Adds a Platform API endpoint that allows migrating existing Google and
Microsoft email channels (with OAuth credentials) into Chatwoot without
requiring end-users to re-authenticate. This enables customers who lack
Rails console access to programmatically migrate email channels from
legacy systems.
### How to test
1. Create a Platform App and grant it permissible access to a target
account
2. `POST /platform/api/v1/accounts/:account_id/email_channel_migrations`
with a payload like:
```json
{
"migrations": [
{
"email": "support@example.com",
"provider": "google",
"provider_config": {
"access_token": "...",
"refresh_token": "...",
"expires_on": "..."
},
"inbox_name": "Migrated Support"
}
]
}
```
3. Verify channels are created with correct provider, provider_config, and IMAP defaults
4. Verify partial failures (e.g. duplicate email) don't roll back other migrations in the batch
5. Verify unauthenticated and non-permissible requests return 401
---------
Co-authored-by: Sojan Jose <sojan@pepalo.com>
* fix: downcase email when finding
* feat: add `from_email` class
* refactor: use `from_email`
* feat: add rule to disallow find_by email directly
* chore: remove redundant test
Since the previous imlpmentation didn't do a case-insentive search, a new user would be created, and the error would be raised at the DB layer. With the new changes, this test case is redundant
* refactor: use from_email
Updated JSON data format for Platform API for account creation update API endpoints features flags to accept false values on each feature.
fixes: #5717
When the platform update API is called with a new user email, Chatwoot will still follow the same behaviour as in the dashboard where the user will have to confirm the new email activation link until the email gets updated on the user record.
In the case of platform APIs, this might not be the ideal behaviour since the original app will already have a flow to update the user emails. Hence we need to confirm the emails without the extra step in this case
fixes: #4510