| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Fix routes to match verb and URL path with -g option also.
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Yesterday, when improving how `parsed_body` extracted a parser I wrote
77bbf1e. Then I thought that was too many changes in one commit
and broke it up locally... or so I thought.
When pushed the extra commits removed the changes! Wups!
In shame, lob those changes together here:
* 3b94c38 which meant to fix the CHANGELOG syntax error.
* 5007df5 which meant to mention `parsed_body` in the docs.
* 036a7a0 which meant to memoize the `parsed_body`.
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Fix argument passing to rake routes
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- Fixed related documentation and usage all around
Fixes #23561
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It's common to use several assertions on the parsed response. The response
bodies aren't meant to be mutated. People should make new test requests
instead.
Thus, it should be safe to memoize the parsing.
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Little easier to understand when you know the method that's used.
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We're not guaranteed to have a `RequestEncoder` to assign on `get` requests
because we aren't extracting the parser from the response content type.
Until now.
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When testing:
```ruby
post articles_path, params: { article: { title: 'Ahoy!' } }, as: :json
```
It's common to want to make assertions on the response body. Perhaps the
server responded with JSON, so you write `JSON.parse(response.body)`.
But that gets tedious real quick.
Instead add `parsed_body` which will automatically parse the reponse
body as what the last request was encoded `as`.
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Add `as` to encode a request as a specific mime type.
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Turns
```
post articles_path(format: :json), params: { article: { name: 'Ahoy!' } }.to_json,
headers: { 'Content-Type' => 'application/json' }
```
into
```
post articles_path, params: { article: { name: 'Ahoy!' } }, as: :json
```
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We don't need to use active support in this case because we know the
type that will be returned.
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```
[aaron@TC rails (master)]$ cat xor.rb
a = "\x14b\"\xB4P8\x05\x8D\xC74\xC3\xEC}\xFDf\x8E!h\xCF^\xBF\xA5%\xC6\xF0\xA9\xF9x\x04\xFA\xF1\x82"
b = "O.\xF7\x01\xA9D\xA3\xE1D\x7FU\x85\xFC\x8Ak\e\x04\x8A\x97\x91\xD01\x02\xA4G\x1EIf:Y\x0F@"
def xor_byte_strings(s1, s2)
s1.bytes.zip(s2.bytes).map { |(c1,c2)| c1 ^ c2 }.pack('c*')
end
def xor_byte_strings2(s1, s2)
s2_bytes = s2.bytes
s1.bytes.map.with_index { |c1, i| c1 ^ s2_bytes[i] }.pack('c*')
end
require 'benchmark/ips'
require 'allocation_tracer'
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report 'xor_byte_strings' do
xor_byte_strings a, b
end
x.report 'xor_byte_strings2' do
xor_byte_strings2 a, b
end
end
ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.setup(%i{type})
result = ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.trace do
xor_byte_strings a, b
end
p :xor_byte_strings => result
ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.clear
result = ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.trace do
xor_byte_strings2 a, b
end
p :xor_byte_strings2 => result
[aaron@TC rails (master)]$ ruby -I~/git/allocation_tracer/lib xor.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
xor_byte_strings 10.087k i/100ms
xor_byte_strings2 11.339k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
xor_byte_strings 108.386k (± 5.8%) i/s - 544.698k
xor_byte_strings2 122.239k (± 3.0%) i/s - 612.306k
{:xor_byte_strings=>{[:T_ARRAY]=>[38, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [:T_STRING]=>[2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]}}
{:xor_byte_strings2=>{[:T_ARRAY]=>[3, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [:T_DATA]=>[1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [:T_IMEMO]=>[2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [:T_STRING]=>[2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]}}
```
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fix 'method redefined' warnings
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Hand off the interlock to the new thread in AC::Live
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Most importantly, the original request thread must yield its share lock
while waiting for the live thread to commit -- otherwise a request's
base and live threads can deadlock against each other.
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Referencing Rails.env without checking if it's defined couples
us to Railties.
Fix by avoiding the line breaks if we don't have an env check
to rely on.
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Tests can (and do) access the database from the main thread. In this
case they were starting a transaction, then making a request. The
request would create a new thread, which would allocate a new database
connection. Since the main thread started a transaction that contains
data that the new thread wants to see, the new thread would not see it
due to data visibility from transactions. Spawning the new thread in
production is fine because middleware should not be doing database
manipulation similar to the test harness. Before 603fe20c it was
possible to set the database connection id based on a thread local, but
603fe20c changes the connection lookup code to never look at the
"connection id" but only at the thread object itself. Without that
indirection, we can't force threads to use the same connection pool as
another thread.
