The nojs button appears when the stream is online and the user is not watching.
The js button appears when the stream is online and the media element either
(1) is not using the network or (2) fires an error event.
Matches the behaviour of the js chat. Makes it so if you submit an empty
message but with a correct captcha, you won't be deverified and given another
captcha until you successfully send a message (and exceed the flood threshold).
Previously you could fill in the captcha with no message and be given back a
new captcha, which doesn't make that much sense.
This adds a field 'watching' in `user_for_websocket` that's True iff WATCHING,
False iff NOTWATCHING, and None otherwise (since clients don't need to know if
a user is tentative or absent). When the value of this field changes for any
user, they get added to the update buffer (like with any other change).
Removed race condition in `t_sunset_users`: `broadcast_users_update` was being
called *after* a user was removed from memory (and for each user being removed,
which was redundant). In that scenario if there's a user in the update buffer
and `t_sunset_users` wins the race between it and `t_broadcast_users_update`,
then when `t_sunset_users` calls `broadcast_users_update` a KeyError would be
raised since the user's already been removed.
Fixed unintended behaviour of `t_sunset_users`: it was removing users based on
the result of `is_visible`, so users who were actually tenative (as opposed to
absent) were being removed.
Incoming requests are handled in anonstream/routes/. Route handlers
mainly depend on files in anonstream/, which in turn depend on files in
anonstream/helpers/ and anonstream/utils/. Utils are pure functions and
helpers are almost pure functions; they don't mutate state but they
do depend on the global app config.