no issue
- Two affected unit tests were triggering the "slow unit test" error on CI which gave a clue they were either:
- written badly
OR
- were not unit tests at all
- The latter proved to be true and the tests were moved where they belong - into the regression test suite with much more forgiving running itme constraints.
- Unit tests should run quick ALWAYS as that's the first thing that gets triggered before pushing improvements to main. Faster - better.
refs 8a1fd1f57f
refs 5584430ddc
- The change to async/await in the original commit 558443 was causing problems in downstream dependencies (create-error package) where it was loosing a context of "this". It's not a direct dependency so I didn't go yak shaving into where exacly the context is lost.
- The fix to keep a correct context of "this" was sticking to an existing pattern using regular function returning promises. Once we need to redo them into async/await we can investigate if there's a way around create-error's context prolbem
- This is part of the quest to separate the frontend and server & get rid of all the places where there are cross-requires
- At the moment the settings cache is one big shared cache used by the frontend and server liberally
- This change doesn't really solve the fundamental problems, as we still depend on events, and requires from inside frontend
- However it allows us to control the misuse slightly better by getting rid of restricted requires and turning on that eslint ruleset
no issue
- we're going to pull this out into the framework monorepo but
refactoring it here first makes it a lot easier to extract without
losing the history
no issue
- we're going to pull this out into the `framework` monorepo but
refactoring it here first makes it a lot easier to extract without
losing the history
- note: this is very temporary and will be extracted soon
refs:
- cf15f60085
- dd20cc649b
- ccf27f7009
- abf146d61f
- 2b54c92a14
- bb029a53f6
- 95bd7ee675
- 9018b4df22
- df01a6e5f4
- d313726b34
- these plugins were in a state where they were independent enough to be
pulled out into their own packages, which is what we did in the
referenced commits above
- each package is named like `@tryghost/bookshelf-<plugin>`
- to avoid requiring multiple packages into Ghost, we've also created a
wrapper package called `@tryghost/bookshelf-plugins` which re-exports
all these plugins, so the changes in Ghost are very simple - dbebdd43b5
- this commit deletes the plugins + tests, and replaces with our new
package with some minor code changes
- This is a really specific piece of code related to validating models against our internal schema.js format
- This doesn't make sense without a schema.js file
- It does depend on the internal validator and validate tools - but those are used elsewhere too, and can reasonably be moved out of the codebase
- I don't see schema.js moving out of the codebase any time soon. We can move the validator but it would be a class that requires schema via DI
- For now my focus is on getting the data/validation tooling separated and making clear sense
- Improving data/schema can come later :)
- 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
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12791
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/566https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12787 introduced a significant performance regression due to a misunderstanding of when Bookshelf calls `.format()` ([related upstream issue](https://github.com/bookshelf/bookshelf/issues/668)). We expected `.format()` to only be called on save but it's also called when Bookshelf performs fetching and eager loading which happens frequently. `.format()` can be a heavy method as it needs to parse and serialize html and markdown so it should be performed as infrequently as possible.
- override `sync()` in the base model so we can call our own `.formatOnWrite()` method to transform attributes on `update` and `insert` operations
- this was the only feasible location in Bookshelf I could find that is low enough level to not require modifying model instance attributes
- gives models the option to perform heavy transform operations only when writing to the database compared to the usual `.format()` method that is also called on fetch in many situations
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/552
Refactors URL transforms so they take place at the model layer rather than the API serializer layer. Continuation of the pattern created for the settings model in https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12738
- Added checks to all front-end tests to ensure output does not contain the magic replacement string
- includes failing acceptance test for `__GHOST_URL__` appearing in sitemaps
- Removed all transform-ready URL transforms from API serializers
- input serializers transform image urls relative->absolute to keep absolute-urls as the consistent "outside of the database" format
- output serializers should not need to perform any URL transforms as that will be done at the model layer
- Added url transforms to models layer
- removes knowledge from the API serializers which shouldn't need to know how data is stored internally in the database
- makes absolute urls the consistent "outside of the database" URL format
- adds transform step to the sitemap generator because the data used for that is fetched directly via knex which will not run through the bookshelf `parse()` methods
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12736
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/467
knex's `parse()` method is only called on data when directly fetched from the db. This was causing problems when model instances are passed around via events for example because `.get('key')` will return data that was directly set on the model without having gone through the `parse()` transformations. The result of this inconsistency was settings appearing correct when Ghost started up but then being broken as soon as a setting was changed.
