Anchors should never make it to the server when they are in the browser URL bar, however tests are slightly different and some `Link()` functions may return a URL anchor. Instead of every test checking a link and stripping the anchor, I feel the Director::test() function should strip them off.
Updates the CMS profile page and SecurityAdmin to give developers a few ways to customise the required fields.
Added extension hook updateValidator for getValidator for things like modules to inject required fields to go along with Injector for replacing the entire class for project specific use.
The functionality is easy to replicate in custom controllers,
and is too rarely used to be placed in core.
This also removes the `Member::is_repeat_member()` getter
and the `PastMember`/`IsRepeatMember` template globals.
See https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/silverstripe-dev/b8K3wU64TXg
When using Controller::join_links to join two links with identical query
params, both query params would be used in the result, ending up with
links that look like `../edit/show/14?locale=en_NZ&locale=mi_NZ`
This patch eliminates duplicate query params, so only the last one
for any key is present in the output.
Session tracks the user agent in the session, to add some detection of
stolen session IDs. However this was causing a session to always be
created, even if this request didnt store any data in the session.
urlRewriter will expect a callable as a second parameter,
but will work with the current api and simply raise a deprecation error.
HTTP::absoluteURLs now correctly rewrites urls into absolute urls. Resolves introduced in c56a80d6ce
HTTP::absoluteURLs now handles additional cases where urls were not translated.
Test cases for HTTP::absoluteURLs added for both css and attribute links.
Cleaned up replacement expression and improved documentation.
See discussion at https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!topic/silverstripe-dev/Dodomh9QZjk
Fixes an access issue where all public methods on FormField were allowed,
and not checked for $allowed_actions. Before this patch you could e.g.
call FormField->Value() on the first field by using action_Value.
Removes the following assertion because it only worked due to RequestHandlingTest_AllowedControllerExtension
*not* having $allowed_extensions declared: "Actions on magic methods are only accessible if explicitly allowed on the controller."
FIX: Ensure SSViewer::hasTemplate() is aware of themes.
To do this, RequestHandler::definingClassForAction() has been created, splitting out the code that looks up the class that defines a given action into its own method. This is then overridden in Controller to look at templates.
RequestHandler#handleAction now exists. It takes the request, and
the action to call on itself. All calls from handleRequest to call an action
will go through this method
Controller#handleAction has had it's signature changed to
match new RequestHandler#handleAction
RequestHandler#findAction has been added, which extracts the
"match URL to rules to find action" portion of RequestHandler#handleRequest
into a separate, overrideable function
GridField#handleAction has beeen renamed to handleAlterAction and
CMSBatchActionHandler#handleAction has been renamed to handleBatchAction to
avoid name clash with new RequestHandler#handleAction
Reason for change: The exact behaviour of request handling depended heavily
on whether you inherited from RequestHandler or Controller, and whether the
rule extracted it's action directly (like "foo/$ID" => 'foo') or dynamically
(like "$Action/$ID" => "handleAction"). This cleans up behaviour so
all calls follow the same path through handleRequest and handleAction, and
the additional behaviour that Controller adds is clear.
allowed_actions is now only allowed to reference public methods defined
on the same Controller as the allowed_actions static, and
the wildcard "*" has been deprecated
Controller (and subclasses) failed to enforce $allowed_action restrictions
on parent classes if a child class didn't have it explicitly defined.
Controllers which are extended with $allowed_actions (through an Extension)
now deny access to methods defined on the controller, unless this class also has them in its own
$allowed_actions definition.