mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
39 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
39 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
# Clients in Zulip
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`zerver.models.Client` is Zulip's analogue of the HTTP User-Agent
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header (and is populated from User-Agent). It exists for use in
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analytics and other places to provide human-readable summary data
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about "which Zulip client" was used for an operation (e.g. was it the
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Android app, the desktop app, or a bot?).
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In general, it shouldn't be used for anything controlling the behavior
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of Zulip; it's primarily intended to assist debugging.
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## Analytics
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A `Client` is used to sort messages into client categories such as
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`ZulipElectron` on the `/stats`
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[page](https://chat.zulip.org/stats). For more information see,
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[Analytics](analytics.html).
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## Integrations
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Generally, integrations in Zulip should declare a unique User-Agent,
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so that it's easy to figure out which integration is involved when
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debugging an issue. For incoming webhook integrations, we do that
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convenentialy via the auth decorators (as we will describe shortly);
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other integrations generally should set the first User-Agent element
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on their HTTP requests to something of the form
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ZulipIntegrationName/1.2 so that they are categorized properly.
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The `api_key_only_webhook_view` auth decorator, used for most incoming
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webhooks, accepts the name of the integration as an argument and uses
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it to generate a client name that it adds to the `request` (Django
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[HttpRequest](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/ref/request-response/#django.http.HttpRequest))
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object as `request.client`.
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In most integrations, `request.client` is then passed to
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`check_send_stream_message`, where it is used to keep track of which client
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sent the message (which in turn is used by analytics). For more
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information, see [the incoming webhook walkthrough](https://zulipchat.com/api/incoming-webhooks-walkthrough).
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