Ghost/core/server/services/settings/loader.js

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YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
const fs = require('fs-extra'),
path = require('path'),
debug = require('ghost-ignition').debug('services:settings:settings-loader'),
common = require('../../lib/common'),
config = require('../../config'),
✨Dynamic Routing Beta (#9596) refs #9601 ### Dynamic Routing This is the beta version of dynamic routing. - we had a initial implementation of "channels" available in the codebase - we have removed and moved this implementation - there is now a centralised place for dynamic routing - server/services/routing - each routing component is represented by a router type e.g. collections, routes, static pages, taxonomies, rss, preview of posts - keep as much as possible logic of routing helpers, middlewares and controllers - ensure test coverage - connect all the things together - yaml file + validation - routing + routers - url service - sitemaps - url access - deeper implementation of yaml validations - e.g. hard require slashes - ensure routing hierarchy/order - e.g. you enable the subscriber app - you have a custom static page, which lives under the same slug /subscribe - static pages are stronger than apps - e.g. the first collection owns the post it has filtered - a post cannot live in two collections - ensure apps are still working and hook into the routers layer (or better said: and register in the routing service) - put as much as possible comments to the code base for better understanding - ensure a clean debug log - ensure we can unmount routes - e.g. you have a collection permalink of /:slug/ represented by {globals.permalink} - and you change the permalink in the admin to dated permalink - the express route get's refreshed from /:slug/ to /:year/:month/:day/:slug/ - unmount without server restart, yey - ensure we are backwards compatible - e.g. render home.hbs for collection index if collection route is / - ensure you can access your configured permalink from the settings table with {globals.permalink} ### Render 503 if url service did not finish - return 503 if the url service has not finished generating the resource urls ### Rewrite sitemaps - we have rewritten the sitemaps "service", because the url generator does no longer happen on runtime - we generate all urls on bootstrap - the sitemaps service will consume created resource and router urls - these urls will be shown on the xml pages - we listen on url events - we listen on router events - we no longer have to fetch the resources, which is nice - the urlservice pre-fetches resources and emits their urls - the urlservice is the only component who knows which urls are valid - i made some ES6 adaptions - we keep the caching logic -> only regenerate xml if there is a change - updated tests - checked test coverage (100%) ### Re-work usage of Url utility - replace all usages of `urlService.utils.urlFor` by `urlService.getByResourceId` - only for resources e.g. post, author, tag - this is important, because with dynamic routing we no longer create static urls based on the settings permalink on runtime - adapt url utility - adapt tests
2018-06-05 20:02:20 +03:00
yamlParser = require('./yaml-parser'),
validate = require('./validate');
YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
/**
* Reads the desired settings YAML file and passes the
* file to the YAML parser which then returns a JSON object.
* @param {String} setting the requested settings as defined in setting knownSettings
* @returns {Object} settingsFile
YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
*/
module.exports = function loadSettings(setting) {
// we only support the `yaml` file extension. `yml` will be ignored.
const fileName = `${setting}.yaml`;
const contentPath = config.getContentPath('settings');
const filePath = path.join(contentPath, fileName);
try {
const file = fs.readFileSync(filePath, 'utf8');
debug('settings file found for', setting);
YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
✨Dynamic Routing Beta (#9596) refs #9601 ### Dynamic Routing This is the beta version of dynamic routing. - we had a initial implementation of "channels" available in the codebase - we have removed and moved this implementation - there is now a centralised place for dynamic routing - server/services/routing - each routing component is represented by a router type e.g. collections, routes, static pages, taxonomies, rss, preview of posts - keep as much as possible logic of routing helpers, middlewares and controllers - ensure test coverage - connect all the things together - yaml file + validation - routing + routers - url service - sitemaps - url access - deeper implementation of yaml validations - e.g. hard require slashes - ensure routing hierarchy/order - e.g. you enable the subscriber app - you have a custom static page, which lives under the same slug /subscribe - static pages are stronger than apps - e.g. the first collection owns the post it has filtered - a post cannot live in two collections - ensure apps are still working and hook into the routers layer (or better said: and register in the routing service) - put as much as possible comments to the code base for better understanding - ensure a clean debug log - ensure we can unmount routes - e.g. you have a collection permalink of /:slug/ represented by {globals.permalink} - and you change the permalink in the admin to dated permalink - the express route get's refreshed from /:slug/ to /:year/:month/:day/:slug/ - unmount without server restart, yey - ensure we are backwards compatible - e.g. render home.hbs for collection index if collection route is / - ensure you can access your configured permalink from the settings table with {globals.permalink} ### Render 503 if url service did not finish - return 503 if the url service has not finished generating the resource urls ### Rewrite sitemaps - we have rewritten the sitemaps "service", because the url generator does no longer happen on runtime - we generate all urls on bootstrap - the sitemaps service will consume created resource and router urls - these urls will be shown on the xml pages - we listen on url events - we listen on router events - we no longer have to fetch the resources, which is nice - the urlservice pre-fetches resources and emits their urls - the urlservice is the only component who knows which urls are valid - i made some ES6 adaptions - we keep the caching logic -> only regenerate xml if there is a change - updated tests - checked test coverage (100%) ### Re-work usage of Url utility - replace all usages of `urlService.utils.urlFor` by `urlService.getByResourceId` - only for resources e.g. post, author, tag - this is important, because with dynamic routing we no longer create static urls based on the settings permalink on runtime - adapt url utility - adapt tests
2018-06-05 20:02:20 +03:00
const object = yamlParser(file, fileName);
return validate(object);
} catch (err) {
if (common.errors.utils.isIgnitionError(err)) {
throw err;
}
YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
throw new common.errors.GhostError({
message: common.i18n.t('errors.services.settings.loader', {setting: setting, path: contentPath}),
context: filePath,
err: err
YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
});
}
YAML settings loader and parser closes #9528 These code changes introduce a YAML parser which will load and parse YAML files from the `/content/settings` directory. There are three major parts involved: 1. `ensure-settings.js`: this fn takes care that on bootstrap, the supported files are present in the `/content/settings` directory. If the files are not present, they get copied back from our default files. The default files to copy from are located in `core/server/services/settings`. 2. `loader.js`: the settings loader reads the requested `yaml` file from the disk and passes it to the yaml parser, which returns a `json` object of the file. The settings loader throws an error, if the file is not accessible, e. g. because of permission errors. 3. `yaml-parser`: gets passed a `yaml` file and returns a `json` object. If the file is not parseable, it returns a clear error that contains the information, what and where the parsing error occurred (e. g. line number and reason). - added a `get()` fn to settings services, that returns the settings object that's asked for. e. g. `settings.get('routes').then(()...` will return the `routes` settings. - added a `getAll()` fn to settings services, that returns all available settings in an object. The object looks like: `{routes: {routes: {}, collections: {}, resources: {}}, globals: {value: {}}`, assuming that we have to supported settings `routes` and `globals`. Further additions: - config `contentPath` for `settings` - config overrides for default `yaml` files location in `/core/server/services/settings` **Important**: These code changes are in preparation for Dynamic Routing and not yet used. The process of copying the supported `yaml` files (in this first step, the `routes.yaml` file) is not yet activated.
2018-04-13 04:34:03 +03:00
};