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* Introduce Actionable ErrorsGenadi Samokovarov2019-04-191-0/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Actionable errors let's you dispatch actions from Rails' error pages. This can help you save time if you have a clear action for the resolution of common development errors. The de-facto example are pending migrations. Every time pending migrations are found, a middleware raises an error. With actionable errors, you can run the migrations right from the error page. Other examples include Rails plugins that need to run a rake task to setup themselves. They can now raise actionable errors to run the setup straight from the error pages. Here is how to define an actionable error: ```ruby class PendingMigrationError < MigrationError #:nodoc: include ActiveSupport::ActionableError action "Run pending migrations" do ActiveRecord::Tasks::DatabaseTasks.migrate end end ``` To make an error actionable, include the `ActiveSupport::ActionableError` module and invoke the `action` class macro to define the action. An action needs a name and a procedure to execute. The name is shown as the name of a button on the error pages. Once clicked, it will invoke the given procedure.
* Turn lookup context in to a stack, push and pop if formats changeAaron Patterson2019-02-111-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | This commit keeps a stack of lookup contexts on the ActionView::Base instance. If a format is passed to render, we instantiate a new lookup context and push it on the stack, that way any child calls to "render" will use the same format information as the parent. This also isolates "sibling" calls to render (multiple calls to render in the same template). Fixes #35222 #34138
* Pull generated methods up in to the anonymous subclassAaron Patterson2019-02-061-6/+1
| | | | Then we don't need the extra module.
* Move templates to an anonymous subclass of AV::BaseAaron Patterson2019-02-061-0/+9
| | | | | Now we can throw away the subclass and the generated methods will get GC'd too
* Tighten up the AV::Base constructorAaron Patterson2019-01-291-1/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The AV::Base constructor was too complicated, and this commit tightens up the parameters it will take. At runtime, AV::Base is most commonly constructed here: https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/94d54fa4ab641a0ddeb173409cb41cc5becc02a9/actionview/lib/action_view/rendering.rb#L72-L74 This provides an AV::Renderer instance, a hash of assignments, and a controller instance. Since this is the common case for construction, we should remove logic from the constructor that handles other cases. This commit introduces special constructors for those other cases. Interestingly, most code paths that construct AV::Base "strangely" are tests.
* Introduce a guard against DNS rebinding attacksGenadi Samokovarov2018-12-151-0/+50
The ActionDispatch::HostAuthorization is a new middleware that prevent against DNS rebinding and other Host header attacks. By default it is included only in the development environment with the following configuration: Rails.application.config.hosts = [ IPAddr.new("0.0.0.0/0"), # All IPv4 addresses. IPAddr.new("::/0"), # All IPv6 addresses. "localhost" # The localhost reserved domain. ] In other environments, `Rails.application.config.hosts` is empty and no Host header checks will be done. If you want to guard against header attacks on production, you have to manually permit the allowed hosts with: Rails.application.config.hosts << "product.com" The host of a request is checked against the hosts entries with the case operator (#===), which lets hosts support entries of type RegExp, Proc and IPAddr to name a few. Here is an example with a regexp. # Allow requests from subdomains like `www.product.com` and # `beta1.product.com`. Rails.application.config.hosts << /.*\.product\.com/ A special case is supported that allows you to permit all sub-domains: # Allow requests from subdomains like `www.product.com` and # `beta1.product.com`. Rails.application.config.hosts << ".product.com"