updates. Facebook has disabled the ability to store user preferences
via their old REST API, causing our application to break. Also, verbs
in status updates seem to be deprecated, and stream posts don't seem
to have a verb.
Revert "Locale switch cleanup: use common_switch_locale() which is safer for updating gettext state. Also moved a few calls to reduce chance of hitting an exception before switching back."
This reverts commit 74a89b1fc3.
- Use FQL to check for publish stream permission instead of old REST API
- Better error handling, especially for error code 100
- More logging / better log messages
Fixed typo in RedirectingAction when no return-to data provided in form submission.
RedirectingAction::returnToArgs() has been renamed to returnToPrevious() to avoid conflict with Action::returnToArgs() which returns arguments to be passed to other actions as return-to arguments. All callers should now be updated.
More profile settings actions will now redirect through a login form if visited as a GET request, as would be expected from a bookmark, link sent in e-mail etc.
To enable the admin panel:
$config['admin']['panels'][] = 'openid';
Or to set them manually:
$config['openid']['trusted_provider'] = 'https://login.ubuntu.net/';
$config['openid']['required_team'] = 'my-project-cabal';
$config['site']['openidonly'] = true;
OpenID-only mode can still be set from addPlugin() parameters as well for backwards compatibility.
Note: if it's set there, that value will override the setting from the database or config.php.
Note that team restrictions are only really meaningful if a trusted provider is set; otherwise,
any OpenID server could report back that users are members of the given team.
Restrictions are checked only at OpenID authentication time and will not kick off people currently
with a session open; existing remembered logins may also survive these changes.
Using code for Launchpad team support provided by Canonical under AGPLv3, pulled from r27 of
WordPress teams integration plugin:
https://code.edge.launchpad.net/~canonical-isd-hackers/wordpress-teams-integration/trunk
The code pattern 'new XXXException($e)' to chain exceptions doesn't actually work as intended, as exceptions are actually expecting a string message here.
This caused an implicit string conversion from HTTP_Request2_Exception, which is a PEAR_Exception, which defines an absurdly detailed __toString() method including a giant HTML table with a backtrace if you happen to be on a web request.
Simply passing $e->getMessage() instead clears this up, as we'll get the nice short message like 'Couldn't connect to tcp://blahblah:80'