The semantics of property paths are now:
(1) if a property path is set, it is _always_ respected (relative to the object
of the parent field)
(2) if no property path is set, the object of the parent field is _always_ ignored
Fact (2) allows us to set data into fields that is updated independently of the parent
field (like CSRF tokens, subforms with different objects etc.)
What is missing now is support for subfields that pass the object of the parent field
through to their own subfields. This functionality would be needed for GoogleMapFields,
DateRangeFields etc., which are compositions of individual fields that update the
parent object of the FieldGroup.
There are several alternatives for the latter functionality that should be discussed
in a RFC.
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
- interfaces can now also be defined on containers which are built with an Extension
- interface injection can also be used on classes that require constructor arguments
Currently, ambiguities only arise for PHP files, as PhpFileLoader and AnnotationFileLoader would both claim support. Future conflicts may occur if the XML, YAML, or PHP loaders were to receive Directory and Glob loaders (as annotations have).
Since the "type" parameter is optional, loader resolution will default to awarding resolution to the first loader to claim support. A previous hack in PhpFileLoader to avoid an AnnotationFileLoader conflict was removed, so that should be the only lost backwards compatibility with this patch. Unit tests were also created for the various loader classes, although only the supports() method is being tested.
This implementation was proposed on the symfony-dev mailing list in response to Fabien's RFC for custom loader notation: http://groups.google.com/group/symfony-devs/browse_thread/thread/3104c1a9e45799d2/20fbe393c1afe088
Both HttpKernel and Security define a 403 exception:
* Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Exception\ForbiddenHttpException
* Symfony\Component\Security\Exception\AccessDeniedException
The one in HttpKernel has been removed in favor of the Security one.