* Funsational/master:
Update PDO session storage to check if any rows are updated when doing a session write. If no rows are udpated when performing a session write it generally means that we have created a new session id somewhere and we have not inserted into the database. This is the case for when calling regenerate_session_id() from the native session storage class. It will update the session id then call sessionWrite() to save the session but since the new session id does not exist in the DB, no rows are updated and any new session attributes such as security tokens are lost.
* hhamon/cookie_path_fix:
[Security] renamed Cookie::isHttponly() to Cookie::isHttpOnly()
[HttpKernel] renamed Cookie::isHttponly() to Cookie::isHttpOnly()
[BrowserKit] renamed Cookie::isHttponly() to Cookie::isHttpOnly()
[HttpFoundation] fix cookie path default value to / and added some new unit tests to cover the class
* DuoSRX/code-coverage:
[HttpFoundation] Fixed a typo in response->setLastModified()
[HttpFoundation] Added some more tests on response
[HttpFoundation] Added some tests on Response
[HttpFoundation] Replace a duplicated test with a method in Response
Fixed code coverage generation when resources folder are deeper
The Response is not available in the DIC anymore.
When you need to create a response, create an instance of
Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response instead.
As a side effect, the Controller::createResponse() and Controller::redirect()
methods have been removed and can easily be replaced as follows:
return $this->createResponse('content', 200, array('foo' => 'bar'));
return new Response('content', 200, array('foo' => 'bar'));
return $this->redirect($url);
return Response::createRedirect($url);
Without this patch, if you call __toString() on a Response,
the content-type auto-detection would never be trigerred
as __toString() changes the default content-type.
This commit breaks functional tests in Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\HttpCache\HttpCacheTest.php. I tried to fix functional tests but I didn\'t manage to. For your information, the "try { } catch" block in the HttpKernel\HttpCache::lookup() method seems strange because I suspect line 274 to never leverage any exception...
The Request constructor no longer uses values from PHP's super globals. If you want a Request populated with these values you must use the new static method Request::fromGlobals().
Your front controllers (i.e. web/app.php, web/app_dev.php ...) will need to be updated:
// old
$kernel->handle(new Request())->send();
// new
$kernel->handle(Request::fromGlobals())->send();
This adds lazy loading for firewall configurations. This is useful when you have multiple firewalls, only the firewalls which are actually needed to process the Request are initialized. So, your event dispatcher is not as costly to initialize anymore.
It also implements re-using of RequestMatchers if all matching rules are the same, and exposes the remaining rules which are already implemented by the request matcher (host, ip, methods) in the access-control section
The current `loadClass()` implementation tries to load a class from the first matching prefix then stops, producing false-negative results. This is especially evident in groups of related libraries, such as Doctrine:
Doctrine
Doctrine\Common
Doctrine\Common\DataFixtures
Doctrine\DBAL
Doctrine\DBAL\Migrations
Each of these libraries is submoduled into a different vendor directory. Depending on what order these libraries are added to a UniversalClassLoader instance, classes may or may not actually be loaded. This fix continues searching registered namespaces and prefixes if the first partial match is negative.
Original explanation from pull request:
I'm Using symfony2 with URL Rewriting to 'hide' index.php.
On form authentication, symfony2 redirect to http://host:port/index.php/login_path instead of http://host:port/login_path. I do understand that, in my case, redirect is set into one of :
FormAuthenticationEntryPoint with getUriForPath()
FormAuthenticationListener with getUriForPath()
Security/Firewal/ExceptionListener with getUri()
This path modify getUri and getUriForPath to :
remove default port from URI
remove script name if not initially present
When an object has a "main" many relation with related "things" (objects,
parameters, ...), the method names are normalized:
* get()
* set()
* all()
* replace()
* remove()
* clear()
* isEmpty()
* add()
* register()
* count()
* keys()
The classes below follow this method naming convention:
* BrowserKit\CookieJar -> Cookie
* BrowserKit\History -> Request
* Console\Application -> Command
* Console\Application\Helper\HelperSet -> HelperInterface
* DependencyInjection\Container -> services
* DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder -> services
* DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\ParameterBag -> parameters
* DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\FrozenParameterBag -> parameters
* DomCrawler\Form -> FormField
* EventDispatcher\Event -> parameters
* Form\FieldGroup -> Field
* HttpFoundation\HeaderBag -> headers
* HttpFoundation\ParameterBag -> parameters
* HttpFoundation\Session -> attributes
* HttpKernel\Profiler\Profiler -> DataCollectorInterface
* Routing\RouteCollection -> Route
* Security\Authentication\AuthenticationProviderManager -> AuthenticationProviderInterface
* Templating\Engine -> HelperInterface
* Translation\MessageCatalogue -> messages
The usage of these methods are only allowed when it is clear that there is a
main relation:
* a CookieJar has many Cookies;
* a Container has many services and many parameters (as services is the main
relation, we use the naming convention for this relation);
* a Console Input has many arguments and many options. There is no "main"
relation, and so the naming convention does not apply.
