In the admin app we need something to use in show in lieu of template
name when a template isn’t used. Let’s store this in the reference field
for now.
When we have a public API there will be no human creating the broadcast
message. Instead it will be created by an API integration, authenticated
by a key (just like for emails or texts).
This updates the database to:
- add a new foreign key from BroadcastMessages to API keys
- add a `reference` column
It doesn’t change the model yet, because the model is used by previous
migrations, so would cause them to fail when run before the new columns
exist. We can make this change in later pull requests.
We shouldn’t import models into migrations because if the model changes
later down the line then the migration can’t be re-run at a later date
(for example to rebuild a database from scratch).
We don’t need to encode the content before storing it (we’ll always do
that before rendering/sending) so we don’t need to use
`BroadcastMessageTemplate`.
And given that no past broadcasts will have personalisation, we don’t
need to replace the personalisation in the template before rendering it.
So we can just copy the raw content from the templates table.
No point trying, it's the same lambda. As `_invoke_lambda` currently
takes a bytes payload, rather than a json payload, it meant the decision
between encoding the payload in the canary or moving the encoding into
the `_invoke_lambda` function. We decided to go for the former as the
lesser of two evils. We may end up doing the encoding twice in the case
of a failover but this avoids us having to put the encoding in our code
in several places (for example the canary and also soon to be the link
tests).
For all FunctionErrors, and for invoke errors (status > 299) we
want to retry with failover lambda.
We are doing this, because if there is a connection or other error
with one lambda, the failover lambda may still work and it's
worth trying.
With time, we will probably have more complex retry flow, depending
on the error and even maybe differing for each MNO (broadcast provider).
In 8285ef5f89
we turned off alerting on 2nd class letters still being in sending on
certain days of the week because we were only sending letters out on
Mon, Wed, Fri.
Now we have swapped back to sending out 2nd class letters on all
workdays so this change can be reverted. Note, I haven't reverted the
commit exactly but more so the behaviour, whilst leaving in some tests
to explicitly test 2nd class letters for the alert in case we change
this again.
new broadcast messages will have content filled whether they have a
tempalte or not, but old ones won't so populate.
Stole the session constructor from 0044_jos_to_notification_hist.py
We will need a lambda to failover to if the first lambda fails. This
isn't so much a case of the lambda itself failing, as it is a cross
availability zone resource automatically, it's more in case something in
the networking goes down in our AZ and therefore the lambda can't call
out to the CBC. In this case, we will be able to swap to using the
second AZ by calling the second lambda.
This is to prepare us for where when we try and send/cancel a broadcast
we may need to invoke more than one lambda. This might happen if we call
the invoke the first lambda, we get an error and therefore we try and
invoke a failover/second lambda. Then `_invoke_lambda` will be
responsible for the call to AWS whereas `_invoke_lambda_with_failover`
will be responsible more for picking the lambda and deciding on retry
behaviour if failure cases.
ensures code remains backwards compatible during the deploy. this commit
should be reverted once all broadcast_message.content fields have been
back-filled.
we want to be able to create broadcast messages without templates. To
start with, these will come from the API, but in future we may want to
let people create via the admin interface without creating a template
too.
populate a non-nullable content field with the values supplied via the
template (or supplied directly if via api).