when an exception happens in an action before the response has been
committed, then we should re-raise the exception in the main thread.
This lets us reuse the existing exception handling.
detect the type of controller we're testing and return the right type of
response based on that controller. This allows us to stop doing the
weird sleep thing.
Commit 4f2cd3e9 introduced a bug by reordering the call to
`@controller.recycle!` above the call to `build_request_uri`. The
impact of this was that the `@_url_options` cache ends up not being
reset between building a request URI (occurring within the test
controller) and the firing of the actual request.
We encountered this bug because we had the following setup:
class MinimumReproducibleController < ActionController::Base
before_filter { @param = 'param' }
def index
render text: url_for(params)
end
def default_url_options
{ custom_opt: @param }
end
end
def test_index
get :index # builds url, then fires actual request
end
The first step in `get :index` in the test suite would populate the
@_url_options cache. The subsequent call to `url_for` inside of the
controller action would then utilize the uncleared cache, thus never
calling the now-updated default_url_options.
This commit fixes this bug calling recycle! twice, and removes a call
to set response_body, which should no longer be needed since we're
recycling the request object explicitly.
This is an option for to HTML content with a content type of
`text/html`. This rendering option calls `ERB::Util.html_escape`
internally to escape unsafe HTML string, so you will have to mark your
string as html safe if you have any HTML tag in it.
Please see #12374 for more detail.
This is as an option to render content with a content type of
`text/plain`. This is the preferred option if you are planning to render
a plain text content.
Please see #12374 for more detail.
This is an option for sending a raw content back to browser. Note that
this rendering option will unset the default content type and does not
include "Content-Type" header back in the response.
You should only use this option if you are expecting the "Content-Type"
header to not be set. More information on "Content-Type" header can be
found on RFC 2616, section 7.2.1.
Please see #12374 for more detail.
if the controller action has not yet streamed any data, actions should
process as normal, and errors should trigger the appropriate behavior
(500, or in the case of ActionController::BadRequest, a 400 Bad Request)
Allow setting `request.variant` as an array - an order in which they will be
rendered.
For example:
request.variant = [:tablet, :phone]
respond_to do |format|
format.html.none
format.html.phone # this gets rendered
end
If we set :shallow_path when shallow is called it can result in incorrect
paths if the resource is inside a namespace because namespace itself sets
the :shallow_path option to the namespace path.
We fix this by removing the :shallow_path option from shallow as that should
only be turning shallow routes on and not otherwise affecting the scope.
To do this we need to treat the :shallow option to resources differently to
other scope options and move it to before the nested block is called.
This change also has the positive side effect of making the behavior of the
:shallow option consistent with the shallow method.
Fixes#12498.
Returning `self` from within the array returned by `to_ary`
caused this. Instead, we can just substitute another object.
It provides the `each` behavior required by the rack spec.
MessageEncryptor has :serializer option, where any serializer object can
be passed. This commit make it possible to set this serializer from configuration
level.
There are predefined serializers (:marshal_serializer, :json_serialzier)
and custom serializer can be passed as String, Symbol (camelized and
constantized in ActionDispatch::Session namepspace) or serializer object.
Default :json_serializer was also added to generators to provide secure
defalt.
The request attributes filtered_parameters, filtered_env and filtered_path
are memoized for performance reasons. However this can cause unusual
behavior in tests where there are multiple calls to get, post, etc.
Fixes#13803.
The revert is needed because of a regression described in #13369, routes
with trailing slash are no longer recognized properly.
This reverts commit 50311f1391ddd8e0349d74eb57f04b7e0045a27d.
After introducing 50311f1 a regression was introduced: routes with
trailing slash are no longer recognized properly. This commit provides a
failing test for this situation.
