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."
I was trying
Member:
extensions:
MyMemberExtension
And it didn't work then someone on IRC pointed that I need to put a '-' before values. So this works.
Member:
extensions:
- MyMemberExtension
Hope will help someone else.
This reverts commit 14b997eea3.
Its just not practical to use the Config API as it stands,
the add_extension() wrapper does more than just a Config->update().
Most use cases can be covered via YML, but any conditional
additions (e.g. in unit tests) can still benefit from the
add_extensions() shorthand.
Rendering potentially 1000s of nodes can exceed the CPU and memory constraints
of a normal PHP process, as well as the rendering capabilities of browsers.
Set a hard maximum for the renderable nodes, deferring to a "show as list" action
in the main CMS tree. For TreeDropdownField, we don't have the list fallback option,
so ask the user to search for the node title instead.
Also makes both the "node_threshold_total" and "node_threshold_leaf" values configurable
Since we can't influence the setting of configuration values,
we also can't set/unset the 'custom_theme' value based on which
theme is set. This means the 'custom_theme' value goes stale,
and we can't rely on it e.g. in FilesystemPublisher.
The 'theme_enabled' toggle is a cleaner solution to the same problem,
since the 'custom_theme' was really just a way to remember the original
theme, while still disabling it. The toggle makes this more explicit,
but also requires users of the 'theme' setting to check for it.
They are now accessed via the Config API, and contain associative rather than indexed arrays.
Before: `array('de_DE' => array('German', 'Deutsch'))`, after: `array('de_DE' => array('name' => 'German', 'native' => 'Deutsch'))`.
Also fixed a i18n.js_i18n config accessor
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
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.
This is a measure to support form fields and controllers
interacting with files in different contexts,
for example an UploadField used in a ModelAdmin,
or a website frontend. The check for 'CMS_ACCESS_AssetAdmin'
was too restricting. This wasn't a problem in 2.x simply because
the old FileField/Upload classes didn't respect File->can*()
permissions.