no issue
- replace logic for preparing nested tags
- if you have nested tags in your file, we won't update or update the target tag
- we simply would like to add the relationship to the database
- use same approach as base class
- add `posts_tags` to target post model
- update identifiers
- insert relation by foreign key `tag_id`
- bump bookshelf-relations to 0.1.10
no issue
- change behaviour from updating user references after the actual import to update the user reference before the actual import
- updating user references after the import is way less case intense
- that was the initial decision for updating the references afterwards
- but that does not play well with adding nested relations by identifier
- the refactoring is required for multiple authors
- if we e.g. store invalid author id's, we won't be able to add a belongs-to-many relation for multiple authors
- bookshelf-relations is generic and always tries to find a matching target before attching a model
- invalid user references won't work anymore
- this change has a very good side affect
- 17mb takes on master ~1,5seconds
- on this branch it takes ~45seconds
- also the memory usage is way lower and stabler
- 40mb takes 1,6s (times out on master)
no issue
- otherwise we will have trouble in the future fetching relations by foreign key
- e.g. `tag_id: {id}`
- this won't work if we don't explicitly define the name of the keys
- bookshelf can't fulfil the request
- this does not change any behaviour, it just makes use of the ability to define the names of your foreign keys
no issue
- Ghost does not support adding an author by relation (`post.author = {id: '..'}`)
- Ghost does not support editing an author by relation (`post.author = {id: '..'}`)
- only `author_id` is allowed
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/3658
- the `validateSchema` helper was a bit broken
- if you add a user without email, you will receive a database error
- but the validation error should catch that email is passed with null
- it was broken, because:
- A: it called `toJSON` -> this can remove properties from the output (e.g. password)
- B: we only validated fields, which were part of the JSON data (model.hasOwnProperty)
- we now differentiate between schema validation for update and insert
- fixed one broken import test
- if you import a post without a status, it should not error
- it falls back to the default value
- removed user model `onValidate`
- the user model added a custom implementation of `onValidate`, because of a bug which we experienced (see https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/3638)
- with the refactoring this is no longer required - we only validate fields which have changed when updating resources
- also, removed extra safe catch when logging in (no longer needed - unit tested)
- add lot's of unit tests to proof the code change
- always call the base class, except you have a good reason
no issue
- `isNew` does not work in Ghost, because Ghost does not use auto increment id's
- see https://github.com/bookshelf/bookshelf/issues/1265
- see https://github.com/bookshelf/bookshelf/blob/0.10.3/src/base/model.js#L211
- we only had one occurance, which was anyway redundant
- if you add a user, `hasChanged('password') is true
- if you edit a user and the password has changed, `hasChanged('password')` is true as well
NOTE #1:
1. We can't override `isNew` and throw an error, because bookshelf makes use of `isNew` as well, but it's a fallback if `options.method` is not set.
2. It's hard to re-implement `isNew` based on `options.method`, because then we need to ensure that this value is always set (requires a couple of changes)
NOTE #2:
If we need to differentiate if a model is new or edited, we should manually check for `options.method === insert`.
NOTE #3:
The unit tests are much faster compared to the model integration tests.
I did a comparision with the same test assertion:
- unit test takes 70ms
- integration test takes 190ms
no issue
- added https://github.com/colonyamerican/mock-knex as dev dependency
- the mock serves our data generator test data by default
- but you can define your own if you want
- we need a proper mock for unit testing
- we should not mock bookshelf if possible, otherwise we can't test event flows
no issue
- move password hashing and password comparison to lib/security/password
- added two unit test
- FYI: password hashing takes ~100ms
- we could probably mock password hashing in certain cases when unit testing
no issue
- this commit cleans up the usages of `include` and `withRelated`.
### API layer (`include`)
- as request parameter e.g. `?include=roles,tags`
- as theme API parameter e.g. `{{get .... include="author"}}`
- as internal API access e.g. `api.posts.browse({include: 'author,tags'})`
- the `include` notation is more readable than `withRelated`
- and it allows us to use a different easier format (comma separated list)
- the API utility transforms these more readable properties into model style (or into Ghost style)
### Model access (`withRelated`)
- e.g. `models.Post.findPage({withRelated: ['tags']})`
- driven by bookshelf
---
Commits explained.
