refs: TryGhost/Toolbox#147
* Replaces all references to isIgnitionError with isGhostError
* Switches use of GhostError to InternalServerError - as GhostError is no longer public
There are places where InternalServerError is not the valid error, and new errors should be added to the @tryghost/errors package to ensure that we can use semantically correct errors in those cases.
refs: #13380
- The i18n package is deprecated. It is being replaced with the tpl package.
Co-authored-by: Aleksander Chromik <aleksander.chromik@footballco.com>
- single authors were deprecated in v1.22 when we added multiple authors
- we always thought we'd clean this up a lot sooner, but it's stuck because it's an annoying thing to break people's shit over
- still saying "remove in vX" isn't useful, we need to know how long a feature has been deprecated so we can judge whether it's safe to remove
refs 829e8ed010
- i18n is used everywhere but only requires shared or external packages, therefore it's a good candidate for living in shared
- this reduces invalid requires across frontend and server, and lets us use it everywhere until we come up with a better option
- Having these as destructured from the same package is hindering refactoring now
- Events should really only ever be used server-side
- i18n should be a shared module for now so it can be used everywhere until we figure out something better
- Having them seperate also allows us to lint them properly
- deleted files under `core/server/lib/promise` and related test files
- added `@tryghost/promise` as a dependency
- fixed all local requires to point to the new package
refs #12064
- `critical` is meant to be something unpredictable like internal error, something worthy attention, as described in Ignition -3439456d94/README.md (list-of-errors)
- This error level was introduced with - this PR https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/9426, but there is no context provided why this specific value was used. Assuming it's an outdated value as 'not found' is nowhere to be treated in any special way
* refactored `core/frontend/apps` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/frontend/services/{apps, redirects, routing}` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/frontend/services/settings` to destructure common imports
* refactored remaining `core/frontend/services` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/adapters` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/data/{db, exporter, schema, validation}` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/data/importer` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/models/{base, plugins, relations}` to destructure common imports
* refactored remaining `core/server/models` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/api/canary/utils/serializers/output` to destructure common imports
* refactored remaining `core/server/api/canary/utils` to destructure common imports
* refactored remaining `core/server/api/canary` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/api/shared` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/server/api/v2/utils` to destructure common imports
* refactored remaining `core/server/api/v2` to destructure common imports
* refactored `core/frontend/meta` to destructure common imports
* fixed some tests referencing `common.errors` instead of `@tryghost/errors`
- Not all of them need to be updated; only updating the ones that are
causing failures
* fixed errors import being shadowed by local scope
- All var declarations are now const or let as per ES6
- All comma-separated lists / chained declarations are now one declaration per line
- This is for clarity/readability but also made running the var-to-const/let switch smoother
- ESLint rules updated to match
How this was done:
- npm install -g jscodeshift
- git clone https://github.com/cpojer/js-codemod.git
- git clone git@github.com:TryGhost/Ghost.git shallow-ghost
- cd shallow-ghost
- jscodeshift -t ../js-codemod/transforms/unchain-variables.js . -v=2
- jscodeshift -t ../js-codemod/transforms/no-vars.js . -v=2
- yarn
- yarn test
- yarn lint / fix various lint errors (almost all indent) by opening files and saving in vscode
- grunt test-regression
- sorted!
no issue
- Knex removed their use of several Bluebird methods, including `return`
- our code used `return`, but mostly to return null after a destroy action
- these uses have been replaced with `.then(() => null)` in order to
continue returning null and to avoid breaking anything
- Apps are marked as removed in 3.0, never officially launched and have been deprecated for at least 2 years.
- We've slowly removed bits that got in our way or were insecure over time meaning they mostly didn't work
- This cleans up the remainder of the logic
- The tables should be cleaned up in a future major
- Apps are marked as removed in 3.0, never officially launched and have been deprecated for at least 2 years.
- We've slowly removed bits that got in our way or were insecure over time meaning they mostly didn't work
- This cleans up the remainder of the logic
- The tables should be cleaned up in a future major
no issue
- Updated test utilities to clearly identify both fields are not used in API responses
- Updated comment to remember clearning authors/author_id before releasing Ghost 4.0
closes#10512
- Removed field filtering in blog owner fetching because it didn't work before (fields weren't reduced) and now broke generated sql queries (ambiguous id field)
refs #10438
- we now try to match by slug or id or email
- fallback to owner
- you cannot create a user via post endpoint
- Ghost uses the invite flow to add users
- get rid of `id` restriction on API level
refs #9248
- Bookshelf gives access to ".changed" before the update
- Discussion: https://github.com/bookshelf/bookshelf/issues/1943
- We also need to know what has changed after the update to be able to decide if we should trigger events
- Furthermore: Bookshelf cannot handle relation updates, it always marks relations as changed even though they did not change
- Bumped bookshelf-relations to be able to
- know if relations were updated
- ensure we unset relations on bookshelf's ".changed"
refs #10438
- integrations != users
- Ghost's assumption is: if you create a post, the primary author becomes the logged in user
- we have to require authors for integrations
- short fix and needs some more thoughts later
refs #9865
This updates all current permissible methods to use the new function
signature which includes the hasApiKeyPermissions parameter. It also
makes sure that the hasApiKeyPermissions argument is taken into account
whenever checking before returning a resolved promise.
To be continued. This is just a tiny part of the big picture. None of these changes are fully committed to stay as they are.
refs #9865
Both the Post and the Author model implement the permissible method,
however the Post model does not abide by the signature of the
permissible method and add their own parameter "result" at the end.
This makes changes to the permissible method difficult as we have to
take into account multiple signatures.
This changes the Post model permissible method to the correct signature,
but still retains the current functionality. This will make it easier to
break up future permission related PR's so they can be reviwed easier
and faster!
Moved URL attributes logic from the model into API layer
refs #9866
- Moved URL related attribute calculation for posts, users, and tags into API layer
- Added test coverage for url attributes in tags/authors/primary_tags/primary_authors
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
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)