The "invites" worker exists to do two things -- make a Confirmation
object, and send the outgoing email. Making the Confirmation object
in a background process from where the PreregistrationUser is created
temporarily leaves the PreregistrationUser in invalid state, and
results in 500's, and the user not immediately seeing the sent
invitation. That the "invites" worker also wants to create the
Confirmation object means that "resending" an invite invalidates the
URL in the previous email, which can be confusing to the user.
Moving the Confirmation creation to the same transaction solves both
of these issues, and leaves the "invites" worker with nothing to do
but send the email; as such, we remove it entirely, and use the
existing "email_senders" worker to send the invites. The volume of
invites is small enough that this will not affect other uses of that
worker.
Fixes: #21306Fixes: #24275
This prevents users from hammering the invitation endpoint, causing
races, and inviting more users than they should otherwise be allowed
to.
Doing this requires that we not raise InvitationError when we have
partially succeeded; that behaviour is left to the one callsite of
do_invite_users.
Reported by Lakshit Agarwal (@chiekosec).
Updates the base hash for the streams setting overlay to be
"channels" instead of "streams".
Because there are Welcome Bot and Notification Bot messages that
would have been sent with the "/#streams" hash, we will need to
support parsing those overlay hashes as an alias for "/#channels"
permanently.
Part of the stream to channels rename project.
We now "first_message_id" of the stream on the deletion of the first
message that was sent to it. This results in 1 extra query when any
stream message is deleted and 3 extra queries when the first message
sent to any stream is deleted.
Fixes#28877.
This commit removes name, description, is_system_group and
can_mention_group fields from UserGroup model and rename
them in NamedUserGroup model.
Fixes#29554.
This commit updates code to access name from named_user_group
field which points to the "NamedUserGroup" instead of directly
accessing name from "UserGroup", since name field will only
be present on NamedUserGroup objects in further commits.
Updates various areas of the backend code that generate
JsonableErrors with translated strings to use channel
instead of stream.
Part of stream to channel rename project.
Updates notification messages that are sent to "stream events"
topic when a permission or policy setting is changed to use channel
instead of stream. Also, updates some strings that were not marked
for translation in the message that was sent when the retention
policy was changed.
Updates notification messages that are sent when a stream/channel
is created.
Updates notification messages that are sent when a user is
subscribed to stream/channel(s).
Part of stream to channel rename project.
Updates translated JsonableError strings that relate to streams
to use channel instead of stream. Separated from other error string
updates as this is a dense area of changes for this rename.
Part of stream to channel rename project.
In zerver/actions/message_send.py, updates translated error strings
to use channel instead of stream.
Also, updates the messages sent to bot owners when a stream doesn't
exist or has no subscribers.
Part of stream to channel rename project.
Generally updates variables that appear in translated strings that use
"stream" to instead use "channel".
Two exceptions are ErrorCode.STREAM_DOES_NOT_EXIST JsonableErrors as
changing the variable would also change the fields returned by these
errors to clients.
Changes to context variables in emails and variables in onboarding
welcome bot messages are addressed in separate commits.
Part of stream to channel rename project.
Adds nullable creator field, containing a reference to the user who
created the stream. When creating a stream, acting user is set as
the creator of the stream. Since API calls to create streams always
have an acting user, this field should always be set when streams
are created using the API.
Because streams can be created with no acting user, this field is
nullable. We try to backfill existing streams using RealmAuditLog table,
but not all streams are guaranteed to have a recorded create log. Thus
this new field is left null when it cannot be backfilled. We also set
this field to null when the creator user is deleted.
Earlier a extra audit log entry of type
USER_GROUP_GROUP_BASED_SETTING_CHANGED was made when a new user
group is created. This commit updates the code to not create
that audit log entry.
There is no need to create these entry as we would still
have the required data from the "OLD_VALUE" field in the
audit log entry created when changing the setting and this
also makes it consistent with the entries created for
other operations like stream creation.
zerver.lib.timeout abuses asynchronous exceptions, so it’s only safe
to use on CPU computations with no side effects.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit adds an option to the advanced section of
Preferences settings, that would allow users to choose
whether to receive typing notifications from other
users.
Fixes#29642
Most importantly, fixes a bug where a realm with a custom
.upload_quota_gb value (set by changing it in the database via e.g.
manage.py shell) would end up having it lowered while upgrading their
plan via the do_change_realm_plan_type function, which used to just set
it to the value implied by the new plan without caring about whether
that isn't lower than the original limit.
The new approach is cleaner since we don't do db queries by
upload_quota_gb so it's nicer to just generate these dynamically, making
changes to our limit-per-plan rules much easier - skipping the need for
migrations.
f92d43c690 added uses of `@overload` to probide multiple type
signatures for `access_message`, based on the `get_user_message`
parameter. Unfortunately, mypy does not check the function body
against overload signatures, so it allows type errors to go
undetected.