Fixes #23483
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- Fixes #23428.
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Prototype, you have served us well. But you are no longer how we make an
XMLHttpRequest. RIP
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Duplicate assert_generates options before modifying it
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Some places were saying filter, while others said filter_options, spare the ambiguity
and use filter throughout.
This inlines a needless local variable and clarifies a route filter consists of defaults
and values to match against.
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Assume the filter is a string, if it wasn't a hash and isn't nil. Remove needless else
and rely on Ruby's default nil return.
Add spaces within hash braces.
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Add options for rake routes task
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Add two options: `-c` and `-g`.
`-g` option returns the urls name, verb and path fields that match the pattern.
`-c` option returns the urls for specific controller.
Fixes #18902, and Fixes #20420
[Anton Davydov & Vipul A M]
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Fixes some parts of #23148.
[ci skip]
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remove unused require
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`with_indifferent_access` had been used in `assigns` method, but has been removed in ca83436.
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There are some cases when the `body` in `response_body=` can be set to
nil. One of those cases is in `actionpack-action_caching` which I found
while upgrading it for Rails 5.
It's not possible to run `body.each` on a `nil` body so we have to
return after we run `response.reset_body!`.
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Issue #16519 covers confusion potentially caused by how HTTP
headers, that contain underscores in their names, are retrieved
through `ActionDispatch::Http::Headers#[]`.
This confusion has its origin in how a CGI maps HTTP header names
to variable names. Even though underscores in header names
are rarely encountered, they are valid according to RFC822 [1].
Nonetheless CGI like variable names, as requested by the Rack
specfication, will only contain underscores and therefore the
original header name cannot be recovered after the Rack server passed
on the environemnt hash. Please, see also the disscussion on
StackOverflow [2], which also links to an explaination in the
nginx documentation [3].
[1] http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc822.txt
[2] http://stackoverflow.com/questions/22856136/why-underscores-are-forbidden-in-http-header-names
[3] https://www.nginx.com/resources/wiki/start/topics/tutorials/config_pitfalls/#missing-disappearing-http-headers
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Accept header is taken from what Safari on El Capitan sends:
```ruby
require 'benchmark/ips'
require 'action_dispatch/http/mime_type'
require 'active_support/all'
accept = 'text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8'
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report "omg" do
Mime::Type.parse(accept)
end
end
```
Before:
```
[aaron@TC actionpack (master)]$ be ruby ../x.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
omg 3.181k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
omg 35.062k (±12.8%) i/s - 174.955k
[aaron@TC actionpack (master)]$ be ruby ../x.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
omg 3.153k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
omg 33.724k (±12.4%) i/s - 167.109k
[aaron@TC actionpack (master)]$ be ruby ../x.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
omg 3.575k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
omg 37.251k (±10.4%) i/s - 185.900k
```
After:
```
[aaron@TC actionpack (master)]$ be ruby ../x.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
omg 3.365k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
omg 40.069k (±16.1%) i/s - 198.535k
[aaron@TC actionpack (master)]$ be ruby ../x.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
omg 4.168k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
omg 47.596k (± 7.7%) i/s - 237.576k
[aaron@TC actionpack (master)]$ be ruby ../x.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
omg 4.282k i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
omg 43.626k (±17.7%) i/s - 209.818k
```
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we never use this custom array outside the mime type `parse` method. We
can reduce the interaction to just a regular array, so we should use
that instead (IOW, there was nothing special about AcceptList so we
should remove it).
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Remove nonsense definition of == from `AcceptItem`. The definition only
compared names and not `q` values or even object identity. The only use
was in the `assort!` method that really just wanted the index of the
item given the item's name. Instead we just change the caller to use
`index` with the block form.
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This commit refactors the private methods that were just aliases to []
to just directly use [] and cache the return values on the stack.
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same strategy as `@text_xml_idx`: cache it on the stack to avoid ivar
lookups and the `||=` call.
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this eliminates the ivar lookup and also eliminates the `||=`
conditional that happens every time we called the `text_xml_idx` method.
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and remove unecessary spaces in string interpolation.
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* 5-0-beta-sec:
bumping version
fix version update task to deal with .beta1.1
Eliminate instance level writers for class accessors
allow :file to be outside rails root, but anything else must be inside the rails view directory
Don't short-circuit reject_if proc
stop caching mime types globally
use secure string comparisons for basic auth username / password
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rails view directory
CVE-2016-0752
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Unknown mime types should not be cached globally. This global cache
leads to a memory leak and a denial of service vulnerability.
CVE-2016-0751
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