import Ember from 'ember'; import DS from 'ember-data'; import getRequestErrorMessage from 'ghost/utils/ajax'; import ValidatorExtensions from 'ghost/utils/validator-extensions'; import PostValidator from 'ghost/validators/post'; import SetupValidator from 'ghost/validators/setup'; import SignupValidator from 'ghost/validators/signup'; import SigninValidator from 'ghost/validators/signin'; import SettingValidator from 'ghost/validators/setting'; import ResetValidator from 'ghost/validators/reset'; import UserValidator from 'ghost/validators/user'; import TagSettingsValidator from 'ghost/validators/tag-settings'; // our extensions to the validator library ValidatorExtensions.init(); // This is here because it is used by some things that format errors from api responses // This function should be removed in the notifications refactor // format errors to be used in `notifications.showErrors`. // result is [{message: 'concatenated error messages'}] function formatErrors(errors, opts) { var message = 'There was an error'; opts = opts || {}; if (opts.wasSave && opts.validationType) { message += ' saving this ' + opts.validationType; } if (Ember.isArray(errors)) { // get the validator's error messages from the array. // normalize array members to map to strings. message = errors.map(function (error) { var errorMessage; if (typeof error === 'string') { errorMessage = error; } else { errorMessage = error.message; } return Ember.Handlebars.Utils.escapeExpression(errorMessage); }).join('
').htmlSafe(); } else if (errors instanceof Error) { message += errors.message || '.'; } else if (typeof errors === 'object') { // Get messages from server response message += ': ' + getRequestErrorMessage(errors, true); } else if (typeof errors === 'string') { message += ': ' + errors; } else { message += '.'; } // set format for notifications.showErrors message = [{message: message}]; return message; } /** * The class that gets this mixin will receive these properties and functions. * It will be able to validate any properties on itself (or the model it passes to validate()) * with the use of a declared validator. */ export default Ember.Mixin.create({ // these validators can be passed a model to validate when the class that // mixes in the ValidationEngine declares a validationType equal to a key on this object. // the model is either passed in via `this.validate({ model: object })` // or by calling `this.validate()` without the model property. // in that case the model will be the class that the ValidationEngine // was mixed into, i.e. the controller or Ember Data model. validators: { post: PostValidator, setup: SetupValidator, signup: SignupValidator, signin: SigninValidator, setting: SettingValidator, reset: ResetValidator, user: UserValidator, tag: TagSettingsValidator }, // This adds the Errors object to the validation engine, and shouldn't affect // ember-data models because they essentially use the same thing errors: DS.Errors.create(), /** * Passes the model to the validator specified by validationType. * Returns a promise that will resolve if validation succeeds, and reject if not. * Some options can be specified: * * `model: Object` - you can specify the model to be validated, rather than pass the default value of `this`, * the class that mixes in this mixin. * * `property: String` - you can specify a specific property to validate. If * no property is specified, the entire model will be * validated */ validate: function (opts) { // jscs:disable safeContextKeyword opts = opts || {}; var model = this, type, validator; if (opts.model) { model = opts.model; } else if (this instanceof DS.Model) { model = this; } else if (this.get('model')) { model = this.get('model'); } type = this.get('validationType') || model.get('validationType'); validator = this.get('validators.' + type) || model.get('validators.' + type); opts.validationType = type; return new Ember.RSVP.Promise(function (resolve, reject) { var passed; if (!type || !validator) { return reject(['The validator specified, "' + type + '", did not exist!']); } if (opts.property) { model.get('errors').remove(opts.property); } else { model.get('errors').clear(); } passed = validator.check(model, opts.property); return (passed) ? resolve() : reject(); }); }, /** * The primary goal of this method is to override the `save` method on Ember Data models. * This allows us to run validation before actually trying to save the model to the server. * You can supply options to be passed into the `validate` method, since the ED `save` method takes no options. */ save: function (options) { var self = this, // this is a hack, but needed for async _super calls. // ref: https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/pull/4301 _super = this.__nextSuper; options = options || {}; options.wasSave = true; // model.destroyRecord() calls model.save() behind the scenes. // in that case, we don't need validation checks or error propagation, // because the model itself is being destroyed. if (this.get('isDeleted')) { return this._super(); } // If validation fails, reject with validation errors. // If save to the server fails, reject with server response. return this.validate(options).then(function () { return _super.call(self, options); }).catch(function (result) { // server save failed - validate() would have given back an array if (!Ember.isArray(result)) { if (options.format !== false) { // concatenate all errors into an array with a single object: [{message: 'concatted message'}] result = formatErrors(result, options); } else { // return the array of errors from the server result = getRequestErrorMessage(result); } } return Ember.RSVP.reject(result); }); }, actions: { validate: function (property) { this.validate({property: property}); } } });