Due to changed return value of DataObject::get(),
the (negated) check always returned false.
This wasn't noticed in 3.0 because Group->canEdit() is rarely
enforced, but does become noticeable in 3.1 where GridField
checks those object-level permissions.
Thanks to @purplespider for reporting!
Same fix as be97535b for 3.1. Makes the method signature
more consistent with other DataExtension methods,
and comply with its subclass implementation in
Hierarchy->validate(). See accbd7f1e2 for more comments.
This allows a developer to programatically access the size of the DB Varchar field. This allows us to be a bit more DRY and to define the size in one place and limit TextFields to the same value
This reverts commit 1960df8bc3.
Revert "FIX: validate doesn't take var by reference"
This reverts commit 866bb0713b.
@ajshort has changed the method signatures in 1f6f7f08. While it wasn't explicitly noted in the commit message, I think its a good change - objects like a FieldList are always passed by reference in PHP, no need to declare that behaviour.
PHP is throwing strict error warnings when overriding the
updateCMSFields and other functions in custom DataExtensions due to
the fact that the abstract class doesn't declare the variables should
be passed by reference
Bug was most prominent after page publication,
which triggers a node reload. It iterated through
all node attributes to assign them to the existing node,
which apparently includes some non-scalar attributes
that can't simply be copied in IE.
We'll need to fix the "no space left on device" issue,
most likely caused by Postgres keeping too much of a query log,
or somehow creating a history of past data.
For now, having a Postgres build breaking the whole
build process (incl. MySQL builds) does more harm than good.
Sometimes Page_Controller::init() will trigger a redirection. For example, it may redirect to a
canonical URL. In this case, the Security views, which co-opt Page_Controller, need to respect
this.
This reverts commit 356a367eb5.
We can't use headers_sent() to determine an accurate
content length, since PHP defaults to buffering a couple of bytes
even without ob_start() (see "output_buffering" setting).
This makes the patch harmful, since it breaks any responses relying
on more structure data, like removing closing brackets from JSON.
Which in turn breaks the CMS in horrible ways (see #8010).
See #7574 for context.