| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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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.
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Fixes #12777
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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
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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
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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
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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.
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test for regression introduced by https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/9155
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When generating an unnamed url (i.e. using `url_for` with an options
hash) we should skip anything other than standard Rails routes otherwise
it will match the first mounted application or redirect and generate a
url with query parameters rather than raising an error if the options
hash doesn't match any defined routes.
Fixes #8018
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leading .)
Adding a boolean route constraint checks for presence/absence of request property
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routing bugfixes when matching multiple paths
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Closes #9913.
We need to expand the match shorthand syntax for every path.
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This problem was introduced with:
https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/d03aa104e069be4e301efa8cefb90a2a785a7bff
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Closes #10071
`#normalize_path!` depends on the options so we need to call
`#normalize_options!` first to make sure everything is set correctly.
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Rather than trying to use gsub to remove the optional route segments,
which will fail with nested optional segments, use a custom visitor
class that returns a empty string for group nodes.
Closes #9524
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Closes #9466.
Passing `format: true` used to override the constraints: { format: /json/ }
with `/.+/`. This patch only sets the format if there is no constraint present.
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Closes #9435.
Skip valid encoding checks for non-String parameters that come
from the matched route's defaults.
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Closes #9432.
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Closes #7554.
This patch determines the `controller#action` directly
in the `match` method when the shorthand syntax is used.
this prevents problems with namespaces and scopes.
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The current implementation only works correctly if you supply the `:controller`
with directory notation (eg. `:controller => 'admin/posts'`).
The ruby constant notation (eg. `:controller => 'Admin::Posts`) leads to unexpected problems with `url_for`.
This patch prints a warning for every non supported `:controller` option. I also added documentation how
to work with namespaced controllers. The warning links to that documentation in the rails guide.
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Ruby 1.9 freezes Hash string keys by default so where a route is
defined like this:
get 'search' => 'search'
then the Mapper will derive the action from the key. This blows up
later when the action is added to the parameters hash and the
encoding is forced.
Closes #3429
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This commit changes route defaults so that explicit defaults are no
longer required where the key is not part of the path. For example:
resources :posts, bucket_type: 'posts'
will be required whenever constructing the url from a hash such as a
functional test or using url_for directly. However using the explicit
form alters the behavior so it's not required:
resources :projects, defaults: { bucket_type: 'projects' }
This changes existing behavior slightly in that any routes which
only differ in their defaults will match the first route rather
than the closest match.
Closes #8814
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This now allows the use of arrays like this:
get '/foo/:action', to: 'foo', constraints: { subdomain: %w[www admin] }
or constraints where the request method returns an Fixnum like this:
get '/foo', to: 'foo#index', constraints: { port: 8080 }
Note that this only applies to constraints on the request - path
constraints still need to be specified as Regexps as the various
constraints are compiled into a single Regexp.
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be ignored. A regular expression constraint gets overwritten when the
routes.rb file is processed. Changed the overwriting to an ||= instead
of an = assignment.
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Move the routes for each test inside the test method so that
it's easier to see which routes are applicable to which test.
To ensure that each test wasn't invalidated the changes were
done by first removing all of the routes, ensuring that all
of the tests failed and then adding the routes back to each
test one by one. One test for `assert_recognizes` was
removed as it wasn't actually testing the defined routes and
is now tested more thoroughly in routing_assertions_test.rb.
One downside is that the test suite takes about 1s longer
due to having to using `method_missing` for handling the url
helpers as using `include url_helpers` isn't isolated
for each test.
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Was surprising found that this example doesn't work:
scope :api do
resources :users
end
and the right form to use it is:
scope 'api' do
resources :users
end
I think this should work similary as `namespace` where both are allowed.
These two are equivalent:
namespace :api do
resources :users
end
namespace 'api' do
resources :user
end
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This reverts commit f4ad0ebe7a6b17658bddfeb996e3c34835b75623, reversing
changes made to 8b2cbb3a832101f0e672ee309beca0f8c555b292.
Conflicts:
actionpack/CHANGELOG.md
REASON: This added introduced a bug when you have a shorthand route
inside a nested namespace.
See
https://github.com/rafaelfranca/rails/commit/281367eb770faf8077c1fd6194188e92ed1637a1
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this is a patch for #7777.
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When using shortcut routes inside an engine the "to_shorthand" variable
is set to true, causing the module scope of the route to not be applied.
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Many named routes have keys that are required to successfully resolve. If a key is left off like this:
<%= link_to 'user', user_path %>
This will produce an error like this:
No route matches {:action=>"show", :controller=>"users"}
Since we know that the :id is missing, we can add extra debugging information to the error message.
No route matches {:action=>"show", :controller=>"users"} missing required keys: [:id]
This will help new and seasoned developers look closer at their parameters. I've also subclassed the routing error to be clear that this error is a result of attempting to generate a url and not because the user is trying to visit a bad url.
While this may sound trivial this error message is misleading and confuses most developers. The important part isn't what's in the options its's what's missing. Adding this information to the error message will make debugging much more obvious.
This is the sister pull request of https://github.com/rails/journey/pull/44 which will be required to get they missing keys into the correct error message.
Example Development Error in Rails: http://cl.ly/image/3S0T0n1T3421
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by Active Support)
Selecting which key extensions to include in active_support/rails
made apparent the systematic usage of Object#in? in the code base.
After some discussion in
https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/5ea6b0df9a36d033f21b52049426257a4637028d
we decided to remove it and use plain Ruby, which seems enough
for this particular idiom.
In this commit the refactor has been made case by case. Sometimes
include? is the natural alternative, others a simple || is the
way you actually spell the condition in your head, others a case
statement seems more appropriate. I have chosen the one I liked
the most in each case.
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Since #5581 added support for resources with custom params we should
not assume that it is :id when using shallow resource routing.
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The Mapper looks for a :id constraint in the scope to see whether it
should apply a constraint for nested resources. Since #5581 added support
for resource params other than :id, we need to check for a constraint on
the parent resource's param name and not assume it's :id.
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Optional segments with a root scope need to have the leading slash
outside of the parentheses, otherwise the generated url will be empty.
However if the route has non-optional elements then the leading slash
needs to remain inside the parentheses otherwise the generated url
will have two leading slashes, e.g:
Blog::Application.routes.draw do
get '/(:category)', :to => 'posts#index', :as => :root
get '/(:category)/author/:name', :to => 'posts#author', :as => :author
end
$ rake routes
root GET /(:category)(.:format) posts#index
author GET (/:category)/author/:name(.:format) posts#author
This change adds support for optional segments that contain a slash,
allowing support for urls like /page/2 for the root path, e.g:
Blog::Application.routes.draw do
get '/(page/:page)', :to => 'posts#index', :as => :root
end
$ rake routes
root GET /(page/:page)(.:format) posts#index
Fixes #7073
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Related with 5e7d6bba79393de0279917f93b82f3b7b176f4b5
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Passing path parameters with invalid encoding is likely to trigger errors
further on like `ArgumentError (invalid byte sequence in UTF-8)`. This will
result in a 500 error whereas the better error to return is a 400 error which
allows exception notification libraries to filter it out if they wish.
Closes #4450
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