* 2.0:
[Tests] Skip segfaulting form test
Rename test file
[BrowserKit] added missing @return PHPDoc for the Client::submit() method.
also test PHP 5.3.2, since this is the official lowest supported PHP version
Commits
-------
85ca8e3 ParameterBag no longer resolves parameters that have spaces.
99011ca Added tests for ParameterBag parameters with spaces
Discussion
----------
[DependencyInjection] Parameters with spaces are not resolved
Bug fix: yes
Feature addition: no
Backwards compatibility break: no (not likely, according to convention)
Symfony2 tests pass: yes
Fixes the following tickets: #2884
`ParameterBag` currently resolves anything between two `%` signs, which creates issues for any parameters in the DIC that are legitimate text. This PR enforces the [documented parameter convention](http://symfony.com/doc/2.0/book/service_container.html#service-parameters) so that only `%parameters.with.no_spaces%` are resolved.
I was considering using instead `^%([^\w\._-]+)%$`, but felt that was too constricting & could easily introduce issues with existing applications.
Commits
-------
49d2685 [Form] Add default validation to TextType field (and related)
Discussion
----------
[Form] Add default transformer to TextType field (and related)
Bug fix: yes&no (?)
Feature addition: yes (?)
BC break: no
Symfony2 tests pass: yes
Fixes the following tickets: #1962.
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by stloyd at 2011/12/19 03:43:37 -0800
@fabpot ping ;-)
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by fabpot at 2011/12/19 10:58:20 -0800
Is it really needed? I have a feeling that it enforces unneeded constraints, but I can be wrong of course.
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by hlecorche at 2011/12/20 02:31:03 -0800
It's needed because with TextType field, and without the ValueToStringTransformer, the user data (when sending the form) can be an array !!!
For example:
- if there is a TextType field
- and if there is a MaxLengthValidator
- and if the user data (when sending the form) is an array
So the exception "Expected argument of type string, array given in src\Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\MaxLengthValidator.php at line 40" is thrown
Commits
-------
3ae976c fixed CS
84ad40d added cache clear hook
Discussion
----------
[Cache][2.1] Added cache clear hook
Allows bundles to hook into the `cache:clear` command by using the `kernel.cache_clearer` tag instead of using the `event_dispatcher` service.
See #1884
Bug fix: No
Feature addition: Yes
Backwards compatibility break: No
Symfony2 tests pass: Yes
Fixes the following tickets: #1884
References the following tickets: #1884
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by dustin10 at 2011/12/16 11:03:54 -0800
Rebased to squash all commits into one.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/17 05:27:29 -0800
@fabpot: we figured that priorities wouldn't be needed for cleaning .. haven't tested the PR, but conceptually it looks good to me and aside from the priority stuff its modeled after the cache warners.
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by dustin10 at 2011/12/19 09:46:26 -0800
@fabpot Updated to pass cache dir to `clear` method.
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by dustin10 at 2011/12/19 10:02:21 -0800
@stof and @fabpot Another thought I just had. Should the `$this->getContainer()->get('cache_clearer')->clear($realCacheDir);` call in the `CacheClearCommand` be done before the warming?
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by stof at 2011/12/19 10:03:59 -0800
indeed. the clearing should be done before the warming.
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by dustin10 at 2011/12/19 10:19:28 -0800
Squashed all commits into one. Let me know if there is anything else.
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by dustin10 at 2011/12/19 10:31:50 -0800
Fixed extra lines.
* 2.0:
[FrameworkBundle] Added functional tests.
[Form] Added missing use statements (closes#2880)
[Console] Improve input definition output for Boolean defaults
[SecurityBundle] Changed environment to something unique.
