Commits
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5b92b9e [Console] Selectively output to STDOUT or OUTPUT stream
Discussion
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[Console] Selectively output to STDOUT or OUTPUT stream
Originally opened in this PR targeting master, but asked to target 2.0 instead: https://github.com/symfony/symfony/pull/4148
Bug fix: yes
Feature addition: no
Backwards compatibility break: no
Symfony2 tests pass: yes
Fixes the following tickets: #1434
Todo: -
As noted in the ticket discussion and linked discussion threads, IBM i5 Series has issues with writing output to STDOUT when viewed via their QP2TERM console. The output is likely not being converted to the correct character-encoding on the system level.
This PR changes the default output stream from `php://stdout` to `php://output` for OS400 environments, which does not exhibit this issue.
I'm using `php_uname('s')` to check for the presence of "OS400", which is at least one of the IBM OS's exhibiting this issue. This check is only done once when executing a Console task and shouldn't see any adverse affects in speed on the 99% other platforms using Symfony.
I'm not a native to the OS400 platform so I can't really anticipate any other possible regressions that might occur from switching output streams for that platform. On my Mac, this change would strip all color output, but the PR code only changes output for OS400 environment. To my knowledge the QP2TERM console doesn't even support color, so no loss there.
I think this change is best to make the Console component at least usable out of the box for anyone else trying to build CLI applications for use on OS400.
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by igorw at 2012-04-29T19:41:21Z
#4146 might also need a fix for this.
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by johnkary at 2012-04-29T20:21:39Z
@igorw Hmm. In this case for #4152 when creating a CLI application, `Symfony\Component\Console\Output\ConsoleOutput` is the [default implementation](5b92b9ed43/src/Symfony/Component/Console/Application.php (L113)) used by `Symfony\Component\Console\Application` when not specifying your own `OutputInterface`. Our hard-coded defaults were causing problems out of the box.
I haven't looked too closely at the PRs surrounding the additions of `StreamingResponse` and your recent `OutputStream` but are we assuming anywhere that `php://stdout` is the default stream used when creating a streaming response? If so it MAY require a check similar to what I implemented for Console. My addition was only necessary because the output was being sent to a CLI console. If output is sent to a browser, I don't believe this would be an issue.
If you have something that needs testing on OS400 just ping me.
Addresses issues with writing console output for IBM i5 Series (OS400).
The normal QP2TERM shell outputs garbage text when attempting to write
directly to STDOUT, likely because of EBCDIC character-encoding used
on IBM platforms. Writing to the OUTPUT mimics using 'echo' or 'print'
and prints properly in the console.
Fixes#1434
Commits
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689a40d [MonologBridge] Fixed the WebProcessor
Discussion
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[MonologBridge] Fixed the WebProcessor
The WebProcessor can now be registered as a kernel.request listener to
get the request instead of passing it as a constructor argument, which
was broken as the request is not yet available when the logger is
instantiated.
I'm sending it to 2.0 even if the way to use the processor is not BC as this is really a bugfix. The processor was simply unusable with the previous way. Tell me if you think it should only be fixed for 2.1
Fixes#3311
Commits
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246c885 [Form] Fixed: Default value of 'error_bubbling' is now determined by the 'single_control' option
d3bb4d0 [Form] Renamed option 'primitive' to 'single_control'
167e64f [Form] Fixed: Field attributes are not rendered in the label anymore. Label attributes are now passed in "label_attr"
68018a1 [Form] Dropped useless test that is guaranteed by OptionsParser tests and that needs to be adapted very often
649752c [Form] Fixed: CSRF token was not displayed on empty complex forms
c623fcf [Form] Fixed: CSRF protection did not run if token was missing
eb75ab1 [Form] Fixed results of the FieldType+FormType merge.
Discussion
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[Form] Fixed errors introduced in the FieldType+FormType merge
Bug fix: yes
Feature addition: no
Backwards compatibility break: yes
Symfony2 tests pass: yes
Fixes the following tickets: #3994, #4000, #2294, #4118
Todo: -
![Travis Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/bschussek/symfony.png?branch=issue3994)
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by Tobion at 2012-04-22T15:39:20Z
`primitive` is a pretty abstract option name. It depends on the person what he considers primitive. Maybe more explicit naming or better documentation what it means.
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by bschussek at 2012-04-22T15:47:29Z
Better suggestions?
The distinction here is between primitive and complex forms, where primitive forms are such forms that can be represented by a single HTML tag. This obviously needs to be documented.
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by Tobion at 2012-04-22T15:49:45Z
Maybe `single_widget` or something like that.
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by vicb at 2012-04-23T13:09:43Z
@Tobion @bschussek would `elementary` be better than `primitive` ?
