Currently Members that were deleted would still have their passwords
stored in the DB even though they were deleted. This seems unnecessary
and just increases data that could potentially be compromised later.
I've decoupled `Cookie` from the actual act of setting and getting
cookies. Currently there are a few limitations to how Cookie works that
this change mitigates:
0. `Cookie` currently changes the super global `$_COOKIE` when setting
to make the state of an application a bit more managable, but this is
bad because we shouldn't be modifying super globals
0. One can't actually change the `$cookie_class` once the
`Cookie::$inst` has been instantiated
0. One can't test cookies as there is no class that holds the state of
the cookies (it's just held in the super global which is reset as part
of `Director::test()`
0. One can't tell the origin of a cookie (eg: did the application set it
and it needs to be sent, or did we receive it from the browser?)
0. `time()` was used, so testing was made difficult
0. There was no way to get all the cookies at once (without accessing
the super global)
Todos are on the phpdoc and I'd like to write some tests for the backend
as well as update the docs (if there are any) around cookies.
DOCS Adding `Cookie` docs
Explains basic usage of `Cookie` as well as how the `Cookie_Backend`
controls the setting and getting of cookies and manages state of sent vs
received cookies
Fixing `Cookie` usage
`Cookie` is being used inconsistently with the API throughout framework.
Either by not using `force_expiry` to expire cookies or setting them to
null and then expiring them (which is redundant).
NEW `Director::test()` takes `Cookie_Backend` rather than `array` for `$cookies` param
BUG Fix incompatibility in Member_GroupList
Fix regressions in merges from 3.1
BUG Fix Security failing on test classes
BUG Fix postgresql compatibility
Clarify sql encoding of table names
Database abstraction broken up into controller, connector, query builder, and schema manager, each independently configurable via YAML / Injector
Creation of new DBQueryGenerator for database specific generation of SQL
Support for parameterised queries, move of code base to use these over escaped conditions
Refactor of SQLQuery into separate query classes for each of INSERT UPDATE DELETE and SELECT
Support for PDO
Installation process upgraded to use new ORM
SS_DatabaseException created to handle database errors, maintaining details of raw sql and parameter details for user code designed interested in that data.
Renamed DB static methods to conform correctly to naming conventions (e.g. DB::getConn -> DB::get_conn)
3.2 upgrade docs
Performance Optimisation and simplification of code to use more concise API
API Ability for database adapters to register extensions to ConfigureFromEnv.php
Default to "yyyy-MM-dd" for date format, and "H:mm" for time_format.
Switched to config API for setting/getting values.
Avoid using "MMM" in particular, since it causes
inconsistencies in month names between jQuery UI and Zend_Locale_Format.
Fixes https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-cms/issues/544
This will resolve issues in cases where the site locale may be assigned a value that does not have an explicit translation. E.g. if the locale is en_NZ (and it's appropriate for this to be the assigned locale), Afrikaans will no longer be the default selected locale when creating members. Now en_US is chosen as a better fallback default.
This is a minor ease of use fix that means fewer CMS users can be accidentally created in Afrikaans within NZ based sites.
Test cases included.
Partially reverts b0f38f4990
which broke unit tests relying on the old entity name
in 3.1, where translations and the en.yml master file have been backported to.
Required to save/restore parts of the session information,
which Member nukes indiscriminately on logout.
Specific use case is restoring linkages to temporary databases
on Behat test runs.
If you fail your maximum login attempts and are locked out, further failed login attempts add to your already existing FailedLoginCount as it is only reset if you log in successfully. This means that if you're locked out, then try again, one failure will automatically lock you out again, regardless of what you set your max limit to.
Example:
lock_out_after_incorrect_logins: 3
FailedLoginCount: 0
The user fails three login attempts.
lock_out_after_incorrect_logins: 3
FailedLoginCount: 3
The user is now locked out.
Lockout time passes.
The user fails their 4th login.
lock_out_after_incorrect_logins: 3
FailedLoginCount: 4
This will continue to happen until the user successfully logs in, without giving them the pre-defined amount of login attempts again due to this condition being met after every incorrect login:
```php
if($this->FailedLoginCount >= self::config()->lock_out_after_incorrect_logins) {
```
FailedLoginTestCount Test Added
Adding a hook for registerFailedLogin so that it is possible to add some custom logic when a user fails to login
Also rearranged the write as this function could hit the DB up to 3 times. Now it will me 0 or 1 times.