2879: missing space between catch and the brace
#2688: Entities are generated in wrong folder (doctrine:generate:entities Namespace)
[TwigBundle] Fix the exception message escaping
Commits
-------
7c2f11f Merge pull request #1 from pminnieur/post_response
9f4391f [HttpKernel] fixed DocBlocks
2a61714 [HttpKernel] added PostResponseEvent dispatching to HttpKernel
915f440 [HttpKernel] removed BC breaks, introduced new TerminableInterface
7efe4bc [HttpKernel] Add Kernel::terminate() and HttpKernel::terminate() for post-response logic
Discussion
----------
[HttpKernel] Add Kernel::terminate() and HttpKernel::terminate() for post-response logic
This came out of a discussion on IRC about doing stuff post-response, and the fact that right now there is no best practice, and it basically requires adding code after the `->send()` call.
It's an attempt at fixing it in an official way. Of course terminate() would need to be called explicitly, and added to the front controllers, but then it offers a standard way for everyone to listen on that event and do things without slowing down the user response.
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by stof at 2011/12/06 02:41:26 -0800
We discussed it on IRC and I suggested a way to avoid the BC break of the interface: adding a new interface (``TerminableInterface`` or whatever better name you find) containing this method.
HttpKernel, Kernel and HttpCache can then implement it without breaking the existing apps using the component (Kernel and HttpCache would need an instanceof check to see if the inner kernel implements the method)
For Symfony2 users it will mean they have to change their front controller to benefit from the new event of course, but this is easy to do.
Btw, Silex can then be able to use it without *any* change for the end users as it can be done inside ``Application::run()``
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by pminnieur at 2011/12/06 11:47:03 -0800
@Seldaek: I opened a pull request so that the discussion on IRC is fulfilled and no BC breaks exist: https://github.com/Seldaek/symfony/pull/1/files
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by fabpot at 2011/12/07 07:59:49 -0800
Any real-world use case for this?
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by Seldaek at 2011/12/07 08:10:31 -0800
Doing slow stuff after the user got his response back without having to implement a message queue. I believe @pminnieur wanted to use it to send logs to loggly?
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by pminnieur at 2011/12/07 09:08:41 -0800
Its a good practice to defer code execution without the introduction of a new software layer (like gearman, amqp, whatever tools people use to defer code execution) which may be way too much just for the goal of having fast responses, whatever my code does.
My real world use case which made me miss this feature the first time:
> I have a calendar with a scheduled Event. For a given period of time, several Event entities will be created, coupled to the scheduled event (the schedule Event just keeps track of `startDate`, `endDate` and the `dateInterval`). Let's say we want this scheduled Event to be on every Monday-Friday, on a weekly basis, for the next 10 years.
This means I have to create `10*52*5` Event entities before I could even think about sending a simple redirect response. If I could defer code execution, I'd only save the scheduled Event, send the redirect response and after that, I create the `10*52*5` entities.
The other use case was loggly, yes. Sending logging data over the wire before the response is send doesn't make sense in my eyes, so it could be deferred after the response is send (this especially sucks if loggly fails and i get a 500 --the frontend/public user is not interested in a working logging facility, he wants his responses).
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by mvrhov at 2011/12/07 10:07:03 -0800
This would help significantly, but the real problem, that your process is busy and unavailable for the next request, is still there.
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by fabpot at 2011/12/07 10:15:18 -0800
I think this is the wrong solution for a real problem.
Saying "Its a good practice to defer code execution without the introduction of a new software layer" is just wrong.
It is definitely a good practice to defer code execution, but you should use the right tool for the job.
I'm -1.
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by pminnieur at 2011/12/07 10:25:44 -0800
It should just give a possibility to put unimportant but heavy lifting code behind the send request with ease. With little effort people could benefit from the usage of `fastcgi_finish_request` without introducing new software, using `register_shutdown_function` or using `__destruct `(which works for simple things, but may act weird with dependencies).
It should not simulate node.js ;-) I agree that the real problem is not solved, but small problems could be solved easily. I personally don't want to setup RabbitMQ or whatever, maintain my crontab or any other software that may allow me to defer code execution.
