| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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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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appends).
Now `BestStandardsSupport` middleware appends it's `X-UA-Compatible` value to app's value.
Also test for `BestStandardsSupport` middleware added.
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This reverts commit a8560fa361958b33d76e4468eb5c07d82a20196e.
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If a unknown format is passed in a request, the methods html?, xml?, json? ...etc
Nil Exception.
This patch add a class NullMimeTypeObject, that is returned when request.format is unknown
and it responds false to the methods that ends with '?'.
It refers to #7837, not fixes because it's not considered a improvement not a bug.
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this is a patch for #7777.
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Pull #7800 broke the build, this should fix it.
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Raise generic ParseError exception when ParamsParser fails parsing request params
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original exception.
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parsing request params.
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Improve support for minitest's spec DSL
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Mime::Type.browser_generated_types
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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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This is a rebased version of #2520.
Conflicts:
actionpack/test/dispatch/request_test.rb
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There is no memcache gem left in repo.
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Refactor `Mime::Type`
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`parse` method performance improvements - ~27-33%:
accept = "image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, image/pjpeg, application/x-shockwave-flash, application/vnd.ms-excel, application/vnd.ms-powerpoint, application/msword, , pronto/1.00.00, sslvpn/1.00.00.00, */*"
Benchmark.measure{ 1_000_0.times { Mime::Type.parse(accept) }}
old: 1.430000 0.000000 1.430000 ( 1.440977)
new: 0.920000 0.000000 0.920000 ( 0.921813)
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Also, add documentation for alternate usage.
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This allows us to make alterations to the generated routes based on the
scope of the current mapper, and otherwise allows us to move larger
blocks of concerns out of the routes file, altogether.
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This reverts commit 7256cb53e0c34e510a4d59a50d120c0358cf1d99, reversing
changes made to 6ebe22c3ae716d089af1e5090ddb0d12b31af8ac.
Reason: A test was failing.
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This reverts commit e4b33b08d6d2b88b627b1e52c4f349e57c5b89fc.
https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/7452#issuecomment-8094302
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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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There is no memcache gem left in repo.
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With a value of "nosniff", this prevents Internet Explorer from MIME-sniffing a response away from the declared content-type.
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This pattern was introduced as a plugin by @dhh.
The original implementation can be found in
https://github.com/rails/routing_concerns
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their own header object
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When you mount your application at a path, for example /myapp, server
should set SCRIPT_NAME to /myapp. With such information, rails
application knows that it's mounted at /myapp path and it should generate
routes relative to that path.
Before this patch, rails handled SCRIPT_NAME correctly only for regular
apps, but it failed to do it for mounted engines. The solution was to
hardcode default_url_options[:script_name], which is not the best answer
- it will work only when application is mounted at a fixed path.
This patch fixes the situation by respecting original value of
SCRIPT_NAME when generating application's routes from engine and the
other way round - when you generate engine's routes from application.
This is done by using one of 2 pieces of information in env - current
SCRIPT_NAME or SCRIPT_NAME for a corresponding router. This is because
we have 2 cases to handle:
- generating engine's route from application: in this situation
SCRIPT_NAME is basically SCRIPT_NAME set by the server and it
indicates the place where application is mounted, so we can just pass
it as :original_script_name in url_options. :original_script_name is
used because if we use :script_name, router will ignore generating
prefix for engine
- generating application's route from engine: in this situation we
already lost information about the SCRIPT_NAME that server used. For
example if application is mounted at /myapp and engine is mounted at
/blog, at this point SCRIPT_NAME is equal /myapp/blog. Because of that
we need to keep reference to /myapp SCRIPT_NAME by binding it to the
current router. Later on we can extract it and use when generating url
Please note that starting from now you *should not* use
default_url_options[:script_name] explicitly if your server already
passes correct SCRIPT_NAME to rack env.
(closes #6933)
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