no-issue
This protects our tests against changes to the database schema, which
helps us decouple the API from the database, and make tests less
brittle. It also forces us to manually update the tests if we do make a
change to the API!
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/687
- The approach of generating validation properties using `/server/data/schema` package's tables object is prone to leaking unwanted database fields into API responses
- This refactor takes a tiny step into direction of relying on "allowlist" approach for properties in the API response resources.
- Apart from solving the described property leak problem it also moves toward decoupling tests from `/core/server` dependencies!
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12567
- Changing unique constraint from slug to slug+type should allow for posts and pages to be created with the same slug
- The constraint will be present on application layer for API v4 while we figure out how to deal with it in API v5
no-issue
* Handled send_email_when_published in Posts API
This restores backwards compatibility of the Posts API allowing existing
clients to continue to use the `send_email_when_published` flag. This
change uses two edits, which is unfortunate. The reason being is that
this is an API compatibility issue, not a model issue, so we shouldn't
introduce code to the model layer to handle it. The visibility property
of the model is used to determine how to fall back, and because it can
be left out of the API request, and relies on a default in the settings,
we require that the model decide on the `visibility` before we run our
fallback logic (or we duplicate the `visibility` default at the cost of
maintenance in the future)
* Dropped send_email_when_published column from posts
Since this column is not used any more, we can drop it from the table.
We include an extra migration to repopulate the column in the event of
a rollback
* Updated importer to handle send_email_when_published
Because we currently export this value from Ghost, we should correctly
import it. This follows the same logic as the migrations for this value.
* Included send_email_when_published in API response
As our v3 API documentation includes `send_email_when_published` we must
retain backward compatibility by calculating the property.
* Fixed fields filter with send_email_when_published
* Added safety checks to frame properties
Some parts of the code pass a manually created "frame" which is missing
lots of properties, so we check for the existence of all of them before
using them.
* Fixed 3.1 migration to include columnDefinition
We require that migrations have all the information they need contained
within them as they run in an unknown state of the codebase, which could
be from the commit they are introduced, to any future commit. In this
case the column definition is removed from the schema in 3.38 and the
migration would fail when run in this version or later.
refs #11729
- When ordering is done by fields from a relation (like post's `meta_title` that comes form `posts_meta` table), Bookshelf does not include those relations in the original query which caused errors. To support this usecase added a mechanism to detect fields from a relation and load those relations into query.
- Extended ordering to include table name in ordered field name. The information about the table name is needed to avoid using `tableName` within pagination plugin and gives path to having other than original table ordering fields (e.g. order by posts_meta table fields)
- Added test case to check ordering on posts_meta fields
- Added support for "eager loading" relations. Allows to extend query builder object with joins to related tables,
which could be used in ordering (possibly in filtering later). Bookshelf does not support ordering/filtering by proprieties coming from relations, that's why this kind of plugin and query expansion is needed
- Added note about lack of support for child relations with same property names.
no issue
- adds `search` bookshelf plugin that calls out to an optional `searchQuery()` method on individual models to apply model-specific SQL conditions to queries
- updated the base model's `findPage()` method to use the search plugin within `findPage` calls
- added a `searchQuery` method to the `member` model that performs a basic `LIKE %query%` for both `name` and `email` columns
- allowed the `?search=` parameter to pass through in the `options` object for member browse requests
- move all test files from core/test to test/
- updated all imports and other references
- all code inside of core/ is then application code
- tests are correctly at the root level
- consistent with other repos/projects
Co-authored-by: Kevin Ansfield <kevin@lookingsideways.co.uk>