Since the tinymce upgrade from 3.5.6 to 3.5.7 it seems like data attributes are forbidden on tags.
This fix tells tinymce to allow data* properties on img tags
Quoted table / column names to make test cases work in postgres
BUG Fixed issue with SQLQuery::lastRow crashing on empty set. Added test cases for lastRow and firstRow.
Quoted table / column names to make test cases work in postgres
Merge branch '3.0-sqlquery-lastrow-fix' of github.com:tractorcow/sapphire into 3.0-sqlquery-lastrow-fix
- Moved some docs around to reflect this change
- Described how to symlink from vendor/bin/phpunit
- Added note about browser-runs not being recommended
- Added more examples on how to run through "sake",
to complement the existing descriptions for "phpunit"
Since the tinymce upgrade from 3.5.6 to 3.5.7 it seems like data attributes are forbidden on tags.
This fix tells tinymce to allow data* properties on img tags
Refactor the code to make it clear the distinction is made between a
plaintext token and a hashed version. Rename fields so it is more
obvious what is being written and what sent out to the user.
This reuses the salt and algorithm from the Member, which are kept
constant throughout the Member lifetime in a normal scenario. If they do
change, users will need to re-request so the hashes can be regenerated.
Upload::load() assumes that a parent Folder always exists for a file
upload, but that's not always the case, and a non-object error is
given if no parent folder.
Check the folder exists first before getting the ID.
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.