Replace the overloads with two functions, for one of which also
returns the usermessage. The third form, of only returning if the
usermessage exists, is not in a high-enough performance endpoint that
a third form is worth maintaining; it uses the usermessage form.
When an organization (without open ability for anyone to join) invites a
guest user, the invitation prompts allows them to choose whether the
guest should be added to default streams or not. This is useful, because
since we don't have per-role default streams configs, they may want
default streams to be for full Members.
SCIM provisioning doesn't have this control, since a newly provisioned
user gets created via a direct do_create_user call, thus adding them to
the organization's default streams, with no workaround possible aside of
just getting rid of default streams in the organization.
To make provisioning guests in such an organization usable, we add a
simple config option to create them with no streams. It's configured by
adding
```
"create_guests_without_streams": True
```
to the config dict in settings.SCIM_CONFIG.
Creating a bot with a name that is already in use
will raise an error. However, by deactivating
the existing bot, creating a new bot with the
same name, and then reactivating the original bot,
it is possible to have multiple bots with the same name.
To fix this, we check if the bot name is already
in use in the active bots list. If it is,
an error will be raised, prompting either the
name of the existing bot to be changed or
the bot to be deactivated.
Co-authored-by: Sujal Shah <sujalshah28092004@gmail.com>
Earlier, low licenses warning message was sent to the
"New user announcements" stream.
We plan to disable the stream by default as a part of improving
onboarding experience.
Now, we send a group DM to admins for low licenses warning
to make it independent of the setting. These warning messages
are important and shouldn't be missed.
This is a prep commit to add a 'recipient_users' parameter to
the 'internal_send_huddle_message' function.
'emails' is no longer a required parameter. We can use either
of the 'emails' or 'recipient_users' parameter. 'emails' is
eventually used to fetch 'recipient_users', so if the
'recipient_users' is already available we should use that to
skip database query.
Previously, users were allowed to signup or change their names to
those which already existed in the realm.
This commit adds an Organization Permission, that shall enforce
users to use unique names while signing up or changing their
names. If a same or normalized full name is found in realm,
then a validation error is thrown.
Fixes#7830.
Rather than use a bulk insert via Django, use the faster
`bulk_insert_all_ums` that we already have. This also adds a `ON
CONFLICT` clause, to make the insert resilient to race conditions.
There are currently two callsites, with different desired `ON
CONFLICT` behaviours:
- For `notify_reaction_update`, if the `UserMessage` had already been
created, we would have done nothing to change it.
- For `do_update_message_flags`, we would have ensured a specific bit
was (un)set.
Extend `create_historical_user_messages` and `bulk_insert_all_ums` to
support `ON CONFLICT (...) UPDATE SET flags = ...`.
Replaced HUDDLE attribute with DIRECT_MESSAGE_GROUP using VS Code search,
part of a general renaming of the object class.
Fixes part of #28640.
Co-authored-by: JohnLu2004 <JohnLu10212004@gmail.com>
This commit adds a management command that will run regularly
as a cron job to send zulip updates to realms based on their
current and latest zulip_update_announcements_level.
For realms with:
* level = None: Send a group DM to admins notifying them about
this new feature & suggestion to set the stream accordingly.
* level = 0:
* If stream is still not configured, wait for a week
before setting their level to latest level. They will
miss updates until their configure the stream.
* If stream is configured, send updates.
* level > 0: Send one message/update per level & increase
the level by 1 till the latest level.
Fixes#28604.
This is a prep commit to extract out the logic to
create message from 'internal_send_huddle_message'
into a separate function 'internal_prep_huddle_message'.
We will use this new function to get the huddle message
without sending it immediately.
In general, we never want to use savepoints.
This prep commit adds savepoint=False in do_send_messages
as we don't want to just rollback to this savepoint and
proceed if we encounter any error while sending zulip updates
via cron.
A user who was no longer subscribed to a private stream kept their
UserMessage row for a message sent while they were in it; this is
expected. However, they _also_ kept that row even if the message was
moved to a different private stream that they were also not subscribed
to. This violates the invariant that users without subscriptions
never have UserMessage rows.
This `if new_stream is not None` block was improperly indented,
causing it to only run if the propagation mode was not `change_one`.
Since the block controlled creation and deletion of UserMessage rows,
this led to messages being improperly still visible to members of the
old stream if they were being moved from public to private streams.
Clients also failed to receive `delete_message` events, so the
messages remained visible in their feeds until they reloaded the
application.
Only affects zulipchat, by being based on the BILLING_ENABLED setting.
