| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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v6.0.0.beta3 release
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* Update RAILS_VERSION
* Bundle
* rake update_versions
* rake changelog:header
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Sample example ->
Before:
prathamesh@Prathameshs-MacBook-Pro-2 blog *$ rails server thin
DEPRECATION WARNING: Passing the Rack server name as a regular argument is deprecated
and will be removed in the next Rails version. Please, use the -u
option instead.
After:
prathamesh@Prathameshs-MacBook-Pro-2 squish_app *$ rails server thin
DEPRECATION WARNING: Passing the Rack server name as a regular argument is deprecated and will be removed in the next Rails version. Please, use the -u option instead.
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Ensure that the `_blob` association is properly loaded when attaching `::One`
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attaching `::One`
Consider a model with `One` and `Many` attachments configured:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one_attached :avatar
has_many_attached :highlights
end
=== One Attachment
After attaching `One` attachment (`:avatar`), we can see that the associated
`_blob` record (`:avatar_blob`) still returns as `nil`.
user.avatar.attach(blob)
user.avatar_attachment.present? => true
user.avatar_blob.present? => false # Incorrect!
This is a false negative. It happens because after the attachment and blob
are built:
1. The record already has its `_blob` association loaded, as `nil`
2. the `::Attachment` is associated with the record but the `::Blob` only gets
associated with the `::Attachment`, not the record itself
In reality, the blob does in fact exist. We can verify this as follows:
user.avatar.attach(blob)
user.avatar_attachment.blob.present? => true # Blob does exist!
The fix in this change is to simply assign the `::Blob` when assigning
the `::Attachment`. After this fix is applied, we correctly observe:
user.avatar.attach(blob)
user.avatar_attachment.present? => true
user.avatar_blob.present? => true # Woohoo!
=== Many Attachments
We don't see this issue with `Many` attachments because the `_blob` association
is already loaded as part of attaching more/newer blobs.
user.highlights.attach(blob)
user.highlights_attachments.any? => true
user.highlights_blobs.any? => true
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Since b21f50d8ae36d9b50b673579e17bccbe55363b34, requiring active_storage
on its own has failed with the following error:
activestorage/lib/active_storage.rb:55:in `<module:ActiveStorage>': undefined method `minutes' for 5:Integer (NoMethodError)
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include the content type when uploading to S3
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The code snippet within the usage documentation comment used the wrong object namespace for the ActiveStorage::Analyzer::VideoAnalyzer
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We need this in order to be able to add this migration for users that
use ActiveStorage during update their apps from Rails 5.2 to Rails 6.0.
Related to #33405
`rake app:update` should update active_storage
`rake app:update` should execute `rake active_storage:update`
if it is used in the app that is being updated.
It will add new active_storage's migrations to users' apps during update Rails.
Context https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/33405#discussion_r204239399
Also, see a related discussion in the Campfire:
https://3.basecamp.com/3076981/buckets/24956/chats/12416418@1236713081
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Currently we sometimes find a redundant begin block in code review
(e.g. https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/33604#discussion_r209784205).
I'd like to enable `Style/RedundantBegin` cop to avoid that, since
rescue/else/ensure are allowed inside do/end blocks in Ruby 2.5
(https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12906), so we'd probably meets with
that situation than before.
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* Force content-type to binary on service urls for relevant content types
We have a list of content types that must be forcibly served as binary,
but in practice this only means to serve them as attachment always. We
should also set the Content-Type to the configured binary type.
As a bonus: add text/cache-manifest to the list of content types to be
served as binary by default.
* Store content-disposition and content-type in GCS
Forcing these in the service_url when serving the file works fine for S3
and Azure, since these services include params in the signature.
However, GCS specifically excludes response-content-disposition and
response-content-type from the signature, which means an attacker can
modify these and have files that should be served as text/plain attachments
served as inline HTML for example. This makes our attempt to force
specific files to be served as binary and as attachment can be easily
bypassed.
The only way this can be forced in GCS is by storing
content-disposition and content-type in the object metadata.
* Update GCS object metadata after identifying blob
In some cases we create the blob and upload the data before identifying
the content-type, which means we can't store that in GCS right when
uploading. In these, after creating the attachment, we enqueue a job to
identify the blob, and set the content-type.
In other cases, files are uploaded to the storage service via direct
upload link. We create the blob before the direct upload, which happens
independently from the blob creation itself. We then mark the blob as
identified, but we have already the content-type we need without having
put it in the service.
In these two cases, then, we need to update the metadata in the GCS
service.
* Include content-type and disposition in the verified key for disk service
This prevents an attacker from modifying these params in the service
signed URL, which is particularly important when we want to force them
to have specific values for security reasons.
* Allow only a list of specific content types to be served inline
This is different from the content types that must be served as binary
in the sense that any content type not in this list will be always
served as attachment but with its original content type. Only types in
this list are allowed to be served either inline or as attachment.
Apart from forcing this in the service URL, for GCS we need to store the
disposition in the metadata.
Fix CVE-2018-16477.
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Encode Content-Disposition filenames on send_data and send_file
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Applications can configure the route prefix prepended to the Active
Storage routes. By default this maintains the previous prefix
`/rails/active_storage` but supports custom prefixes.
Before this change the route for serving blobs is fixed to
`/rails/active_storage/blobs/:signed_id/*filename`. After this change
it's possible to configure the route to something like
`/files/blobs/:signed_id/*filename`.
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The Azure gem uses `Azure::Core::Http::HTTPError` for everything:
checksum mismatch, missing object, network unavailable, and many more.
(https://www.rubydoc.info/github/yaxia/azure-storage-ruby/Azure/Core/Http/HTTPError).
Rescuing that class obscures all sorts of configuration errors. We
should check the type of error in those rescue blocks, and reraise when
needed.
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cbothner/azure-service-swallowing-all-errors"
This reverts commit b204d167c5cfebd59f771d406178e371811ac43a, reversing
changes made to de6a200f82a3de399fa685d583503bc88dbc5e9f.
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The Azure gem uses `Azure::Core::Http::HTTPError` for everything:
checksum mismatch, missing object, network unavailable, and many more.
(https://www.rubydoc.info/github/yaxia/azure-storage-ruby/Azure/Core/Http/HTTPError).
Rescuing that class obscures all sorts of configuration errors. We
should check the type of error in those rescue blocks, and reraise when
needed.
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`ActiveStorage::Blob#download` and `ActiveStorage::Blob#open` raise
`ActiveStorage::FileNotFoundError` when the corresponding file is missing
from the storage service. Services translate service-specific missing
object exceptions (e.g. `Google::Cloud::NotFoundError` for the GCS service
and `Errno::ENOENT` for the disk service) into
`ActiveStorage::FileNotFoundError`.
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Closes #33292.
[Andrei Makarov & George Claghorn]
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Avoid mangling service names that end in S:
"GCS".classify # => "GC"
"GCS".camelize # => "GCS"
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Closes #32530.
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PDFPreviewer became MuPDFPreviewer in 0b717c2. Previewers are simple enough that we can just provide a single example.
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overwrite previous attachments
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Closes #32193.
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