$forceWrite was being ignored because it was tested in a part of the
code that is reachable if and only if there are changes to the object.
This patch adds an additional test to correct that logic error.
Also, refrain from needlessly checking for changes when $forceWrite is
true.
Fixes#1687
Lazy loading no longer loads fields from the versions table when querying. This could lead to incorrect data being displayed if the data on the object and the version it pointed to did not match.
API methods to allow setting of the context of the query that generated the DataObject on that object (used by the lazy loading mechanism to correctly query the Stage, Live, or Versions tables)
See https://github.com/silverstripe/sapphire/pull/1178 for context.
Before this was only possible for some specific ones, like onBeforeWrite.
This excludes any callbacks with augment*() or update*() naming,
since these are assumed to be on extension only, with a corresponding
base method available on the class itself (e.g. "updateCMSFields()"
vs "getCMSFields()").
This causes a 'Fatal error: Call to a member function hasMethod() on a non-object'.
This can happen when displaying a field in a gridfield on a belongs_to relationship.
In 3.0 there was some confusion about whether DataLists and ArrayLists
were mutable or not. If DataLists were immutable, they'd return the result, and your code
would look like
$list = $list->filter(....);
If DataLists were mutable, they'd operate on themselves, returning nothing, and your code
would look like
$list->filter(....);
This makes all DataLists and ArrayList immutable for all _searching_ operations.
Operations on DataList that modify the underlying SQL data store remain mutating.
- These functions no longer mutate the existing object, and if you do not capture the value
returned by them will have no effect:
ArrayList#reverse
ArrayList#sort
ArrayList#filter
ArrayList#exclude
DataList#dataQuery (use DataList#alterDataQuery to modify dataQuery in a safe manner)
DataList#where
DataList#limit
DataList#sort
DataList#addFilter
DataList#applyFilterContext
DataList#innerJoin
DataList#leftJoin
DataList#find
DataList#byIDs
DataList#reverse
- DataList#setDataQueryParam has been added as syntactic sugar around the most common
cause of accessing the dataQuery directly - setting query parameters
- RelationList#setForeignID has been removed. Always use RelationList#forForeignID
when querying, and overload RelationList#foreignIDList when subclassing.
- Relatedly,the protected variable RelationList->foreignID has been removed, as the ID is
now stored on a query parameter. Use RelationList#getForeignID to read it.
Avoid PHPUnit throwing "test didn't run any assertions"
notices in PHP. If nothing else, it keeps test output
looking less broken by default, making it more likely
that actual errors do get noticed.
In a usual CMS request, DataObject::db() is called potentially
thousands of times, calling Config::get() constantly for the same
uninherited statics, which is slow. This improves performance
by caching those into DataObject::$_cache_db
On sites with lots of modules, and pages with plenty of database
queries, DataObject::custom_database_fields() can be called
thousands of times, and slow down page render times. This fixes
it so the fields are cached by class in a static variable, and
are cleared when reset() is called on the DataObject.
In cases where a getter on a DataObject calls getComponent() or
other relational getter, $this->model won't have been set at
this point, and a fatal error is triggered.
This fixes it so $this->model is set *before* populateDefaults()
in DataObject::__construct() and the getters can operate normally.
The entire framework repo (with the exception of system-generated files) has been amended to respect the 120c line-length limit. This is in preparation for the enforcement of this rule with PHP_CodeSniffer.
We know the subclass of a record by its ClassName value, but code changes
might have meant that class no longer exists. We used to just break,
but this patch overrides the apparent value of ClassName to be
one that exists in that situation