Summary:
Move event framework from Phabricator to libphutil so it can be used in other
phutil projects, such as Arcanist.
Test plan:
Use along with path to libphutil, events should work as expected.
Reviewers: epriestley
Differential Revision: 1098
Summary:
This is an attempt to satisfy a lot of the one-off requests a little more
generally, by providing a relatively generic piece of event architecture.
Allow the registation of event listeners which can react to various application
events (currently, task editing).
I'll doc this a bit better but I wanted to see if anyone had massive objections
to doing this or the broad approach. The specific problem I want to address is
that one client wants to do a bunch of routing for tasks via email, so it's
either build a hook, or have them override most of ManiphestReplyHandler, or
something slightly more general like this.
Test Plan: Wrote a silly listener that adds "Quack!" to a task every time it is
edited and edited some tasks. I was justly rewarded.
Reviewers: nh, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: aran
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 881
Summary:
When an object is updated, record the content source for the update. This mostly
isn't terribly useful but one concrete thing I want to do with it is let admins
audit via-email replies more easily since there are a bunch of options which let
you do hyjinx if you intentionally configure them insecurely. I think having a
little more auditability around this feature is generally good. At some point
I'm going to turn this into a link admins can click to see details.
It also allows us to see how frequently different mechanisms are used, and lets
you see if someone is at their desk or on a mobile or whatever, at least
indirectly.
The "tablet" and "mobile" sources are currently unused but I figured I'd throw
them in anyway. SMS support should definitely happen at some point.
Not 100% sure about the design for this, I might change it to plain text at some
point.
Test Plan: Updated objects and saw update sources rendered.
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, epriestley, jungejason
Differential Revision: 844
Summary: This lets you configure an email address which will create tasks when
emails are sent to it. It's pretty basic but should get us most of the way
there.
Test Plan: Configured an address and created a task via email. Replied to a task
via email to check that I didn't break that.
Reviewed By: tuomaspelkonen
Reviewers: davidreuss, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran, epriestley, tuomaspelkonen
Differential Revision: 590
Summary:
We already support this (and Facebook uses it) but it is difficult to configure
and you have to write a bunch of code. Instead, provide a simple flag.
See the documentation changes for details, but when this flag is enabled we send
one email with a reply-to like "D2+public+23hf91fh19fh@phabricator.example.com".
Anyone can reply to this, and we figure out who they are based on their "From"
address instead of a unique hash. This is less secure, but a reasonable tradeoff
in many cases.
This also has the advantage over a naive implementation of at least doing object
hash validation.
@jungejason: I don't think this affects Facebook's implementation but this is an
area where we've had problems in the past, so watch out for it when you deploy.
Also note that you must set "metamta.public-replies" to true since Maniphest now
looks for that key specifically before going into public reply mode; it no
longer just tests for a public reply address being generateable (since it can
always generate one now).
Test Plan:
Swapped my local install in and out of public reply mode and commented on
objects. Got expected email behavior. Replied to public and private email
addresses.
Attacked public addresses by using them when the install was configured to
disallow them and by altering the hash and the from address. All this stuff was
rejected.
Reviewed By: jungejason
Reviewers: moskov, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran, epriestley, moskov, jungejason
Differential Revision: 563
Summary:
See T251. In Gmail, conversations split if you reply to them and the next email
does not "In-Reply-To" your message ID. When an action is triggered by an email,
carry its Message-ID through the stack and use it for "In-Reply-To" and
"References" on the subsequent message.
Test Plan:
Live-patched phabricator.com and replied to a Maniphest thread in Gmail without
disrupting the thread. Locally replied to Maniphest and Differential threads and
verified Message-ID was carried across the reply boundary.
Reviewed By: rm
Reviewers: tcook, jungejason, aran, tuomaspelkonen, rm
CC: aran, epriestley, rm
Differential Revision: 498
Summary:
Allow files to be attached to a task by attaching them to an email reply to the
task.
Test Plan:
Applied this patch live since I haven't managed to get inbound email configured
locally, then attached files to a task via email.
Reviewed By: jungejason
Reviewers: tuomaspelkonen, jungejason, aran
CC: anjali, aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 369
Phabricator
Summary:
Hook up the last pieces. This shouldn't impact the Facebook install, EXCEPT that
I removed "!accept" and added "!rethink" (plan changes). If you want to continue
supporting !accept, you should override the method in your subclass if you don't
already.
Test Plan:
Used the Mail Receiver test console to send mail to tasks and revisions.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran
Differential Revision: 289
Summary:
Provide a base PhabricatorMailReplyHandler class which handles the plumbing for
multiplexing email if necessary and supporting public and private reply handler
addressses. DifferentialReplyHandler now extends it, and a new
ManiphestReplyHandler also does.
The general approach here is that we have three supported cases:
- no reply handler, default config, same as what we're doing now
- public reply handler, requires overriding classes but just sets "reply-to"
to some address the install generates and still sends only one email
- private reply handler, provides a default generation mechanism or you can
override it and splits mail apart so we send one to each recipient
Test Plan:
Sent email from Maniphest and Differential with and without
reply-handler-domains set.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 254