* Reorder the usage of `convertOptions`
- 1. validation
- 2. options convertion
- 3. permissions
- the reason is simple, the permission layer access the model layer
- we have to prepare the options before talking to the model layer
- added `convertOptions` where it was missed (not required, but for consistency reasons)
* Use `withRelated` when accessing the model layer and use `include` when accessing the API layer
* Change `convertOptions` API utiliy
- API Usage
- ghost.api(..., {include: 'tags,authors'})
- `include` should only be used when calling the API (either via request or via manual usage)
- `include` is only for readability and easier format
- Ghost (Model Layer Usage)
- models.Post.findOne(..., {withRelated: ['tags', 'authors']})
- should only use `withRelated`
- model layer cannot read 'tags,authors`
- model layer has no idea what `include` means, speaks a different language
- `withRelated` is bookshelf
- internal usage
* include-count plugin: use `withRelated` instead of `include`
- imagine you outsource this plugin to git and publish it to npm
- `include` is an unknown option in bookshelf
* Updated `permittedOptions` in base model
- `include` is no longer a known option
* Remove all occurances of `include` in the model layer
* Extend `filterOptions` base function
- this function should be called as first action
- we clone the unfiltered options
- check if you are using `include` (this is a protection which could help us in the beginning)
- check for permitted and (later on default `withRelated`) options
- the usage is coming in next commit
* Ensure we call `filterOptions` as first action
- use `ghostBookshelf.Model.filterOptions` as first action
- consistent naming pattern for incoming options: `unfilteredOptions`
- re-added allowed options for `toJSON`
- one unsolved architecture problem:
- if you override a function e.g. `edit`
- then you should call `filterOptions` as first action
- the base implementation of e.g. `edit` will call it again
- future improvement
* Removed `findOne` from Invite model
- no longer needed, the base implementation is the same
no issue
- Date comparisons are possible via API, but there's no way to inject a valid date into the get helper
- JavaScript's Date.toString() function outputs dates in a useless format
- Swap to using Date.toISOString() and now the format can be understood anywhere!
- {{#get "posts" filter="published_at:<='{{published_at}}'"}}{{/get}} works now as expected
refs #6103
- simplify `toJSON`
- `baseKey` was not used - have not find a single use case
- all the functionality of our `toJSON` is offered in bookshelf
- `omitPivot` does remove pivot elements from the JSON obj (bookshelf feature)
- `shallow` allows you to not return relations
- make use of `serialize`, see http://bookshelfjs.org/docs/src_base_model.js.html#line260
- fetching nested relations e.g. `users.roles` still works (unrelated to this refactoring)
> pick('shallow', 'baseKey', 'include', 'context')
We will re-add options validation in https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/9427, but then with the official way: use `filterOptions`.
---
We return all fetched relations (pre-defined with `withRelated`) by default.
You can disable it with `shallow:true`.
closes#9445
- redirects all asset requests if https is configured (theme, core, images)
- re-use and extend our url-redirect middleware
- add proper integration tests for our express site app (no db interaction, component testing required for such important use cases)
- i added some more general tests
- should avoid mixed content warnings in the browser
no issue
- discovered while testing
- the fixture utility needed a protection against non existent roles in the database
- it tries to fetch the contributor role from the database, which does not exist yet
closes#9314
* added fixtures for contributor role
* update post api tests to prevent contributor publishing post
* update permissible function in role/user model
* fix additional author code in invites
* update contributor role migration for knex-migrator v3
* fix paths in contrib migration
* ensure contributors can't edit or delete published posts, fix routing tests [ci skip]
* update db fixtures hash
* strip tags from post if contributor
* cleanup post permissible function
* excludedAttrs to ignore tag updates for now (might be removed later)
* ensure contributors can't edit another's post
* migration script for 1.21
no issue
- all of the error message keys were unused
- the only html anchor i found was for mail, but this doesn't change anything, because the admin does only show the message and not the context at the moment
no issue
- if we trigger the IPC message to the CLI and the process manager is systemd, systemd will restart Ghost too early (same for local process manager) - this is a timing issue
- the consequence is that the error log won't happen in Ghost (`content/logs/[domain].error.log` won't contain that error)
- let's reorder both executions
[See](https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost-CLI/pull/612/files#r165817172) this comment on the CLI PR.
no issue
- returning and remembering the data, which was imported, is...