The restricted backends in this commit are
- AzureAD - restricted to Standard plan
- SAML - restricted to Plus plan, although it was already practically
restricted due to requiring server-side configuration to be done by us
This restriction is placed upon **enabling** a backend - so
organizations that already have a backend enabled, will continue to be
able to use it. This allows us to make exceptions and enable a backend
for an org manually via the shell, and to grandfather organizations into
keeping the backend they have been relying on.
This commit adds a realm-level setting named
'zulip_update_announcements_stream' that configures the
stream to which zulip updates should be posted.
Fixes part of #28604.
This commit renames the realm-level setting
'signup_notifications_stream' to 'signup_announcements_stream'.
The new name reflects better what the setting does.
This commit renames the realm-level setting 'notifications_stream'
to 'new_stream_announcements_stream'.
The new name reflects better what the setting does.
Previously, in DM disabled org messaging to bot was not working when
starting new conversation and adding bot as recipient because of not
updating on recipient change. And secondly, self messaging was not
allowed.
This commit ensures that the DM to bot and self are allowed irrespective
of dm restrictions.
tests: Verify DMs adhere to DM restriction policy.
Fixes#28412
Signed-off-by: sayyedarib <sayyedaribhussain4321@gmail.com>
Rather than pass around a list of message objects in-memory, we
instead keep the same constructed QuerySet which includes the later
propagated messages (if any), and use that same query to pick out
affected Attachment objects, rather than limiting to the set of ids.
This is not necessarily a win -- the list of message-ids *may* be very
long, and thus the query may be more concise, easier to send to
PostgreSQL, and faster for PostgreSQL to parse. However, the list of
ids is almost certainly better-indexed.
After processing the move, the QuerySet must be re-defined as a search
of ids (and possibly a very long list of such), since there is no
other way which is guaranteed to correctly single out the moved
messages. At this point, it is mostly equivalent to the list of
Message objects, and certainly takes no less memory.
This applies access restrictions in SQL, so that individual messages
do not need to be walked one-by-one. It only functions for stream
messages.
Use of this method significantly speeds up checks if we moved "all
visible messages" in a topic, since we no longer need to walk every
remaining message in the old topic to determine that at least one was
visible to the user. Similarly, it significantly speeds up merging
into existing topics, since it no longer must walk every message in
the new topic to determine if the user could see at least one.
Finally, it unlocks the ability to bulk-update only messages the user
has access to, in a single query (see subsequent commit).
This is a preparatory commit that refactors the check_update_message
method to extract the checks containing whether a user can edit the
message or not into a separate method -validate_message_content_edit,
so that it can be re used later.
This logic was apparently missed when we implemented private streams
with shared history; the correct check is to look at whether the user
can access message history in the stream, which used to be equivalent
to whether it's a private stream.
This commit removes the stale 'email_gateway' parameter
from 'do_send_messages' function.
This should have been removed in 6c473ed75f,
when the call to 'build_message_send_dict' was removed
from 'do_send_messages'.
The endpoint was lacking validation that the authentication_methods dict
submitted by the user made sense. So e.g. it allowed submitting a
nonsense key like NoSuchBackend or modifying the realm's configured
authentication methods for a backend that's not enabled on the server,
which should not be allowed.
Both were ultimately harmless, because:
1. Submitting NoSuchBackend would luckily just trigger a KeyError inside
the transaction.atomic() block in do_set_realm_authentication_methods
so it would actually roll back the database changes it was trying to
make. So this couldn't actually create some weird
RealmAuthenticationMethod entries.
2. Silently enabling or disabling e.g. GitHub for a realm when GitHub
isn't enabled on the server doesn't really change anything. And this
action is only available to the realm's admins to begin with, so
there's no attack vector here.
test_supported_backends_only_updated wasn't actually testing anything,
because the state it was asserting:
```
self.assertFalse(github_auth_enabled(realm))
self.assertTrue(dev_auth_enabled(realm))
self.assertFalse(password_auth_enabled(realm))
```
matched the desired state submitted to the API...
```
result = self.client_patch(
"/json/realm",
{
"authentication_methods": orjson.dumps(
{"Email": False, "Dev": True, "GitHub": False}
).decode()
},
)
```
so we just replace it with a new test that tests the param validation.
This leads to significant speedups. In a test, with 100 random unique
event classes, the old code processed a batch of 100 rows (on average
66-ish unique in the batch) in 0.45 seconds. Doing this in a single
query processes the same batch in 0.0076 seconds.
This is preparatory work towards adding a Topic model.
We plan to use the local variable name as 'topic' for
the Topic model objects.
Currently, we use *topic as the local variable name for
topic names.
We rename local variables of the form *topic to *topic_name
so that we don't need to think about type collisions in
individual code paths where we might want to talk about both
Topic objects and strings for the topic name.
Rename and restructure these comparison variables such that we don't
have a possibly impossible case for presence.last_connected_time being
None.
Fixes#25498.