* master: (536 commits)
doc, API example on how to use `Model#exists?` with multiple IDs. [ci skip]
Restore DATABASE_URL even if it's nil in connection_handler test
[ci skip] - error_messages_for has been deprecated since 2.3.8 - lets reduce any confusion for users
Ensure Active Record connection consistency
Revert "ask the fixture set for the sql statements"
Check `respond_to` before delegation due to: d781caaf31
Adding Hash#compact and Hash#compact! methods
MySQL version 4.1 was EOL on December 31, 2009 We should at least recommend modern versions of MySQL to users.
clear cache on body close so that cache remains during rendering
add a more restricted codepath for templates fixes#13390
refactor generator tests to use block form of Tempfile
Fix typo [ci skip]
Move finish_template as the last public method in the generator
Minor typos fix [ci skip]
make `change_column_null` reversible. Closes#13576.
create/drop test and development databases only if RAILS_ENV is nil
Revert "Speedup String#to"
typo fix in test name. [ci skip].
`core_ext/string/access.rb` test what we are documenting.
Fix typo in image_tag documentation
...
Conflicts:
actionpack/CHANGELOG.md
In Rails 3.2 you only needed pass an argument for dynamic segment once so
unique the segment keys array to match the number of args. Since the number
of args is less than required parts the non-optimized code path is selected.
This means to benefit from optimized url generation the arg needs to be
specified as many times as it appears in the path.
Fixes#12808
When an optimized helper fails to generate, show the full route constraints
in the error message. Previously it would only show the contraints that were
required as part of the path.
Fixes#13592
Using a Regexp to replace dynamic segments in a path string is fraught
with difficulty and can lead to odd edge cases like #13349. Since we
already have a parsed representation of the path it makes sense to use
that to generate an array of segments that can be used to build an
optimized route's path quickly.
Tests on a simple route (e.g. /posts/:id) show a speedup of 35%:
https://gist.github.com/pixeltrix/8261932
Calculating -------------------------------------
Current Helper: 5274 i/100ms
New Helper: 8050 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
Current Helper: 79263.6 (±3.7%) i/s - 395550 in 4.997252s
New Helper: 153464.5 (±4.9%) i/s - 772800 in 5.047834s
Tests on a more complex route show even an greater performance boost:
https://gist.github.com/pixeltrix/8261957
Calculating -------------------------------------
Current Helper: 2367 i/100ms
New Helper: 5382 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
Current Helper: 29506.0 (±3.2%) i/s - 149121 in 5.059294s
New Helper: 78815.5 (±4.1%) i/s - 398268 in 5.062161s
It also has the added benefit of fixing the edge cases described above.
Fixes#13349
Example:
# application routes.rb
mount BlogEngine => '/blog'
# engine routes.rb
get '/welcome' => redirect('')
This now redirects to the path `/blog`, whereas before it would redirect
to the application root path. In the case of a path redirect or a custom
redirect if the path returned contains a host then the path is treated as
absolute. Similarly for option redirects, if the options hash returned
contains a `:host` or `:domain` key then the path is treated as absolute.
Fixes#7977
In #5337 we forced the path encoding to ASCII-8BIT to prevent static
file handling from blowing up before an application has had chance to
deal with possibly invalid urls. However this has a negative side
effect of making it an incompatible encoding if the application's
public path has UTF-8 characters in it.
To work around the problem we check to see if the path has a valid
encoding once it has been unescaped. If it is not valid then we can
return early since it will not match any file anyway.
Fixes#13518
Like `format.any`, you can do the same with variants.
It works for both inline:
respond_to do |format|
format.html.any { render text: "any" }
format.html.phone { render text: "phone" }
end
and block syntax:
respond_to do |format|
format.html do |variant|
variant.any(:tablet, :phablet){ render text: "any" }
variant.phone { render text: "phone" }
end
end
TLDR: always return an object that responds to the query methods from
request.format, and do not touch Mime::Type[] lookup to avoid bugs.
---
Long version:
The initial issue was about being able to do checks like
request.format.html? for request with an unknown format, where
request.format would be nil.
This is where the issue came from at first in #7837 and #8085
(merged in cba05887dc3b56a46a9fe2779b6b228880b49622), but the
implementation went down the path of adding this to the mime type
lookup logic.
This unfortunately introduced subtle bugs, for instance in the merged
commit a test related to send_file had to be changed to accomodate the
introduction of the NullType.
Later another bug was found in #13064, related to the content-type being
shown as #<Mime::NullType:...> for templates with localized extensions
but no format included. This one was fixed in #13133, merged in
43962d6ec50f918c9970bd3cd4b6ee5c7f7426ed.
