We didn’t make this self-service before because the pricing information
wasn’t published (ie we had to send it to services that asked for it).
Now that we publish pricing information in the app, there’s no reason
why services can’t make an informed decision about whether they want
international SMS or not.
So this commit:
- removes the platform admin button
- adds some radio buttons that our users can click with their mice
A common pattern we employ is `POST`-redirect-`GET`. To write tests for
this we often check that the URL of the redirect is what we’re
expecting.
With the way `client_request` is currently set up, there’s no way to do
this because the response isn’t exposed to the test.
So this commit adds an extra parameter which will let us test for
redirects.
Added extra radio button for 'org_banner' option
Updated service setting template to display appropriate text when option is selected
Updated tests to also accomodate new radio option
It’s useful to be able to play with the CSV upload thing and find out
how it works before you’re interrupted by the error telling you that
you’ve got as far as you can in trial mode.
Adds the new Using Notify view
Adds route to Using Notify page.
Add redirects for old pages
Removes the delivery and failure page as it's now in the Using Notify one
Removes the trial mode page due to Using Notify page
Right now Notify restricts you to registering with a UK mobile number.
This is because when we built the user registration stuff we couldn’t
send to international mobiles.
However we can send to international mobile numbers, and it’s totally
reasonable to expect employees of the UK government to be working
abroad, and have a foreign mobile phone – we’ve heard from one such
user.
So this commit:
- changes all places where users enter their own phone number to use
the validation function which allows international phone numbers
- renames the `mobile_number` validation to `uk_mobile_number` to make
it explicit, and force it to break the tests if there’s somewhere it’s
being used that I haven’t thought of
We don’t want users in trial mode sending real letters. So we’ve
introduced an error message. This error message is also showing up when
users in trial mode and making a test letter (and having the knock on
effect of hiding the download button).
They should be able to make a test letter in trial mode, because it
doesn’t cost anything.
Debugging the DVLA markup stuff is quite slow, because it’s split
between the API and utils, and things that work in tests don’t always
work with real template content.
This commit adds us a private endpoint that will let us see what DVLA
markup will be generated for any template, enabling a quicker feedback
loop.
We’ve seen from research (a long time ago) that the ‘manage service’
permission is too broad, and gives too much control to someone who only
needs the ability to edit templates. In other words, editing content
should be its own, separate permission, rather than being rolled up
into manage service.
Since this is already disaggregated on the API side, making this change
just means changing the mapping on the admin side and adding an extra
checkbox on the invite/edit page. Which is what this commit does.
So for now, an existing user who has the manage service permission gets
both manage service and manage templates (ie no change to what they can
do). Newly invited users will get to choose if they have both, either,
or neither.
This commit makes sure that the right permission choices are shown in
these pages:
- manage team page
- invite a user page
- edit permissions page
This is in order to make changing these pages easier (see subsequent
commits).
This commit makes the existing tests around user permissions less
verbose by using the new `client_request` fixture.
This fixture takes care of:
- setting up a service
- asserting that the response is `200`
It also tests that the page titles, some of which didn’t match with the
`<h1>`s, so this commit also fixes that mismatch.