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by vicb at 2012-04-23T13:17:04Z
and `compound \ composite` better than `complex` ?
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by bschussek at 2012-04-23T14:08:33Z
@vicb I fail to see how elementary/compound is easier to understand than primitive/complex. Maybe single_widget, but what's the opposite of this case? multi_widget?
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by vicb at 2012-04-23T14:15:09Z
Actually I am fine with anything... as long as it is documented.
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by bschussek at 2012-04-23T14:22:31Z
Still I think that this unveals a more profound naming problem. How do we (also in the documentation) name forms with children (formerly "forms") and forms without children (formerly "fields")?
Should we refer to them as
* forms and fields?
* complex and primitive forms?
* ...
We must first answer this question before we can find an intuitive option name. If the documentation always switches between different terminologies, neither will it be understandable nor will this option be easy to remember.
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by vicb at 2012-04-23T15:10:32Z
> Still I think that this unveals a more profound naming problem. How do we (also in the documentation) name forms with children (formerly "forms") and forms without children (formerly "fields")?
To make it clear, I would rather say forms that **can have** children and forms that **can not have** children (i.e. Empty collections have no children but they can have and this is reason why you have to introduce those options, right ? - that could be a good example for the doc).
It will probably be better to refer to "complex" / "primitive" forms in the doc (and use the "form" / "field" terms to explain them).
Note: I think @Tobion concern is that "primitive" / "complex" could be pejorative terms (this is why I have proposed "elementary" / "compound").
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by Tobion at 2012-04-23T16:00:54Z
1. primitive/complex is subjective (and could be pejorative too)
2. elementary/compound is more explicit so probably better than primitive/complex
3. I dislike this option in general. Does it make sense to change this option from a user perspective? I guess it's always the same as long as the widget structure stays the same. So it should be resolved at a higher level dynamically from the widget structure and not exposed to any configuration.
4. In documentation I would use the terms forms and fields. Because all people with HTML knowledge will understand that fields cannot have sub-fields whereas forms can. But since this distinction is not findable in code, it should be mentioned that all these are implemented as a form hierarchy.
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by mvrhov at 2012-04-23T16:02:00Z
how about simple and complex?
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by bschussek at 2012-04-23T16:06:33Z
@Tobion It does not make sense to change this option from the user perspective, still the overloading type has to propagate to FormType whether it is a form or a field, so that the default behaviour is correct.
A second option how to implement this is to add a method `isField` to FormTypeInterface that can be overloaded and receives the options. I don't really like to introduce new methods here unless absolutely required.
What about renaming the option "primitive" to "is_field"? The blocks in the template would then be named "form_widget_field" and "form_widget_form".
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by tristanbes at 2012-04-25T14:01:06Z
Oh, I should've seen this before, i thought I was doing something wrong. (empty collections gets an input field bug)
Please big :UP: on this. When will it be merged ? @bschussek
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by Tobion at 2012-04-25T15:30:28Z
+1 for "is_field" and "form_widget_field" but I would rather use "form_widget_compound" instead of "form_widget_form" which is quite strange.
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by bschussek at 2012-04-26T16:34:04Z
@Tobion "simple" and "compound" then?
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by Tobion at 2012-04-26T16:49:58Z
no "field" and "compound"
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by bschussek at 2012-04-26T17:17:02Z
I don't like "field" for a simple reason: Consider the "date" type. We are typically speaking of the "date" field there. But technically, the "date" field is a compound field. So?
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by Tobion at 2012-04-26T21:17:37Z
I don't understand the open question. You proposed "is_field" and "form_widget_field" yourself. So calling the template block "form_widget_field" is a comprehensible consequence of "is_field". I wouldn't call the date type with multiple inputs a field.
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by tristanbes at 2012-04-26T21:52:39Z
We should take a decision cause right here i got all my forms that are broken because of the empty collection rendering as input field :-).
I guess we are many in that situation.
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by bschussek at 2012-04-27T08:28:16Z
I renamed "primitive" to "single_control" now to match with the HTML specification which names all input elements (input, select etc.) "controls". The opposite is now "compound".
Meanwhile, I added a fix for #4118.
@fabpot This is ready for merge now.
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by Tobion at 2012-04-27T10:22:49Z
Hm, I know naming things is hard and sometimes not really important. But since users need to know which block to override, it is essential to make it clear. I think there is still one issue.
The block is named `form_widget_single_control` in order, as you said, to abstract away if it's an input, select etc. But in fact it can only render `input` and nothing else. So this is misleading.
So you could also simply name it `form_widget_input`.
Apart from that I agree with everything.