It breaks logic flow, e.g. when
Its called by BasicAuth:requireLogin() when basic auth is enabled,
before any controller logic kicks in (on every HTTP request).
This means you can't use session-based BackURLs with basic auth enabled,
breaking flows like redirection after Facebook logins.
I can't see why a clear() was necessary here, looks like a overly
cautious way to prevent infinite loops? Can't see how those
would be caused by requireLogin() though.
Been there since all the way back in 2007: a377a67e54
BUG Fix incompatibility in Member_GroupList
Fix regressions in merges from 3.1
BUG Fix Security failing on test classes
BUG Fix postgresql compatibility
Clarify sql encoding of table names
Database abstraction broken up into controller, connector, query builder, and schema manager, each independently configurable via YAML / Injector
Creation of new DBQueryGenerator for database specific generation of SQL
Support for parameterised queries, move of code base to use these over escaped conditions
Refactor of SQLQuery into separate query classes for each of INSERT UPDATE DELETE and SELECT
Support for PDO
Installation process upgraded to use new ORM
SS_DatabaseException created to handle database errors, maintaining details of raw sql and parameter details for user code designed interested in that data.
Renamed DB static methods to conform correctly to naming conventions (e.g. DB::getConn -> DB::get_conn)
3.2 upgrade docs
Performance Optimisation and simplification of code to use more concise API
API Ability for database adapters to register extensions to ConfigureFromEnv.php
In order to focus a field, it needs to be visible,
which can't be guaranteed on a core level by the login form JavaScript.
Optionally check for visibility via jQuery if it exists,
and allow explicit disabling of this behaviour via a unique identifier.
At the moment, if a user is logged in on a device (say, their phone) but has forgotten their password.
If they attempt to reset their password on their desktop, then open the email on their phone they then see the reset password form *with* the CurrentPassword field. I'm not entirely sure what happens if a DIFFERENT user is currently logged in, but I think they remain logged in and you're effectively trying to change their password.
Both scenarios are not ideal and (in fact) this happens a lot in the real world as it's a legitimate complaint we're receiving from a visitors of one of our client's websites.
Default to "yyyy-MM-dd" for date format, and "H:mm" for time_format.
Switched to config API for setting/getting values.
Avoid using "MMM" in particular, since it causes
inconsistencies in month names between jQuery UI and Zend_Locale_Format.
Fixes https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-cms/issues/544
This will resolve issues in cases where the site locale may be assigned a value that does not have an explicit translation. E.g. if the locale is en_NZ (and it's appropriate for this to be the assigned locale), Afrikaans will no longer be the default selected locale when creating members. Now en_US is chosen as a better fallback default.
This is a minor ease of use fix that means fewer CMS users can be accidentally created in Afrikaans within NZ based sites.
Test cases included.
Partially reverts b0f38f4990
which broke unit tests relying on the old entity name
in 3.1, where translations and the en.yml master file have been backported to.
DataObject::validate() is currently set to protected, but this means
you can't call validate() from outside the context of itself unless
you overload the method to use a public visibility and then call
parent::validate()
As it would turn out, most classes that overload this method already
set the visibility to public, so it would make sense the parent matches
that as well.
Required to save/restore parts of the session information,
which Member nukes indiscriminately on logout.
Specific use case is restoring linkages to temporary databases
on Behat test runs.