| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Empty strings / data structures should be treated differently than nils.
We don't really need these calls here (don't pass in blank strings).
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Instead of checking whether the class has recycle! or not, we can just
always add the method to all controller classes when the test harness is
loaded. Technically this means that the controller test harness will
not work with controllers that do not inherit from AC::Metal, but then,
I'm not sure that is supported anyway.
Mixing in the module one will ensure that we don't break method caches,
and eliminates a runtime check so it should speed up tests (slightly).
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In Rails 5.1 `ActionController::TestCase` will be moved out of Rails
into it's own gem.
Please use `ActionDispatch::IntegrationTest` going foward.
Because this will be moved to a gem I used `# :stopdoc:` instead of
deleting the documentation. This will remove it from the Rails
documentation but still leave the method documented for when we move it
to a gem.
Guides have been updated to use the routing structure used in Integration
and all test examples have been updated to inherit from
`ActionDispatch::IntegrationTest` instead of `ActionController::TestCase.
Fixes #22496
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‘Asserts’ at all places [ci skip]
Following commit https://github.com/rails/docrails/commit/495722a95687e25114ae75608dd3107ac5d6611b
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`dispatch` sets the request and response on the controller for us
automatically, so the test harness doesn't need to know the internals of
how request / response is set.
Conflicts:
actionpack/lib/action_controller/test_case.rb
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For ActionController::Base we write the cookies in a middleware if it
was not yet committed no matter if the response was committed or not. [1]
For ActionController::Live we write the cookies before the response is
committed. [2]
We already mimic ActionController::Live in
ActionController::TestCase but we don't mimic the ActionController::Base
behavior because we were checking if the response was committed before
writing the cookies.
Now we are matching the behavior of the middleware and writing the
cookies if it was not written before.
[1]: https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/80c6b901d4d87cee610ab0a438ff6e3c6bf118d1/actionpack/lib/action_dispatch/middleware/cookies.rb#L599-L604
[2]: https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/80c6b901d4d87cee610ab0a438ff6e3c6bf118d1/actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/live.rb#L218-L223
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Rails 4.x and earlier didn't support `Mime::Type[:FOO]`, so libraries
that support multiple Rails versions would've had to feature-detect
whether to use `Mime::Type[:FOO]` or `Mime::FOO`.
`Mime[:foo]` has been around for ages to look up registered MIME types
by symbol / extension, though, so libraries and plugins can safely
switch to that without breaking backward- or forward-compatibility.
Note: `Mime::ALL` isn't a real MIME type and isn't registered for lookup
by type or extension, so it's not available as `Mime[:all]`. We use it
internally as a wildcard for `respond_to` negotiation. If you use this
internal constant, continue to reference it with `Mime::ALL`.
Ref. efc6dd550ee49e7e443f9d72785caa0f240def53
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I'm making this change so that I can construct response objects that
*don't* have the default headers applied. For example, I would like to
construct a response object from the return value of a controller.
If you need to construct a response object with the default headers,
then please use the alternate constructor:
`ActionDispatch::Response.create`
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We should be asking the mime type method for the mime objects rather
than via const lookup
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all parameter parsing is done on the request object now, so we don't
need to worry about at ParamParser middleware
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The test request object will handle parsing XML posts now, so we don't
need to eagerly parse them in the test harness
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The request object will automatically parse these in the
`parse_formatted_parameters` method, so we don't have to worry about it.
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In c546a2b this was changed to mimic how the browser behaves in a real
situation but left out types that were registered.
When this was changed it didn't take `text/plain` or `text/html` content
types into account. This is a problem if you're manipulating the
`Content-Type` headers in your controller tests, and expect a certain
result.
The reason I changed this to use `to_sym` is because if the
`Content-Type` is not registered then the symbol will not exist. If it's
one of the special types we handle that specifically (:json, :xml, or
:url_encoded_form). If it's any registered type we handle it by setting
the `path_parameters` and then the `request_parameters`. If the `to_sym`
returns nil an error will be thrown.
If the controller test sets a `Content-Type` on the request that `Content-Type`
should remain in the header and pass along the filename.