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by Seldaek at 2011/12/08 01:08:32 -0800
@fabpot: one could say that on shared hostings it is still useful because they generally don't give you gearman or \*MQs. Anyway I think it'd be nice to really complete the HttpKernel event cycle.
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by pminnieur at 2011/12/08 01:48:57 -0800
not only on shared hostings, sometimes teams/projects just don't have the resources or knowledge or time to setup such an infrastructure.
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by videlalvaro at 2011/12/08 01:53:06 -0800
I can say we used `fastcgi_finish_request` quite a lot at poppen with symfony 1.x. It certainly helped us to send data to Graphite, save XHProf runs, send data to RabbitMQ, and so on.
For example we used to connect to RabbitMQ and send the messages _after_ calling `fastcgi_finish_request` so the user never had to wait for stuff like that.
Also keep in mind that if you are using Gearman or RabbitMQ or whatever tool you use to defer code execution… you are not deferring the network connection handling, sending data over the wire and what not. I know this is obvious but is often overlooked.
So it would be nice to have an standard way of doing this.
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by henrikbjorn at 2011/12/13 01:42:23 -0800
This could have been useful recently while implementing a "Poor mans cronjob" system. The solution was to do a custom Response object and do the stuff after send have been called with a Connection: Close header and ignore_user_abort(); (Yes very ugly)
Previously, Boolean defaults were printed as strings, which lead to true and false being printed as "1" and "", respectively. With this change, they are now printed as "true" and "false".
Commits
-------
0776b50 removed supports(De)Serializiation()
72b9083 SerializerAwareNormalizer now only implements SerializerAwareInterface
97389fa use Serializer specific RuntimeException
cb495fd added additional unit tests for deserialization
967531f fixed various typos from the refactoring
067242d updated serializer tests to use the new interfaces
d811e29 CS fix
351eaa8 require a (de)normalizer inside the (de)normalizable interfaces instead of a serializer
c3d6123 re-added supports(de)normalization()
078f7f3 more typo fixes
c3a711d abstract class children should also implement dernormalization
2a6741c typo fix
d021dc8 refactored encoder handling to use the supports*() methods to determine which encoder handles what format
f8e2787 refactored Normalizer interfaces
58bd0f5 refactored the EncoderInterface
b0daf35 split off an EncoderInterface and NormalizerInterface from SerializerInterface
Discussion
----------
[Serializer] split off an EncoderInterface and NormalizerInterface from SerializerInte
Bug fix: no
Feature addition: no
Backwards compatibility break: yes (but not inside a stable API)
Symfony2 tests pass: ![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/lsmith77/symfony.png?branch=serializer_interface)
Fixes the following tickets: #2153
The purpose is to make it easier for other implementations that only implement parts of the interface due to different underlying approaches like the JMSSerializerBundle.
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by schmittjoh at 2011/11/01 03:36:17 -0700
Actually, you can keep the current interface and I will just provide an adapter, sth like the following:
```php
<?php
class SymfonyAdapter implements SymfonyInterface
{
public function __construct(BundleInterface $serializer) { /* ... */ }
// symfony serializer methods mapped to bundle methods
}
```
I like to provide an adapter instead of implementing the interface directly since the bundle can be used standalone right now, and I don't want to add a dependency on the component just for the sake of the interface.
However, I do not completely see the purpose of the component. When would someone be recommended to use it? Everything the component does, the bundles does at the same level with the same complexity or simplicity (however you want to view that).
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/01 03:40:55 -0700
standalone in what way? you mean even out of the context of Symfony? In that context imho you should ship that code outside of a Bundle.
Regardless, how will that adaptor work? How would you implement methods like ``getEncoder()``? Afaik you can't and this is what this PR is about, splitting the interface to enable people to more finely specify what they provide.
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by schmittjoh at 2011/11/01 04:03:56 -0700
I would just throw exceptions when something is not supported.
The more important question though is what is the goal of the component in the long-term, i.e. what problems is it supposed to solve, or in which cases should it be used?