- moved absolute/relative->transform-ready URL transformations from the API input serializers to the model's `format()` method and replaced with a relative->absolute transform in API input serializers
- results in consistency because `.get()` on a settings model will always return an URL
- removed transform-ready->absolute transforms from the API output serializers as that is now handled at the model-layer
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/467
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12731
- settings are mostly fetched directly from the settings cache rather than via the API so they aren't subject to the API-level output serializers that transform URLs meaning that URLs in the front-end ended up with raw `__GHOST_URL__` replacement strings
- added images to the Settings model's `parse()` method so they are transformed immediately when fetching from the database
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12347
This change allows a token to be used multiple times for the first 10
seconds after its initial use, this will stop dynamic link checking
software from invaliding magic links.
refs b6728ecb0f
- The "no-shadow" eslint rune was introduced into ghost's eslint plugin (referenced commmit), which resulted in flood of warning in console output when linting the project codebase.
- This cleanup is aiming to make any new linting issues more visible. Follow up commits will contain similar cleanups in other parts of the codebase
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
- for large result sets or complex queries the count query itself can be quite time consuming
- when `limit: 'all'` is passed as an option there's no need to perform a separate count query because we can determine the pagination data from the final result set
- skipped count query when `limit: 'all'` option is present
- re-ordered comments to be closer to the code they reference (ie, why we have our own count query instead of Bookshelf's `.count()`
refs e04f55cce3
- added `tracker.uninstall()` so that previously set up `tracker.on()` listeners are not called by later tests
- fixed `emits edit events` test which was not correctly mocking the select and update queries
closes#12001
* Moved settings validation to the model
This moves the settings validation out of the validation file and into
the model, as it is _only_ used there.
It also sets us up in the future for custom validators on individual
settings.
* Improved validation of stripe_plans setting
- Checks `interval` is a valid string
- Checks `name` & `currency` are strings
* Moved stripe key validation into model
The stripe key settings are all nullable and the regex validation fails
when the input is `null`. Rather than reworking the entirety of how we
validate with default-settings validation objects, this moves the
validation into methods on the Settings model.
* Added tests for new setting validations
Adds tests for both valid and invalid settings, as well as helpers
making future tests easier and less repetitive
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- Updates `boolean` serialization in v2/canary serializers to apply only for `boolean` type settings
- Updates `boolean` transformation in model layer `format`/`parse` to check on `boolean` type setting
- Removes error thrown on Read-only setting for settings edit endpoint
- Updates v2/canary input serializers to remove any Read-only settings (using RO flag) to avoid edits
- Added type/group mappings in the importer when pre-migration settings table import data is present
- Updates tests
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
`Settings.populateDefaults()` is run before migrations during Ghost's startup. This can cause problems when new settings table columns are added (and populated in `default-settings.json`) because `populateDefaults()` was using the model layer which assumes that those columns are available, resulting in `ER_BAD_FIELD_ERROR: Unknown column` type errors.
- query the database for the available `settings` table columns
- switch to using raw knex queries without Bookshelf for insertions so that we're in control of the columns that are added
- use `_.pick` to skip any properties in `default-settings.json` that do not match to an available column - those columns will be added and populated by later migrations
- moving away from using the model to insert settings has the side-effect of not emitting `settings.added/edited` and `settings.x.added/edited` events, this should be fine because `populateDefaults()` is called before anything else is set up and listening
- added a call to `populateDefaults()` in our knex-migrator "before migration" hook so that we have consistent db state across both startup initialised migrations and manually triggered knex migrations
* refactored core/frontend/services/proxy to import common dependency like a normal person
* removed all imports of `common/errors`
* 🔥 removed common/errors module
Co-authored-by: Vikas Potluri <vikaspotluri123.github@gmail.com>
* 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
closes#11825
- The initial implementation had a typo in a role name which didn't allow "Administrator" to edit post's "visibility" attribute
- Added unit tests to check administrator specific role and visibility attribute permission
- Fixed session invalidation for "locked" user
- Currently Ghost API was returning 404 for users having status set to "locked". This lead the user to be stuck in Ghost-Admin with "Rousource Not Found" error message.
- By returning 401 for non-"active" users it allows for the Ghost-Admin to redirect the user to "signin" screen where they would be instructed to reset their password
- Fixed error message returned by session API
- Instead of returning generic 'access' denied message when error happens during `User.check` we want to return more specific error thrown inside of the method, e.g.: 'accountLocked' or 'accountSuspended'
- Fixed messaging for 'accountLocked' i18n, which not corresponds to the
actual UI available to the end user
- Added automatic password reset email to locked users on sign-in
- uses alternative email for required password reset so it's clear that this is a security related reset and not a user-requested reset
- Backported the auto sending of required password reset email to v2 sign-in route
- used by 3rd party clients where the email is necessary for users to know why login is failing
Co-authored-by: Kevin Ansfield <kevin@lookingsideways.co.uk>
- 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!
- 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>