register. On succesful register and verfication they
will be added to service and forwarded to dashboard.
Nothing is done yet with the permissions requested in the
invite to the user.
CSV files currently have ‘to’ as the recipient column. This is changing in
https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-api/pull/109
The admin app also has to validate that the CSV files have the right columns,
because the API expects any CSV that it’s given to have been checked (also we
want things to actually work).
This commit is the minimum code change needed. In the future it should reuse
the same code as the API for processing CSV files. This will need more thinking.
This commit only deals with acceptance by
users who are already in system.
Changed invite client to return invited user objects
instead of dictionaries.
Added commented out test. fixed up fixtures to return invited user
object for invites
This commit adds some guidance on the ‘Add recipients’ page about what should
be in the CSV file. The guidance is contextual to the template, and based on
the problems that we saw users having yesterday.
Without the preview service name we probably have to go back to communicating
a bit more on the add service page. This commit brings back the two bullet
points about where the service name will appear, and tries to tie it into the
nice words that Matt Sheret wrote for us.
This page:
- confused users in research
- didn’t communicate what it was intended to (eg the generated email address,
how your service name would appear in messages)
This commit removes the page so that after typing in the service name the user
is sent straight to the dashboard for their new service.
Use one page template for each of:
- choosing a message template
- adding recipients
- checking an email message
- looking at a job
This commit consolidates the two templates into one, and adds logic to show
the SMS message pattern or the email message pattern depending on the type of
template.
It also gives email templates a bit more width, because the body and the from
address tend to be quite long.
The email pattern looked a bit shonky when displayed in a narrower column. This
commit fixes it by making the email’s metadata (eg subject, from) into a table,
which it sort of is. This means that it is more flexible about the size of
container in which it sits.
This commit parameterises all methods in the send view so that they can send
either emails or SMS messages.
It works out what kind of message it is sending from the `template_type`
property of the template object.
This means that the `Template` util class needs to know about these properties,
which means that this commit depends on:
https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-utils/pull/2
This commit does _not_ add tests for sending emails. The existing tests for
sending SMS still pass, but actually sending emails is outside the scope of
this story.
Templates now have:
- a type (email or sms)
- a subject (if they are email templates)
We don’t want two completely separate view files for email and SMS, because they
would have an enormous amount of repetition.
So this commit adds
- different templates for SMS and email templates
- different form objects for SMS and email templates
…and wires them up.
As part of https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-admin/pull/187 the file
upload pattern was changed to auto-submit once a file had been picked. The
form that was submitted was, however, missing a CSRF token, as well as a submit
button for non-JS users.
This commit makes the file upload pattern self-contained, so that it will always
include a form with a CSRF token in a hidden input and a submit button, which is
then hidden when Javascript loads.
The ‘manage templates’ page was almost identical to the ‘send text messages’
page.
This commit consolidates them into one and makes them all hang together.
Part of this means tweaks to the javascript so that files upload as soon as
you’ve chosen them.
This takes the original prototype version of this page, and, using the same
fake data (ie nothing is wired up):
- adds an invite users page
- adds an edit (and delete) user page
Both these pages allow the user to set another user’s permissions.
This commit adds images for the ticks and crosses, so we have control over their
appearance.
This commit adds a new page, which appears after a user enters the name for
their new service. It shows how the service name will appear in emails and
text messages.
This means that the new service is not created until after they have confirmed
that the name is appropriate in context.
This has also involved:
- visual changes to the ‘email template’ pattern, which wasn’t very refined
before
- removing a bunch of words from the enter service name page, because most users
don’t read them, and we reckon that showing a preview is a better way of
getting them to understand what is meant by service name
Still to do:
- validating the the generated email address for a service is unique (on the
API) side
- having the API return the generated email address, rather than determining it
in the admin app
This commit adds a shortcut, which (in the background) does the creation and
uploading of a CSV file for you.
This enables users to send themselves a test message without having to fiddle
about with CSV files.