| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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this commit removes some direct access to `env`.
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This commit is to abstract the code away from the env hash. It no
longer needs to have the routes key hard coded.
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This changes the renderer class to store the controller and defaults as
an instance variable rather than allocating a new class. You can create
a new renderer with an new env by calling `Renderer#new` or use new
defaults by calling `Renderer#with_defaults` and saving the return value
somewhere.
Also I want to keep the `env` private since I would like to change the
keys in the future. This commit only translates particular keys that
the user requested.
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this means the reader doesn't need to lock, but does have the added cost
of a new object created for every controller
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The controller class is shared among threads, so we need to lock when
allocating the Renderer.
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Remove wrong doc line about AC::Parameters
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AC::Parameters does not inherit from HashWithIndifferentAccess
since #20868 by @sikachu
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`Rack::Session::Abstract::ID` is now deprecated and
`Rack::Session::Abstract::Persisted` should be used instead.
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In c546a2b this was changed to mimic how the browser behaves in a real
situation but left out types that were registered.
When this was changed it didn't take `text/plain` or `text/html` content
types into account. This is a problem if you're manipulating the
`Content-Type` headers in your controller tests, and expect a certain
result.
The reason I changed this to use `to_sym` is because if the
`Content-Type` is not registered then the symbol will not exist. If it's
one of the special types we handle that specifically (:json, :xml, or
:url_encoded_form). If it's any registered type we handle it by setting
the `path_parameters` and then the `request_parameters`. If the `to_sym`
returns nil an error will be thrown.
If the controller test sets a `Content-Type` on the request that `Content-Type`
should remain in the header and pass along the filename.
For example:
If a test sets a content type on a post
```
@request.headers['CONTENT_TYPE'] = 'text/plain'
post :create, params: { name: 'foo.txt' }
```
Then `foo.txt` should be in the `request_parameters` and params related
to the path should be in the `path_parameters` and the `Content-Type`
header should match the one set in the `@request`. When c546a2b was
committed `text/plain` and `text/html` types were throwing a "Unknown
Content-Type" error which is misleading and incorrect.
Note: this does not affect how this is handled in the browser, just how
the controller tests handle setting `Content-Type`.
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This method is specifically about the content type so lets remove the
parameter.
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create a singleton content type that just has nils, so that we don't
have to allocate a content type object all the time.
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If someone sets just a charset, but depends on the implicit type from
rendering, this will store a strange content type header that looks like
this: `; charset=blah`. This is so that when the content type header
is parsed again, it will return nil for the actual type.
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It turns out that the response object never really cares what the mime
type object is, so just use the string.
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pull content-type setting to a private method to dry it up.
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Instead of storing content type information in an ivar and a header,
lets move to just store the content type info in just the header.
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we'll use this method later to lazily parse content type headers.
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everything above metal really doesn't care about setting the content
type, so lets rearrange these methods to be in metal.
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_set_content_type only does something when there is a request object,
otherwise the return value of _get_content_type is always ignored. This
commit moves everything to the module that has access to the request
object so we'll never to_s unless there is a reason
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in the future I would like to make the header hash read only (or at
least remove guarantees that mutations will do anything).
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It's only used there.
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`CookieJar` is only at the start of the chain and has its own
request method, so we don't need it in the module.
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It was the same in both legacy versions of the signed and encrypted cookie jars.
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The `EncryptedCookieJar` already calls it for us, so just delegate to its `parse` implementation.
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`SignedCookieJar`'s parse method already attempts to verify the message,
so we can just call super and try the old verifier if it fails.
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Cuts down on the duplicated reading parts.
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Gets rid of the option parsing and makes what the encryptor does stand out.
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Lets us avoid worrying about parsing the options and doing just what we need.
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Remove the clutter to make PermanentCookieJar's one change stand out.
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Eventually this will be the superclass of all the chained jars.
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bernerdschaefer/bs-polymorphic-url_for-dups-arguments
`url_for` does not modify polymorphic options
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The `url_for` methods in `actionpack` and `actionview`
now make a copy of the provided options
before generating polymorphic paths or URLs.
The bug in the previous behavior
is most noticeable in a case like:
url_options = [:new, :post, param: 'value']
if current_page?(url_options)
css_class = "active"
end
link_to "New Post", url_options, class: css_class
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SSL redirect:
* Move `:host` and `:port` options within `redirect: { … }`. Deprecate.
* Introduce `:status` and `:body` to customize the redirect response.
The 301 permanent default makes it difficult to test the redirect and
back out of it since browsers remember the 301. Test with a 302 or 307
instead, then switch to 301 once you're confident that all is well.
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS):
* Shorter max-age. Shorten the default max-age from 1 year to 180 days,
the low end for https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/ grading and greater
than the 18-week minimum to qualify for browser preload lists.
* Disabling HSTS. Setting `hsts: false` now sets `hsts: { expires: 0 }`
instead of omitting the header. Omitting does nothing to disable HSTS
since browsers hang on to your previous settings until they expire.
Sending `{ hsts: { expires: 0 }}` flushes out old browser settings and
actually disables HSTS:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6797#section-6.1.1
* HSTS Preload. Introduce `preload: true` to set the `preload` flag,
indicating that your site may be included in browser preload lists,
including Chrome, Firefox, Safari, IE11, and Edge. Submit your site:
https://hstspreload.appspot.com
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converts old ID methods to the new abstract store methods in Rack
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Just include the modules necessary in the Request object to implement
the things we need. This should make it easier to build delegate
request objects because the API is smaller
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Escaping and unescaping paths is different than query parameters, and we
need to respect that. This commit uses the new method in Rack to escape
and unescape paths. Fixes #11816
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[ci skip] Added localhost IPv6
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Commit bff61ba, while reducing allocations, caused a regression when an empty
format is passed to a route.
This can happen in cases where you're using an anchor tag, for example:
`https://example.com/parent/575256966.#child_1032289285`.
Because of this change `format` was getting sent in
`parameterized_parts` when previously it was not included. This resulted
in blank `format`'s being returned as `.` when if there was an extension
included it would be `.extension`. Since there was no extension this
caused incorrect URL's.
The test shows this would result in `/posts/show/1.` instead of
`/posts/show/1` which causes bad urls since the format is not present.
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action_controller_overview file Rails' -> Rails" [ci skip]
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