no issue
- removed the `routeKeywords` property from the config and used hard coded keywords.
- removed `routeKeywords` from public configuration API endpoint, as it's no longer used in the Admin.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/65
We are currently work on dynamic routing (aka channels).
An important piece of this feature is the url service, which always knows the url of a resource at any time.
Resources can belong to collections or taxonomies, which can be defined in a [routing yaml file](https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/9528). We are currently shipping portions, which will at end form the full dynamic routing feature.
### Key Notes
- each routing type (collections, taxonomies, static pages) is registered in order - depending on the yaml routes file configuration
- static pages are an internal concept - they sit at the end of the subscriber queue
- we make use of a temporary [`Channels2`](https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/9550/files#diff-9e7251409844521470c9829013cd1563) file, which simulates the current static routing in Ghost (this file will be modified, removed or whatever - this is one of the next steps)
- two way binding: you can ask for a resource url based on the resource id, you can ask for the resource based on the url
- in theory it's possible that multiple resources generate the same url: we don't handle this with collision (because this is error prone), we handle this with the order of serving content. if you ask the service for a resource, which lives behind e.g. /test/, you will get the resource which is served
- loose error handling -> log errors and handle instead of throw error and do nothing (we log the errors with a specific code, so we can react in case there is a bug)
- the url services fetches all resources on bootstrap. we only fetch and keep a reduced set of attributes (basically the main body of a resource)
- the bootstrap time will decrease a very little (depending on the amount of resources you have in your database)
- we still offer the option to disable url preloading (in your config `disableUrlPreload: true`) - this option will be removed as soon as the url service is connected. You can disable the service in case you encounter a problem
- **the url service is not yet connected, we will connect the service step by step. The first version should be released to pre-catch bugs. The next version will add 503 handling if the url service is not ready and it will consume urls for resources.**
----
- the url service generates urls based on resources (posts, pages, users, tags)
- the url service keeps track of resource changes
- the url service keeps track of resource removal/insert
- the architecture:
- each routing type is represented by a url generator
- a routing type is a collection, a taxonomiy or static pages
- a queue which ensures that urls are unique and can be owned by one url generator
- the hierarchy of registration defines that
- we query knex, because bookshelf is too slow
- removed old url service files + logic
- added temp channels alternative (Channels2) -> this file will look different soon, it's for now the temporary connector to the url service. Also the name of the file is not optimal, but that is not really important right now.
no issue
- support more cases
- e.g. multiple where matches
- @TODO
- take time to look for NPM module, which does this already
- test sqlite3 :memory: mode again
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.
no issue
- required for model events
- otherwise you won't receive a full data set
- in worst case you have to re-fetch the post
- required for the url service
- the url service always needs relations (authors,tags) to be able to generate the url properly
@IMPORTANT
- no API change, we still return what you are asking for
- we first edit/add the resource
- then we fetch the data with the API options
- @TODO: this can be optimised and will improve performance
picking/selecting it from the insert/update response
- this is an internal change
closes#9547
- you setup a blog with the following owner:
- email: test@ghost.org
- name: test
- slug: test
- now you import a JSON db file, which holds the exact same owner
- this owner won't be imported, because it's a duplicate
- but the slug is different (!)
- the importer tries to find a matching existing user, but won't find anything
- the importer then send an empty authors array `post.authors=[]` into the model layer
- this is not allowed -> this would mean, you are actively trying to unset all authors
no issue
- if multiple queries run in a transaction, the model events are triggered before the txn finished
- if the txn rolls back, the events are anyway emitted
- the events are triggered too early
- solution:
- `emitChange` needs to detect that a transaction is happening
- it listens on a txn event to determine if events should be triggered
no issue
- if you delete all content, we expect two events
- `post.deleted` and `post.unpublished`
- `post.unpublished` was never triggered, because the api implementation made use of `collection.invoke(`destroy`)`
- what happened?