Because right now it seems to me - correct me if I'm wrong - that the only purpose is that people don't have to install an extra library. However, that might even be frustrating for users because they need to migrate their code to the bundle as soon as they need to customize the serialization process which you need in 99% of the cases. For deserialization, the situation in the component is even worse. So, if my assessment is correct here (i.e. component to get started fast, if you need more migrate to the bundle), I think it would be better and less painful to have them start with the bundle right away.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/01 04:15:10 -0700
Well then imho it would be better to split the interface.
I think the serializer component is sufficient for many situations and imho its easier to grok. Furthermore the normalizer/encoder concept it can be used in situations where JMSSerializerBundle cannot be used.
And splitting up the interfaces has exactly the goal of reducing the "frustrations" caused by out growing the the component.
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by schmittjoh at 2011/11/01 04:29:39 -0700
I don't agree, but it's a subjective thing anyway.
So, whatever interface you come up with (preferably as few methods as possible), I will provide an adapter for it.
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by fabpot at 2011/11/07 08:45:25 -0800
What's the status of this PR?
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/07 10:28:14 -0800
from my POV its good to go. but would like a nod from someone else in terms of the naming of the new interfaces
On 07.11.2011, at 17:45, Fabien Potencier <reply@reply.github.com> wrote:
> What's the status of this PR?
>
> ---
> Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
> https://github.com/symfony/symfony/pull/2530#issuecomment-2655889
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by stof at 2011/11/08 11:37:40 -0800
@lsmith77 what about doing the same for the ``NormalizerInterface`` instead of adding a new interface with a confusing name ? The Serializer class could implement ``Normalizer\NormalizerInterface`` by adding the 2 needed methods instead of duplicating part of the interface.
The next step is to refactor the Serializer class so that it choose the encoder and the decoder based on the ``support*`` methods. But this could probably be done in a separate PR.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/08 11:51:27 -0800
yeah .. i wanted to do that once we are in agreement on the encoder stuff. question then is if we should again split off Denormalization. i guess yes.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/08 12:06:34 -0800
ok done ..
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/08 12:59:51 -0800
i guess the next big task is to add more tests .. had to fix way too few unit tests with all this shuffling around .. will also help validating the concept. i should also test this out in a production application.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/11/14 13:27:48 -0800
@ericclemmons can you also have a look at this PR and potentially help me adding tests?
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by fabpot at 2011/12/07 07:32:06 -0800
@lsmith77: Is it ready to be merged? Should I wait for more unit tests?
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/07 07:34:56 -0800
If you merge it I am afraid I might get lazy and not write tests. This is why I changed the topic to WIP. I promise to finish this on the weekend.
Note however I was planning to write the tests for 2.0 and send them via a separate PR.
Once that PR is merged into 2.0 and master. I would then refactor them to work for this PR.
This way both 2.0 and master will have tests.
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by fabpot at 2011/12/07 07:42:15 -0800
@lsmith77: sounds good. Thanks.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/11 12:02:12 -0800
@fabpot ok i am done from my end.
@schmittjoh would be great if you could look over the final interfaces one time and give your blessing that you will indeed be able to provide implementations for these interfaces inside JMSSerializerBundle (even if just via an adapter)
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by stof at 2011/12/12 12:43:49 -0800
@schmittjoh can you take a look as requested by @lsmith77 ?
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by schmittjoh at 2011/12/13 03:33:23 -0800
Are the supports methods necessary? This is what I'm using in the bundle:
https://github.com/schmittjoh/JMSSerializerBundle/blob/master/Serializer/SerializerInterface.php
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/13 04:08:49 -0800
@schmittjoh without them determining if something is supported will always require an exception, which is pretty expensive. especially if one iterates over a data structure this can cause a lot of overhead.
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by schmittjoh at 2011/12/13 04:24:18 -0800
my question was more if you have a real-world use case where this is useful?