- not required when using the API
- not required when importing via script
- required for tests
- added an option to have control over it
- make more usage of local variables
- the GC cannot tidy up variables, which are defined outside of a loop, but used in the loop
- try to keep less memory in process
- reduce the number of properties we have to remember
no issue
- if you import a JSON file with a post, which has an unknown author,
the target user was removed from the blog
- Ghost can handle this case and still succeeds with import
- but we have stored an `author_id` in the database, which does not map to any user and won't map in the future
- this can trouble if we add support for multiple authors
- currently, we only return the `author_id` to the client and the client can map with `author_id` with users fetched by the API
- if it does not find a user, it just falls back to a different user
- but multiple authors have to be included explicit (`include=authors`) and we will return a mapped (author_id => user) result
- it won't be able to find the user, because we lookup the database
- this would result in an error
- there is in general no reason to import (or store) an unknown/invalid `author_id` into the database
- on import, we show you a warning and you can choose a different author if you want
- solution: fallback to owner user and extend warning
- it's not a behaviour change, you still can import unknown author id's and the import won't fail
- but we ensure valid author id's
- updated test
- further more: returning `author={}` when requesting `include=author` could trouble with ember currently
- it expects the author to be returned
no issue
- the warning is "Transaction was already complete"
- destroying a user happens in a transaction, but the event is not asynchronous
- so we have to ensure that we don't operate on a finished transaction
refs #9127
- permission checks can happen everywhere in the code base
- we would like to create a context class
- global access to `options.context.is(...)`
- please read more about the access plugin in #9127 section "Model layer and the access plugin".
- removed the plugin and use direct context checks
no issue
- the affected test had a wrong payload, but passed anyway because the previous test edited the same title ;)
- this routing test does currently truncate the tables after each test case
- the test can run faster
- if we achieve reducing the routing tests, we can reconsider truncating the db
no issue
1. renamed alias:
- we have a special alias that does initial setup tasks that are only supposed to be run once
- changing the alias to be `setup` rather than `init` otherwise it is too easy to confuse with `grunt init`
2. require globals to be installed manually
- yarn is RUBBISH at managing globals
- internally we use npm for this (actually we have a managed list of globals) and yarn for everything else
- by moving this to documentation, rather than a command, we have flexibility to do this differently
- also explicit globals are better than installing these without the user knowing IMO
3. setup includes knex-migrator
- do this automatically instead of knex-migrator init being a separate command
- every other time knex-migrator is needed, Ghost _should_ tell you what to do
requires https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost-Admin/pull/916
- add "enableDeveloperExperiments" config flag
- allow any HTML payload through in the HTML mobiledoc card
- same approach as taken in the markdown card, running the markup through SimpleDOM isn't necessary and is prone to breaking because of it's limited parsing and error handling abilities
To use Koenig modify your `config.development.json` file and add the following flag to the top-level object:
```
"enableDeveloperExperiments": true
```
If you restart the dev server you will then see a new section on the Labs screen with a Koenig Editor checkbox to enable/disable the editor.
⚠️ The editor is in a _very_ broken state, it's there for developer testing and on-going development. _Do not_ try to use this on any production data!
no issue
- reported in slack (https://ghost.slack.com/files/U8QV8DXQB/F8TSBQ532/image.png)
- do not expose old release notification
- e.g. you are on 1.20.0
- you receive a notification for 1.20.1 to update
- you update to 1.20.1
- ensure we protect exposing the release notification (compare against blog version)
- protect against wrong formats
- @TODO: the notifications could store a `version` property
- by that we could use `notification.version` and don't have to match the version in the message
no issue
- knex@0.12.9
- bookshelf@0.10.3
- and any dependency, which relies on knex@0.14
- we experienced an unwated behaviour where the blog keeps too many connections open
- we have to investigate
no issue
- we increase the client in-memory expiry for production built assets
- as soon as there will be another release, a new asset hash is generated and the client cache is invalidated automatically (doesn't matter how long we store the file in the client)
- the next step is to get rid of having asset hashs part as query params
- ghost-sdk.min.js?v=1234 is becoming e.g. ghost-sdk-1234.min.js
- reasons:
- A: performance tools complain about it
- B: we no longer invalidate the asset hashs for built assets if the theme changes