For many relations where the convention does not apply, the following methods
must be used instead (where XXX is the name of the related thing):
* get() -> getXXX()
* set() -> setXXX()
* all() -> getXXXs()
* replace() -> setXXXs()
* remove() -> removeXXX()
* clear() -> clearXXX()
* isEmpty() -> isEmptyXXX()
* add() -> addXXX()
* register() -> registerXXX()
* count() -> countXXX()
* keys()
The PHP native cache limiter feature has been disabled as this is now managed
by the HeaderBag class directly instead (see below.)
The HeaderBag class uses the following rules to define a sensible and
convervative default value for the Response 'Cache-Control' header:
* If no cache header is defined ('Cache-Control', 'ETag', 'Last-Modified',
and 'Expires'), 'Cache-Control' is set to 'no-cache';
* If 'Cache-Control' is empty, its value is set to "private, max-age=0,
must-revalidate";
* But if at least one 'Cache-Control' directive is set, and no 'public' or
'private' directives have been explicitely added, Symfony2 adds the
'private' directive automatically (except when 's-maxage' is set.)
So, remember to explicitly add the 'public' directive to 'Cache-Control' when
you want shared caches to store your application resources:
// The Response is private by default
$response->setEtag($etag);
$response->setLastModified($date);
$response->setMaxAge(10);
// Change the Response to be public
$response->setPublic();
// Set cache settings in one call
$response->setCache(array(
'etag' => $etag,
'last_modified' => $date,
'max_age' => 10,
'public' => true,
));
The idea of a string port is probably semantically wrong, but it actually follows the convention of at least some web servers ($_SERVER['SERVER_PORT'] is actually a string). And since the $port variable is used as a string in getHttpHost(), it's correct to allow the types not to match.
Some explanations on how it works now:
* The Session is an optional dependency of the Request. If you create the
Request yourself (which is mandatory now in the front controller) and if
you don't inject a Session yourself (which is recommended if you want the
session to be configured via dependency injection), the Symfony2 Kernel
will associate the Session configured in the Container with the Request
automatically.
* When duplicating a request, the session is shared between the parent and
the child (that's because duplicated requests are sub-requests of the main
one most of the time.) Notice that when you use ::create(), the behavior is
the same as for the constructor; no session is attached to the Request.
* Symfony2 tries hard to not create a session cookie when it is not needed
but a Session object is always available (the cookie is only created when
"something" is stored in the session.)
* Symfony2 only starts a session when:
* A session already exists in the request ($_COOKIE[session_name()] is
defined -- this is done by RequestListener);
* There is something written in the session object (the cookie will be sent
to the Client).
* Notice that reading from the session does not start the session anymore (as
we don't need to start a new session to get the default values, and because
if a session exists, it has already been started by RequestListener.)
This fixes a bug in UniversalClassLoader when attempting to autoload class names with leading slashes:
$namespacedClass = "\\Foo\\Bar";
$pearlikeClass = "\\Foo_Bar";
$namespaced = new $namespacedClass();
$pearlike = new $pearlikeClass();
`UniversalClassLoader::loadClass()` was unable to load PEAR-like classes with leading slashes because it found the slash and assumed that the requested class was namespaced. It was unable to load namespaced classes with leading slashes because it would look them up in the autoloader's registered namespaces, and was unable to match '\Foo' to 'Foo'. One (ugly) workaround for the namespaced classes was to register all namespaces twice:
$loader->registerNamespaces(array(
'Foo' => __DIR__ . '/lib',
'\Foo' => __DIR__ . '/lib',
));
But that's not very pretty, nor does it solve the bug with PEAR-like classes. Stripping the leading slash before trying to autoload allows UniversalClassLoader to load both namespaced and PEAR-like classes.