On Tue, Dec 13, 2011 at 1:08 PM, Lukas Kahwe Smith <
reply@reply.github.com
> wrote:
> @schmittjoh without them determining if something is supported will always
> require an exception, which is pretty expensive. especially if one iterates
> over a data structure this can cause a lot of overhead.
>
> ---
> Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
> https://github.com/symfony/symfony/pull/2530#issuecomment-3122157
>
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/13 04:28:08 -0800
yes .. this serializer .. since it traverses the tree and decides what is the current normalizer one by one (aka not via visitors as in your implementation). without the supports*() methods it would need to have the normalizer throw exceptions, but this is not exceptional, its the normal code flow to have to iterate to find the correct normalizer.
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by schmittjoh at 2011/12/13 04:30:36 -0800
can we split it off into a second interface?
On Tue, Dec 13, 2011 at 1:28 PM, Lukas Kahwe Smith <
reply@reply.github.com
> wrote:
> yes .. this serializer .. since it traverses the tree and decides what is
> the current normalizer one by one (aka not via visitors as in your
> implementation). without the supports*() methods it would need to have the
> normalizer throw exceptions, but this is not exceptional, its the normal
> code flow to have to iterate to find the correct normalizer.
>
> ---
> Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
> https://github.com/symfony/symfony/pull/2530#issuecomment-3122315
>
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/13 04:33:27 -0800
hmm .. i guess we could .. these methods in a way are implementation specific and are mainly public because its different objects interacting with each other, though for users of the lib they can also be convenient at times.
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/14 09:13:53 -0800
ok i reviewed things again and just removed those two methods, since the possibility for these methods to be feasible is too tied to the implementation and for this particular implementation supportsEncoding() and supportsDecoding() are still available.
so all ready to be merged ..
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/14 09:15:44 -0800
hmm i realized one thing just now:
cb495fd7a3
that commit should also be included in 2.0 .. i am not sure what the most elegant way is to make that happen ..
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by fabpot at 2011/12/14 10:10:16 -0800
@lsmith77: commit cb495fd7a3 cannot be cherry picked in 2.0 as is as the tests do not pass: "Fatal error: Call to undefined method Symfony\Component\Serializer\Serializer::supportsDenormalization() in tests/Symfony/Tests/Component/Serializer/SerializerTest.php on line 150"
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by lsmith77 at 2011/12/14 10:11:55 -0800
ah of course .. i just removed that method :) .. then never mind .. all is well.
Commits
-------
600066e [Templating] fixed 'scheme://' not detected as absolute path
e6f2687 [HttpKernel] fixed 'scheme://' not detected as absolute path
b50ac5b [Config] fixed 'scheme://' not detected as absolute path
Discussion
----------
[Config][HttpKernel][Templating] 'scheme://' paths not detected as absolute
Bug fix: yes
Feature addition: no
Backwards compatibility break: no (99%)
Symfony2 tests pass: yes
Fixes the following tickets: -
Todo: -
The method ```isAbsolutePath``` does not detect URL schemes as absolute. This makes imposible the use of wrappers to access remote files or the use of files (mostly configuration or templates) stored on phar archives (uses the scheme ```phar://``` in the path).
Three classes implement this methods: ```Symfony\Component\Config\FileLocator```, ```Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Util\Filesystem``` and ```Symfony\Component\Templating\Loader\FilesytemLoader```. All are updated. Also includes a new check on all related tests (```Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Util\Filesystem``` lacks of test).
Commits
-------
5f22268 [Profiler] Sync with master
1aef4e8 Adds collecting info about request method and allowing searching by it
Discussion
----------
[WebProfiler] Add ability to filter data by request method
Bug fix: no
Feature addition: yes
Backwards compatibility break: yes
Symfony2 tests pass: yes
Fixes the following tickets: #1515
For discussion & description checkout: #1515 & #2279
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by fabpot at 2011/12/11 10:02:41 -0800
After merging this PR, the toolbar is not displayed anymore for me.
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by stof at 2011/12/12 14:18:20 -0800
@fabpot the toolbar works for me using this branch