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	UnexpectedWebhookEventType is a generic exception that we may now raise when we encounter a webhook event that is new or one that we simply aren't aware of.
		
			
				
	
	
		
			156 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			156 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
from enum import Enum
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from typing import Any, Dict, List, Optional, Type
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from mypy_extensions import NoReturn
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from django.core.exceptions import PermissionDenied
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from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _
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class AbstractEnum(Enum):
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    '''An enumeration whose members are used strictly for their names.'''
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    def __new__(cls: Type['AbstractEnum']) -> 'AbstractEnum':
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        obj = object.__new__(cls)
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        obj._value_ = len(cls.__members__) + 1
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        return obj
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    # Override all the `Enum` methods that use `_value_`.
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    def __repr__(self) -> str:
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        return str(self)  # nocoverage
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    def value(self) -> None:
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        raise AssertionError("Not implemented")
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    def __reduce_ex__(self, proto: int) -> NoReturn:
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        raise AssertionError("Not implemented")
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class ErrorCode(AbstractEnum):
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    BAD_REQUEST = ()  # Generic name, from the name of HTTP 400.
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    REQUEST_VARIABLE_MISSING = ()
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    REQUEST_VARIABLE_INVALID = ()
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    BAD_IMAGE = ()
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    REALM_UPLOAD_QUOTA = ()
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    BAD_NARROW = ()
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    MISSING_HTTP_EVENT_HEADER = ()
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    STREAM_DOES_NOT_EXIST = ()
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    UNAUTHORIZED_PRINCIPAL = ()
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    UNEXPECTED_WEBHOOK_EVENT_TYPE = ()
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    BAD_EVENT_QUEUE_ID = ()
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    CSRF_FAILED = ()
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    INVITATION_FAILED = ()
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    INVALID_ZULIP_SERVER = ()
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class JsonableError(Exception):
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    '''A standardized error format we can turn into a nice JSON HTTP response.
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    This class can be invoked in several ways.
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     * Easiest, but completely machine-unreadable:
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         raise JsonableError(_("No such widget: {}").format(widget_name))
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       The message may be passed through to clients and shown to a user,
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       so translation is required.  Because the text will vary depending
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       on the user's language, it's not possible for code to distinguish
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       this error from others in a non-buggy way.
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     * Partially machine-readable, with an error code:
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         raise JsonableError(_("No such widget: {}").format(widget_name),
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                             ErrorCode.NO_SUCH_WIDGET)
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       Now the error's `code` attribute can be used, both in server
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       and client code, to identify this type of error.  The data
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       (here, the widget name) is still embedded inside a translated
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       string, and can't be accessed by code.
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     * Fully machine-readable, with an error code and structured data:
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         class NoSuchWidgetError(JsonableError):
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             code = ErrorCode.NO_SUCH_WIDGET
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             data_fields = ['widget_name']
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             def __init__(self, widget_name: str) -> None:
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                 self.widget_name = widget_name  # type: str
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             @staticmethod
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             def msg_format() -> str:
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                 return _("No such widget: {widget_name}")
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         raise NoSuchWidgetError(widget_name)
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       Now both server and client code see a `widget_name` attribute.
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    Subclasses may also override `http_status_code`.
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    '''
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    # Override this in subclasses, or just pass a `code` argument
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    # to the JsonableError constructor.
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    code = ErrorCode.BAD_REQUEST  # type: ErrorCode
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    # Override this in subclasses if providing structured data.
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    data_fields = []  # type: List[str]
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    # Optionally override this in subclasses to return a different HTTP status,
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    # like 403 or 404.
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    http_status_code = 400  # type: int
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    def __init__(self, msg: str, code: Optional[ErrorCode]=None) -> None:
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        if code is not None:
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            self.code = code
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        # `_msg` is an implementation detail of `JsonableError` itself.
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        self._msg = msg  # type: str
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    @staticmethod
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    def msg_format() -> str:
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        '''Override in subclasses.  Gets the items in `data_fields` as format args.
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        This should return (a translation of) a string literal.
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        The reason it's not simply a class attribute is to allow
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        translation to work.
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        '''
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        # Secretly this gets one more format arg not in `data_fields`: `_msg`.
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        # That's for the sake of the `JsonableError` base logic itself, for
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        # the simplest form of use where we just get a plain message string
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        # at construction time.
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        return '{_msg}'
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    #
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    # Infrastructure -- not intended to be overridden in subclasses.
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    #
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    @property
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    def msg(self) -> str:
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        format_data = dict(((f, getattr(self, f)) for f in self.data_fields),
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                           _msg=getattr(self, '_msg', None))
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        return self.msg_format().format(**format_data)
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    @property
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    def data(self) -> Dict[str, Any]:
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        return dict(((f, getattr(self, f)) for f in self.data_fields),
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                    code=self.code.name)
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    def to_json(self) -> Dict[str, Any]:
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        d = {'result': 'error', 'msg': self.msg}
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        d.update(self.data)
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        return d
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    def __str__(self) -> str:
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        return self.msg
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class StreamDoesNotExistError(JsonableError):
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    code = ErrorCode.STREAM_DOES_NOT_EXIST
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    data_fields = ['stream']
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    def __init__(self, stream: str) -> None:
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        self.stream = stream
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    @staticmethod
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    def msg_format() -> str:
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        return _("Stream '{stream}' does not exist")
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class RateLimited(PermissionDenied):
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    def __init__(self, msg: str="") -> None:
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        super().__init__(msg)
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