- you fetch all posts (columns:id)
- you destroy the post (only id column is available)
- the model events are triggered
- but you have no access to a default set of data
- the result is that the event handler can't even tell if this is a post or a page
- added a proper test to ensure which events are triggered
no issue
- add a big comment
- describe:
- how this works
- why this is in place
- what does currently not work
- and why it will work with channels
- @TODO:
- figure out how to disallow:
- `models.Post.findAll({columns: id})`
- `post.save(data)`
- this will trigger bookshelf events and model events
- url generation currently needs a set of attributes (e.g. slug, published_at)
- will be auto-fixed with channels, because you can call `urlService.getUrl(post.id)`
- but what doesn't get solved is our model events
- e.g. `emitChange` needs `post.get('page')` to determine if it's a page
no issue
- this is no longer needed for now
- it was anyway a little bit ugly to modify bookshelf's `changed` object
- if we want to change something about figuring out if a model has changed (including relations)
-> we probably need to override bookshelf
refs #9548
- we always receive date strings from the client in ISO format
- we ensure that we transform these strings into JS dates for comparison
- when the client sends relations, we need to ensure that relations are checked as well
- will only work for the post model for now, because this is the only model which uses `bookshelf-relations`
- added unit tests
- removed some model tests, which do the same
refs #9548
- do not forward `tag.parent` to the model layer
- the model layer should only know `tag.parent_id`
- and the API should only expose `tag.parent` (this is an API feature)
- currently Ghost has a mixture of using `toJSON` and the API validation layer for this
- we just continue with this for now (no time to fix this)
- disallow sending nested-nested relations
- unsupported
- see comment for more information
- this can cause problems with calling `hasChanged` on relations
- add unit tests
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/9548
- the Ghost-admin had sent booleans for `updated_by` and `created_by`
- the easiest fix for now was just to remove the attrs at all
- they are anyway not used on the server, because you can't update these attrs
- only the server has the permission
no issue
- the previous commit will insert two post author relations if the author id of a post is invalid
- if a blog has an invalid author_id (which should be an edge case), we update the author id to the owner id
- `posts_authors` are auto inserted in this case
no issue
This PR adds the server side logic for multiple authors. This adds the ability to add multiple authors per post. We keep and support single authors (maybe till the next major - this is still in discussion)
### key notes
- `authors` are not fetched by default, only if we need them
- the migration script iterates over all posts and figures out if an author_id is valid and exists (in master we can add invalid author_id's) and then adds the relation (falls back to owner if invalid)
- ~~i had to push a fork of bookshelf to npm because we currently can't bump bookshelf + the two bugs i discovered are anyway not yet merged (https://github.com/kirrg001/bookshelf/commits/master)~~ replaced by new bookshelf release
- the implementation of single & multiple authors lives in a single place (introduction of a new concept: model relation)
- if you destroy an author, we keep the behaviour for now -> remove all posts where the primary author id matches. furthermore, remove all relations in posts_authors (e.g. secondary author)
- we make re-use of the `excludeAttrs` concept which was invented in the contributors PR (to protect editing authors as author/contributor role) -> i've added a clear todo that we need a logic to make a diff of the target relation -> both for tags and authors
- `authors` helper available (same as `tags` helper)
- `primary_author` computed field available
- `primary_author` functionality available (same as `primary_tag` e.g. permalinks, prev/next helper etc)
closes#9520
- it contains a dependency bump of the latest Bookshelf release
- Bookshelf introduced a bug in the last release
- see https://github.com/bookshelf/bookshelf/pull/1583
- see https://github.com/bookshelf/bookshelf/pull/1798
- this has caused trouble in Ghost
- the `updated_at` attribute was not automatically set anymore
---
The bookshelf added one breaking change: it's allow to pass custom `updated_at` and `created_at`.
We already have a protection for not being able to override the `created_at` date on update.
We had to add another protection to now allow to only change the `updated_at` property.
You can only change `updated_at` if you actually change something else e.g. the title of a post.
To be able to implement this check i discovered that Bookshelfs `model.changed` object has a tricky behaviour.
It remembers **all** attributes, which where changed, doesn't matter if they are valid or invalid model properties.
We had to add a line of code to avoid remembering none valid model attributes in this object.
e.g. you change `tag.parent` (no valid model attribute). The valid property is `tag.parent_id`.
If you pass `tag.parent` but the value has **not** changed (`tag.parent` === `tag.parent_id`), it will output you `tag.changed.parent`. But this is wrong.
Bookshelf detects `changed` attributes too early. Or if you think the other way around, Ghost detects valid attributes too late.
But the current earliest possible stage is the `onSaving` event, there is no earlier way to pick valid attributes (except of `.forge`, but we don't use this fn ATM).
Later: the API should transform `tag.parent` into `tag.parent_id`, but we are not using it ATM, so no need to pre-optimise.
The API already transforms `post.author` into `post.author_id`.