| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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method_call_assertions
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This clears the transaction record state when the transaction finishes
with a `:committed` status.
Considering the following example where `name` is a required attribute.
Before we had `new_record?` returning `true` for a persisted record:
```ruby
author = Author.create! name: 'foo'
author.name = nil
author.save # => false
author.new_record? # => true
```
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When executing an `ActionController::Parameters#fetch` with a block
that raises a `KeyError` the raised `KeyError` will be rescued and
converted to an `ActionController::ParameterMissing` exception,
covering up the original exception.
[Jonas Schubert Erlandsson & Roque Pinel]
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This is another take at #14384 as we decided to wait until `master` is
targeting Rails 5.0. This commit is implementation-complete, as it
guarantees that all the public methods on the hash-inherited Parameters
are still working (based on test case). We can decide to follow-up later
if we want to remove some methods out from Parameters.
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The current implementation of ActionController::Parameters.const_missing
returns `ActionController::Parameters.always_permitted_parameters` even
if its `super` returns a constant without raising error. This prevents its
subclass in a autoloading module/class from taking advantage of
autoloading constants.
class SomeParameters < ActionController::Parameters
def do_something
DefinedSomewhere.do_something
end
end
In the code above, `DefinedSomewhere` is to be autoloaded with
`Module.const_missing` but `ActionController::Parameters.const_missing`
returns `always_permitted_parameters` instead of the autoloaded
constant.
This pull request fixes the issue respecting `const_missing`'s `super`.
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As suggested in #16299([1]), this method should be a new public API for
retrieving unfiltered parameters from `ActionController::Parameters`
object, given that `Parameters#to_hash` will no longer work in Rails
5.0+ as we stop inheriting `Parameters` from `Hash`.
[1]: https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/16299#issuecomment-50220919
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* `each`
* `each_pair`
* `delete`
* `select!`
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This is to make sure that `permitted` status is maintained on the
resulting object.
I found these methods that needs to be redefined by looking for
`self.class.new` in the code.
* extract!
* transform_keys
* transform_values
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`ActionController::Parameters#to_h` now returns a `Hash` with
unpermitted keys removed. This change is to reflect on a security
concern where some method performed on an `ActionController::Parameters`
may yield a `Hash` object which does not maintain `permitted?` status.
If you would like to get a `Hash` with all the keys intact, duplicate
and mark it as permitted before calling `#to_h`.
params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Senjougahara Hitagi')
params.to_h # => {}
unsafe_params = params.dup.permit!
unsafe_params.to_h # => {"name"=>"Senjougahara Hitagi"}
safe_params = params.permit(:name)
safe_params.to_h # => {"name"=>"Senjougahara Hitagi"}
This change is consider a stopgap as we cannot chage the code to stop
`ActionController::Parameters` to inherit from
`HashWithIndifferentAccess` in the next minor release.
Also, adding a CHANGELOG entry to mention that
`ActionController::Parameters` will not inheriting from
`HashWithIndifferentAccess` in the next major version.
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Add always permitted parameters as a configurable option.
[Rafael Mendonça França + Gary S. Weaver]
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* General style fixes.
* Add changes to configuration guide.
* Add missing tests.
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This is a regression test for 29844dd.
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We cannot cache keys because arrays are mutable. We rather want to cache
the arrays. This behaviour is tailor-made for the usage pattern strongs
params is designed for.
In a forthcoming commit I am going to add a test that covers why we need
to cache by value.
Every strong params instance has a live span of a request, the cache goes
away with the object. Since strong params have such a concrete intention,
it would be interesting to see if there are actually any real-world use
cases that are an actual leak, one that practically may matter.
I am not convinced that the theoretical leak has any practical consequences,
but if it can be shown there are, then I believe we should either get rid of
the cache (which is an optimization), or else wipe it in the mutating API.
This reverts commit e63be2769c039e4e9ada523a8497ce3206cc8a9b.
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memory leak demonstrated on @tenderlove's latest blog post:
http://tenderlovemaking.com/2014/06/02/yagni-methods-are-killing-me.html
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when only 1 parameter is unpermitted.
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#13382]
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sebasoga/change_strong_parameters_require_behaviour"
This reverts commit c2b5a8e61ba0f35015e6ac949a5c8fce2042a1f2, reversing
changes made to 1918b12c0429caec2a6134ac5e5b42ade103fe90.
See: https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/9660#issuecomment-27627493
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sebasoga/change_strong_parameters_require_behaviour
Change ActionController::Parameters#require behavior when value is empty
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When the value for the required key is empty an ActionController::ParameterMissing is raised which gets caught by ActionController::Base and turned into a 400 Bad Request reply with a message in the body saying the key is missing, which is misleading.
With these changes, ActionController::EmptyParameter will be raised which ActionController::Base will catch and turn into a 400 Bad Request reply with a message in the body saying the key value is empty.
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closes #12149
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https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/cc1c3c5be061e7572018f734e5239750ab449e3f
Now instead of raise, we log by default in development and test
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the discussion on https://github.com/rails/strong_parameters/pull/75.
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Also changed the exception to UnpermittedParameters
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provided.
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