* This adds functionality (via an extra req param) to the
* existing get all notifications method allowing us to specify
* when we want the API to return in csv/non-csv format
brings in a fix to InvalidEmail/Phone/AddressExceptions not being
instantiated correctly. `exception.message` is not a python standard,
so we shouldn't be relying on it to transmit exception reasons -
rather we should be using `str(exception)` instead. This involved a
handful of small changes to the schema validation
Return multiple notifications for a service.
Choosing a page_size or a page_number is no longer allowed.
Instead, there is a `next` link included with will return the
next {default_page_size} notifications in the sequence.
Query parameters accepted are:
- template_type: filter by specific template types
- status: filter by specific statuses
- older_than: return a chronological list of notifications older
than this one. The notification with the id that is passed in
is _not_ returned.
Note that both `template_type` and `status` can accept multiple
parameters. Thus it is possible to call
`/v2/notifications?status=created&status=sending&status=delivered`
If you want to send a job on Monday morning, you should be able to
schedule it on Friday. You shouldn’t need to work on the weekend.
96 hours is a full 4 days, so you can schedule a job at any time on
Friday for any time on Monday.
We’ve checked with the information assurance people, and they’re OK with
us holding the data for this extra amount of time.
We want to show developers a log of notifications they’ve sent using the
API in the admin app. In order to indentify a notification it’s probably
helpful to know:
- who the notification was sent to (which we expose)
- when the notification was created (which we expose)
- which key was used to create the notification (which we expose, but
only as the `id` of the key)
Developers don’t see the `id` of the API key in the app anywhere, so
this isn’t useful information. Much more useful is the `type` and `name`
of the key. So this commit changes the schema to also return these.
This commit does some slightly hacky stuff with conftest because it
breaks a lot of other tests if the sample notification has a real API
key or an API key with a non-unique name.
- If the job JSON contains a scheduling date then the new 'job_status" column is set to "scheduled"
- the date is persisted on the JOB row in the database
- Also the job WILL NOT be placed onto the queue of jobs. This is deferred to a later celery beat task.
- ensured statues not deleted on test runs
- returns in API call
Merge branch 'add-new-column-to-jobs-for-delayed-sending' into scheduled-delivery-of-jobs
Conflicts:
app/models.py
only in the public notification endpoint so far for fear of breaking
things - in an ideal world i'd remove the template relationship
from models entirely and replace that with actual_template
a service now has branding and organisation_id columns, and two new
tables have been aded to reflect these:
* branding is a static types table referring to how a service wants
their emails to be branded:
* 'govuk' for GOV UK branding (default)
* 'org' for organisational branding only
* 'both' for co-branded output with both
* organisation is a table defining an organisation's branding. this
contains three entries, all of which are nullable
* colour - a hex code for a coloured bar on the logo's left
* logo - relative path for that org's logo image
* name - the name to display on the right of the logo
"with personalisation" should only be used by the public notification api
"with template" should be used when we want template name, etc details.
also added an xfail test for correctly constructing notification
personalisation
rename the notification_status_schema to make it apparent that it
involves the template, and then don't use it on the job page - the
job page doesn't do anything with the data. won't somebody think of
the cpu cycles! (also means it ignores problems with template
versions)
if passed in, returns the service object with additional statistics
dictionary, which will be used in the admin app to populate dashboard
components. A new schema has been created for this to avoid clashing/
causing confusion with the existing schema, which is already used
for PUT/POST as well, and this schema can be easily tailored to
reduce ambiguity and lazy-loading