Besides that, custom handlers were not receiving the proper template
formats anymore when passing through the rendering process, because of
the NullType addition. That was found while migrating an application
from 3.2 to 4.0 that uses the Markerb gem (a custom handler that
generates both text and html emails from a markdown template).
---
This changes the implementation moving away from returning this null
object from the mime lookup, and still fixes the initial issue where
request.format.zomg? would raise an exception for unknown formats due to
request.format being nil.
Change most tests to make use of assert_raise returning the raised
exception rather than relying on a combination of flunk + rescue to
check for exception types/messages.
Session#fetch was mutating the session when given a default argument
and/or a block. Since Session duck-types as a Hash, it should behave
like one in these cases.
When a route is mounted inside a resources block, it's automatically
prefixed, so a following code:
resources :users do
mount Blog::Engine => '/blog'
end
will generate a user_blog path helper.
In order to access engine helpers, we also use "mounted_helpers", a list
of helpers associated with each mounted engine, so a path to blog's post
can be generated using user_blog.post_path(user, post).
The problem I'm fixing here is that mount used a raw :as option, without
taking nestings into account. As a result, blog was added to a route set
as a `user_blog`, but helper was generated for just `blog`.
This commit applies the proper logic for defining a helper for a mounted
engine nested in resources or resource block.
(closes#8533)
In most cases, when setting variant specific code, you're not sharing any code
within format.
Inline syntax can vastly simplify defining variants in those situations:
respond_to do |format|
format.js { render "trash" }
format.html do |variant|
variant.phone { redirect_to progress_path }
variant.none { render "trash" }
end
end
Becomes:
respond_to do |format|
format.js { render "trash" }
format.html.phone { redirect_to progress_path }
format.html.none { render "trash" }
end
In most cases, when setting variant specific code, you're not sharing any code
within format.
Inline syntax can vastly simplify defining variants in those sitiations:
respond_to do |format|
format.js { render "trash" }
format.html do |variant|
variant.phone { redirect_to progress_path }
variant.none { render "trash" }
end
end
`
Becomes:
respond_to do |format|
format.js { render "trash" }
format.html.phone { redirect_to progress_path }
format.html.none { render "trash" }
end
By default, variants in the templates will be picked up if a variant is set
and there's a match. The format will be:
app/views/projects/show.html.erb
app/views/projects/show.html+tablet.erb
app/views/projects/show.html+phone.erb
If request.variant = :tablet is set, we'll automatically be rendering the
html+tablet template.
In the controller, we can also tailer to the variants with this syntax:
class ProjectsController < ActionController::Base
def show
respond_to do |format|
format.html do |html|
@stars = @project.stars
html.tablet { @notifications = @project.notifications }
html.phone { @chat_heads = @project.chat_heads }
end
format.js
format.atom
end
end
end
The variant itself is nil by default, but can be set in before filters, like
so:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
before_action do
if request.user_agent =~ /iPad/
request.variant = :tablet
end
end
end
This is modeled loosely on custom mime types, but it's specifically not
intended to be used together. If you're going to make a custom mime type,
you don't need a variant. Variants are for variations on a single mime
types.
* master-sec:
Deep Munge the parameters for GET and POST
Stop using i18n's built in HTML error handling.
Ensure simple_format escapes its html attributes
Escape the unit value provided to number_to_currency
Only use valid mime type symbols as cache keys
This PR fixes#13064 regression bug introduced by the #8085
Now in _process_format when the format is a Mime::NullType nothing is written in self.content_type.
In this way the method Response#assign_default_content_type_and_charset can
write the the default mime_type.
The previous implementation of this functionality could be accidentally
subverted by instantiating a raw Rack::Request before the first Rails::Request
was constructed.
Fixes CVE-2013-6417
A path redirect may contain any and all parts of a url which have different
escaping rules for each part. This commit tries to escape each part correctly
by splitting the string into three chunks - path (which may also include a host),
query and fragment; then it applies the correct escape pattern to each part.
Whilst using `URI.parse` would be better, unfortunately the possible presence
of %{name} parameters in the path redirect string prevents us from using it so
we have to use a regular expression instead.
Fixes#13110.