This is a bug that combines Hierarchy, Versioned and LeftAndMain admins and CMSSiteTreeFilters.
This bug can be reproduced by having a large site tree with enough deleted pages in it so it doesn't
pre load all the children pages when initially opening an admin. Filter by either 'All pages including deleted'
or 'Deleted pages'. For CMS users it will look like deleted pages are gone.
The solution involves a couple of smaller fixes in both CMS and framework modules.
1) Ensure that 'numHistoricalChildren' are used instead of 'numChildren' when dealing with deleted pages
2) LeftAndMain::currentPage() deletes all the 'marking' cache previously built up by Hierarchy::markPartialTree()
3) Use Versioned::get_included_deleted() instead of raw DB queries against the DataObject tables when calculating parents in CMSSiteTreeFilter
Previously selectFromTable would simply try to select the composite field name. This expands the extraField name to include the children field names and uses CompositeDBField::writeToManipulation to generate the correct SQL for the queries.
Move functionality from static start and destroy functions into instance
methods, allowing these to be overloaded. This works the same way as
calling Session::set() which then in turn calls inst_set()
Additionally use Injector to create the default Session instance to
allow the class to be swapped out.
BUG Disabled disruptive test case in DirectorTest
API RequestProcessor and VersionedRequestFilter now both correctly implement RequestFilter
Better PHPDoc on RequestFilter and implementations
This issue is caused by the odd default behaviour of Zend_Date, which attempts to parse yyyy-mm-dd format date and times as though they were yyyy-dd-mm.
If more than two $from were added through SQLQuery->addFrom(),
the getOrderedJoins() comparison kicks in. It assumes all $from
parts are in array notation, which isn't always the case.
For legacy reasons, and because we don't have full API support,
you can still add literal joins through addFrom('INNER JOIN ...').
On PHP 5.3, the ordering comparison still works because it
allows array access in strings, with string rather than numeric indexes.
Thankfully that's no longer supported in PHP 5.4.
DataQuery::initialiseQuery() will add a default sort to a query,
and when calling up an aggregate it will make a query like this
which doesn't make sense:
SELECT MAX("LastEdited") FROM "Member" ORDER BY "ID"
In this case there is no need to add the ORDER BY, and it will
break databases like MSSQL in cases such as
GenericTemplateGlobalProvider
which provides a default List() function for adding aggregates
into SSViewer template cacheblocks.
If we add a limit, however, then it does make sense:
SELECT MAX("LastEdited") FROM "Member" ORDER BY "ID" LIMIT 10
This fixes SQLQuery::aggregate() to NOT add an ORDER BY to an
aggregate call if there is no limit.