* 🐛 export database read settings from database
no issue
- the backup script uses the export database lib and is broken if knex-migrator is called via shell, the settings cache is not loaded
- i have changed the export database lib to read the settings key directly from the db
* use get('value')
refs #7489
- as we are now using a different migration approach (knex-migrator), we don't need to remember the database version anymore
- it was once used to check the state of a database and based on it we decided to migrate or not
- with knex-migrator everything depends on the migration table entries and the current ghost version you are on
- on current master the leftover usage is to add the db version when exporting the database, which can be replaced by reading the ghost version
- removing this solves also an interesting migration case with knex-migrator:
- you are on 1.0
- you update to 1.1, but 1.1 has no migrations
- the db version would remain in 1.0
- because the db version was only updated when knex migrator executed a migration
refs #7116, refs #2001
- Changes the way Ghost errors are implemented to benefit from proper inheritance
- Moves all error definitions into a single file
- Changes the error constructor to take an options object, rather than needing the arguments to be passed in the correct order.
- Provides a wrapper so that any errors that haven't already been converted to GhostErrors get converted before they are displayed.
Summary of changes:
* 🐛 set NODE_ENV in config handler
* ✨ add GhostError implementation (core/server/errors.js)
- register all errors in one file
- inheritance from GhostError
- option pattern
* 🔥 remove all error files
* ✨ wrap all errors into GhostError in case of HTTP
* 🎨 adaptions
- option pattern for errors
- use GhostError when needed
* 🎨 revert debug deletion and add TODO for error id's
- 🛠 add bunyan and prettyjson, remove morgan
- ✨ add logging module
- GhostLogger class that handles setup of bunyan
- PrettyStream for stdout
- ✨ config for logging
- @TODO: testing level fatal?
- ✨ log each request via GhostLogger (express middleware)
- @TODO: add errors to output
- 🔥 remove errors.updateActiveTheme
- we can read the value from config
- 🔥 remove 15 helper functions in core/server/errors/index.js
- all these functions get replaced by modules:
1. logging
2. error middleware handling for html/json
3. error creation (which will be part of PR #7477)
- ✨ add express error handler for html/json
- one true error handler for express responses
- contains still some TODO's, but they are not high priority for first implementation/integration
- this middleware only takes responsibility of either rendering html responses or return json error responses
- 🎨 use new express error handler in middleware/index
- 404 and 500 handling
- 🎨 return error instead of error message in permissions/index.js
- the rule for error handling should be: if you call a unit, this unit should return a custom Ghost error
- 🎨 wrap serve static module
- rule: if you call a module/unit, you should always wrap this error
- it's always the same rule
- so the caller never has to worry about what comes back
- it's always a clear error instance
- in this case: we return our notfounderror if serve static does not find the resource
- this avoid having checks everywhere
- 🎨 replace usages of errors/index.js functions and adapt tests
- use logging.error, logging.warn
- make tests green
- remove some usages of logging and throwing api errors -> because when a request is involved, logging happens automatically
- 🐛 return errorDetails to Ghost-Admin
- errorDetails is used for Theme error handling
- 🎨 use 500er error for theme is missing error in theme-handler
- 🎨 extend file rotation to 1w
no issue
- removes should-sinon dependency from package.json
- rewrites all usages of should-sinon to use normal should assertions
Unfortunately, should-sinon has very minimal documentation and therefore it is hard to discern what is considered a correctly-written assertion:
- in some cases, refactoring to use should-sinon causes false positives
- in other cases, assertions that work written in the normal way fail when written using should-sinon (e.g. getters, combos with rewire)
The additional overhead created by these issues outweigh any benefit from the easier-to-read assertions
refs #6301
- change knex getter def to be configurable, else it is not testable
- remove exportPath and lang from config - neither are used
- add client_trusted_domains to tables which shouldn't be exported as there are no clients in the export
- change export signature to be an object with `doExport` function consistent with import & easier to test
- cleanup export code so it is clearer, easier to read & to test:
- use mapSeries instead of sequence
- use Promise.props instead of Promise.join
- split functionality into smaller functions
- add test coverage