We’re removing it for performance reasons.
This means removing the old pages that edited the letter contact block
when it was stored directly on the service, rather than the current
model where a service can have multiple contact blocks.
Fixes a bug where we were calling a wrapper method when instead we
should have been calling the redis_client. This had resulted in no
actual calls to redis happening.
'Session expired' or similar makes it sound like a new error.
It could confuse the user and make them think the sign in didn't work
and that their session has expired again.
So we went with:
The change you made was not saved. Please try again.
When the admin app gets user objects from the API, these include a dict
of permissions by service for what the user can do to that services.
Permissions for inactive services are not included in the response as
per:
87cb6f2597/app/dao/permissions_dao.py (L66)
However, this causes a bug where a service is archived but cached user
data still tells us that the user has permissions to view the service.
This should not be the case and causes errors where users can still see
the archived service page, it's settings, and even request to go live
for it, because they are using old cached data for the user.
We solve this by deleting the users who are part of the service from the
cache.
We also delete the templates for this service from the cache as the
templates are also archived when we ask the API to archive the service
as per:
d95c0131e0/app/service/rest.py (L597)
Note, one decision I had to make was whether to delete the user cache
for just active team members or also invited users. Assuming an invited
user can't see the service until they've accepted their invite anyway, it
shouldn't make any difference whether we delete their cache or not.
This involves three changes which broke our code.
To validate email addresses, the optional dependency `email-validator`
must be installed<sup>1</sup>. But since we don’t use WTForms’ email
validation, we shouldn’t need to subclass it – it can just be its own
self contained thing. Then we don’t need to add the extra dependency.
When rendering textareas, and extra `\r\n` is inserted at the beginning
<sup>2</sup>. Browsers will strip this when displaying the textbox and
submitting the form, but some of our tests need updating to account for
this.
The error message for when you don’t choose an option from some radio
buttons has now changed. Rather than just accepting WTForms’ new
message, this commit makes the error messages like the examples from
the Design System<sup>3</sup>. By default it will say ‘Select an
option’, but by passing in an extra parameter (`thing`) it can be
customised to be more specific, for example ‘Select a type of
organisation’.
***
1. https://github.com/wtforms/wtforms/pull/429
2. https://github.com/wtforms/wtforms/issues/238
3. https://design-system.service.gov.uk/components/radios/#error-messages
A lot of pages in the admin app are now generated entirely from Redis,
without touching the API.
The one remaining API call that a lot of pages make, when the user is
platform admin or a member of an organisation, is to get the name of
the current service’s organisation.
This commit adds some code to start caching that as well, which should
speed up page load times for when we’re clicking around the admin app
(it’s typically 100ms just to get the organisation, and more than that
when the API is under load).
This means changing the service model to get the organisation from the
API by ID, not by service ID. Otherwise it would be very hard to clear
the cache if the name of the organisation ever changed.
We can’t cache the whole organisation because it has a
`count_of_live_services` field which can change at any time, without an
update being made.
make sure everything is using the `nl2br` formatter that properly wraps
it in markdown to keep everything sanitised nicely. Also write a couple
of tests
The property doesn’t represent the whole client, but just one method on
it. So this commit renames the property to better describe what it is
designed to store.
This stops most instances of the fixtures which return sms senders,
email reply to addresses or letter contact blocks from being called as
if they were functions in the tests by replacing them with functions
which return the same results.
This change allows a couple of fixtures which are now longer used to be
deleted.
We were using user fixtures in a lot of parameterized tests, but this is
no longer allowed in Pytest 5. To avoid having to split up the parametrized
tests (which would make the test files a lot longer and slightly more
difficult to read) this commit creates functions which return various types
of user json so that we can use these as the test parameters instead.
Stopped fixtures in conftest.py from calling the fixtures which return
user json as if they were functions. Deleted two fixtures that are now no
longer needed as a result of the changes to conftest.py.
The new taxonomy doesn't have a `notify_go_live_incomplete` tag. We
replaced this with `notify_go_live_incomplete_mou` because the only way
users can submit an incomplete request is if they do not agree to the
MOU.
These are the incomplete tags:
- `notify_go_live_incomplete_mou`
- `notify_go_live_incomplete_reply_to`
- `notify_go_live_incomplete_shared_email`
- `notify_go_live_incomplete_templates`
Of those, only the first one is applied automatically.
Requests to go live and email branding requests come through to Zendesk
with tags attached automatically.
With the revised taxonomy some of these tags need to be updated, as
summarised in this spreadsheet.
In addition, `notify_action` tag has to be added in each of those cases.
Old|New
---|---
`notify_request_to_go_live_complete`|`notify_go_live_complete`
`notify_request_to_go_live_incomplete`|`notify_go_live_incomplete`
`notify_action_add_branding`|`notify_branding`
`notify_request_to_go_live_incomplete_mou`|`notify_go_live_incomplete_mou`
`notify_request_to_go_live`|`notify_go_live`
– https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1o5ATsFsVK8Qpj7x8QvxX-SfEuBZ75028GEySVcdBFYU/edit#gid=0
– https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/169842970
We mostly rely on the API returning a 404 to generate 404s for trying
to get things with non-UUID IDs. This is fine, except our tests often
mock these API calls. So it could look like everything is working fine,
except the thing your passing in might never be a valid UUID, and thus
would 404 in a non-test environment.
So this commit:
1. uses the `uuid` URL converter everywhere there’s something that looks
like an ID in a URL parameter
2. adds a test which automates checking for 1.
If there aren’t a range of options (normally presented as radio buttons)
to show the user on the email branding request page then we just show
the textbox. But we were still doing form validation on the radio
buttons, even though the user couldn’t see them to click them. This
stopped the user from being able to submit the form.
This commit fixes the problem by, in this specific case, pre-ticking the
‘Something else’ radio button.
Updating an organisation’s branding might now also update the branding
of services associated to that organisation. This is similar to how
updating an organisation’s type can update the organisation type for its
services.
In the latter case we already make sure to clear the cached version of
these services which is held in Redis.
This commit does the same clearing of the caches when updating an
organisation’s branding (and does a bit of refactoring to do so without
duplication of code.)