Have the server send down the stream's id for removal
events, and have the client use that id to look up the
stream in its internal data structures. This sets the
stage for eventually just sending the stream id (and not
the stream name) down to clients, once all our clients
are ready to use the stream id.
(imported from commit 922516c98fb79ffad8ae7da0396646663ca54fd0)
Here, we don't want to check the uploading users' realm when determining
message privacy, because that'll prevent non-Zulip users from having
email-mirror-uploaded images. Instead, we just pass along the target
realm for the message explicitly to upload_message_image()
(imported from commit 6891261552135b1f41ff9da55ffe963ee5000556)
Our overall guideline is the type names for events are singular, and the list of
events of that type are plural. 'subscriptions' was not following this guideline
and (potentially as a result) had a bug where it was impossible for clients to explicitly
subscribe to subscription change events properly.
(imported from commit 7b3162141fd673746e0489199966c29ea32ee876)
For EventsRegisterTest that test updates to streams and
subscriptions, we now validate the events generated by
the actions under test conform to predicted schemas.
We define the schemas with help from the validators code
that is also sometimes used to validate incoming request
parameters for our views.
(imported from commit b4222b920a588e15cccee4a2349c074ca9697448)
This change also makes it so that the test_rename_stream()
test exercises the code path. We need to subscribe the user
to the stream in order to generate events.
(imported from commit 77f965efbf5a766eb8de23486e303fa135b2e638)
We now show the module name (e.g. "tests or test_hooks") in the
test output. This change also eliminates the intermediate use
of slashes in the test_name var, which was passed to
bounce_key_prefix_for_testing().
(imported from commit 58e73301037a0b07d7e437514c247f7cb559420e)
Instead of having home() set page_params.realm_name directly from
the user_profile object, have fetch_initial_state_data() set it.
This is more consistent with how we treat other data, and it protects
us against a race condition where realm name updates arrive during
the DB fetching.
(imported from commit 545e3bd73f150438126e3f941e9bebc7aa1d0614)
In particular, make the stream history inaccessible and free up the
name to be re-used.
(imported from commit 6063b7a484ed0ba0279a17d2b3e9a92b5ef1f762)
The file test_runner.py has our subclass of DjangoTestSuiteRunner
and various methods that help it work.
(imported from commit 8eca39a7ed3f8312c986224a810d4951559e7a8b)
The function update_user_profile_caches now operates on a list
of user_profiles, so callers like flush_realm() can benefit from
having a single cache_set_many() call. This slightly complicates
the call from flush_user_profile().
(imported from commit e064871d849b873c6ca388f00d4f7afaba1bf222)
For the realm-wide caches of active user dicts and alert words, just
make a single call to cache_delete() when you are deactivating a
realm. Before this change, we were doing O(N) cache_deletes as
part of the code path through flush_user_profile(). Now we just
call update_user_profile_caches() directly to clear the user_profile
caches.
This change also sets us up to turn flush_realm() into a post-save hook.
(imported from commit 699b4ea226ae15fc8c402cb4bc64ff6bdc041fc2)
This is a slight behavior change, as we now flush user_profile
caches for bots as well as humans.
(imported from commit 24c72c44d851ee4c66a67a4728cd6c548faeedcd)
This function updates all the user_profile-related caches
that are keyed on a per-user basis.
(This had some test coverage already.)
(imported from commit 37979400514a7b46a6dcb7e36665b0fee2f3c525)
Stream name and descriptions updates were being sent to all of the
active users on a realm. They are now only send to users who would have
information about that stream.
(imported from commit 2621ee8029f7356bf44ec493d7b5361bd546a8f5)