For example:
If a test sets a content type on a post
```
@request.headers['CONTENT_TYPE'] = 'text/plain'
post :create, params: { name: 'foo.txt' }
```
Then `foo.txt` should be in the `request_parameters` and params related
to the path should be in the `path_parameters` and the `Content-Type`
header should match the one set in the `@request`. When c546a2b was
committed `text/plain` and `text/html` types were throwing a "Unknown
Content-Type" error which is misleading and incorrect.
Note: this does not affect how this is handled in the browser, just how
the controller tests handle setting `Content-Type`.
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Just include the modules necessary in the Request object to implement
the things we need. This should make it easier to build delegate
request objects because the API is smaller
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With changes made in 8363b8 and ae29142 cookies that are mutated on the
request like `cookies.signed = x` were not retained in subsequent tests,
breaking cookie authentiation in controller tests.
The test added demonstrates the issue.
The reason we need to select from non-deleted cookies is because without
checking the `@delete_cookies` the `cookie_jar` `@cookies` will send the
wrong cookies to be updated. The code must check for `@deleted_cookies`
before sending an `#update` with the requests cookie_jar cookies.
This follows how the cookie_jar cookies from the request were updated
before these changes.
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The following Rails code failed (with a `KeyError` exception) under
test:
```ruby
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
def user_strategy
# At this point:
# ```ruby
# session == {
# "user_strategy"=>"email",
# "user_identifying_value"=>"hello@world.com"
# }
# ```
if session.key?(:user_strategy)
session.fetch(:user_strategy)
end
end
end
```
When I checked the session's keys (`session.keys`), I got an array of
strings. If I accessed `session[:user_strategy]` I got the expected
`'email'` value. However if I used `session.fetch(:user_strategy)` I
got a `KeyError` exception.
This appears to be a Rails 4.2.4 regression (as the code works under
Rails 4.2.3).
Closes #21383
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superclass already has this method, so remove this one
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This is part of a larger refactoring on controller tests. We needed to
move these methods here so that we could get rid of the `|| key ==
:action || key == :controller` in `assign_parameters`. We know this is
ugly and intend to fix it but for now `generate_extras` needs to be used
in the two methods to access the path and the query_string_keys.
We're adding `:controller` and `:action` to the `query_string_keys`
because we always need a controller and action. If someone passed
`action` or `controller` in in there test they are unambigious - we
know they have to go into the query params.
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`extra_keys` is a confusing variable name because it's not clear what is
"extra". This renames it to `query_string_keys` so it's clear that the
"extra" is just the query string.
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allow testing controllers that use session#fetch with a default value.
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Rack [already implements `redirect?` on the response object](https://github.com/rack/rack/blob/1569a985e17d9caaf94d0e97d95ef642c4ab14ba/lib/rack/response.rb#L141) so we don't need to implement our own.
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ActionController::TestResponse was removed in d9fe10c and caused a test
failure on Action View as its test case still refers to it.
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PATH_INFO is already set, so this branch will never execute.
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we were already generating a path in the previous code (it was just not
returned), so lets just use the already computed path to popluate the
PATH_INFO header
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Since we only work with new instances, these ivars will not be set.
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We should call the setter on `path_parameters` so that we know the hash
will only contain the values that we've set.
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I'd like to put all env mutations together so we can understand how to
change this code to call `call` on the controller
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Since parameters are converted to a query string, they will
automatically be turned in to strings by the query parser
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non_path_parameters is used internally (it never escapes this method) so
we should be able to safely use a regular hash.
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since we are serializing parameters, we don't need to do all the dup
checks on each object.
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We should roundtrip the parameters through their respective encoders /
decoders so that the controller will get parameters similar to what they
actually get in a real world situation
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We should convert request parameters to a query string, then let the
request object parse that query string. This should give us results
that are more similar to the real-world
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We should assign parameters to the request object rather than mutate the
hash that is returned by `query_parameters` or `request_parameters`
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this prevents mutations from being available globally
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Instead of trying to manually clear out a request object, lets just
allocate a new one. The rack ENV is reused and cleaned (still), but the
request object is not.
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