Broke after I optimized it to work with a TreeDropdownField
which assumes <li><a> structures that thie "preview" dropdowns
don't have. I also failed at the recursion assignment, causing
infinite loops...
Without this change, a call to Cookie::get() immediately after Cookie::set()
won't return the value provided. This creates some unintuitive edge-cases,
although to date it looks like they have been worked around.
The patch doesn't have a test because our testing framework doesn't deal
with cookies well.
SQLQuery->setLimit(0, 99) should result in "SELECT ... LIMIT 0 OFFSET 1".
In fact it does "SELECT ..." without a LIMIT clause at all,
which is unexpected. This is regardless of the $offset value.
This is a necessity for any further 3.1 pushes of master files to getlocalization.
Because we'd otherwise remove existing master strings for CTF etc,
which means we can no longer backport new translations to 3.0
(and there's no way for users to contribute translations to 3.0 via getlocalization).
It's still a very monolithic class, but at least I've refactored it to return
all collected strings without writing it to files (for easier testing).
This references silverstripe/silverstripe-translatable#113
For that issue, we needed to have the DataQuery as the second parameter to
DataQuery's augmentSQL call. Fortunately, DataQuery was already passing this
argument. However, where the function was defined in DataExtension, the
argument was not present. Thus, subclasses of DataExtension could not add the
parameter to their function signature if they were running in PHP strict mode
because PHP will complain that the signatures don't match.
The Session-keepalive ping that is built into LeftAndMain (i.e. all of the CMS admin) can now be
turned off. The main reason you would want to do this is if you have enabled Session.timeout,
and you want users to be locked out of the CMS after a period.
By default, the Session.timeout configuration option specifies the total
session time, regardless of the amount of activity. This change means
that the timeout specifies how long without any further dynamic requests
before the session cookie expires.
The way it does this is to re-set the session cookie expiry with a
subsequent Set-Cookie command each time a request that necessitates
a session is called.
Strictly speaking, it's a change in session timeout semantics, but I think
it's a good one, because total-session-time-regardless-of-activity is a
stupid timeout to include, and has more to do with the mechanics of the
internet than with application security requirements.