Avoid the use of deprecated MariaDB "zero dates" globally. If they're present
as attribute defaults somewhere, they will be replaced with NULL implicitly.
The existing "zero dates" in MariaDB storage will be left intact and this
should not present any issues.
The "timestamp" type in table definitions now corresponds to DATETIME in
MariaDB with "DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP", which
should be close enough to the original behaviour for compatibility purposes.
It is now the recommended type for "modified" attributes, because of the
update trigger on MariaDB. But there is no such trigger implemented on
PostgreSQL as of this moment.
On big databases these queries from the Nodeinfo plugin choked up:
SELECT profile_id FROM notice
WHERE notice.created >= (CURRENT_DATE - INTERVAL '180' DAY)
AND notice.is_local = 1;
SELECT id FROM "user"
WHERE "user".created >= (CURRENT_DATE - INTERVAL '180' DAY);
Use $object->sqlValue('NULL') (identical to DataObject_Cast'ing) instead and
fix related issues like (email|sms)settings considering these NULLs as a
false positive for the E-Mail address still being set when it's been removed.
There could also be security implications to the now-disabled approach of
considering 'NULL' strings as SQL NULLs.
The code used to operate under the assumption that MariaDB doesn't support
quoting identifiers. Not only is that not exactly true, but MariaDB has
reserved keywords that cannot be used as table or column names unquoted.
The undifined variable $private_stream, from the User class, was causing
undifined behavior from calling requiresSubscriptionApproval. The is_null
test was added to fix this problem.
The file downloader was changed from a simple redirect to the file to one
implemented in PHP, which should make it safer, by making it possible disallow
direct access to the file, to prevent executing of atttachments
The filename has a new format:
bin2hex("{$original_name}")."-{$filehash}"
This format should be respected. Notice the dash, which is important to distinguish it from the previous
format, which was "{$hash}.{$ext}"
This change was made to both make the experience more user friendly, by
providing a readable name for files, as opposed to it's hash. This name is taken
from the upload filename, but, clearly, as this wasn't done before, it's
impossible to have a proper name for older files, so those are displayed as
"untitled.{$ext}".
This new name is displayed in the UI, instead of the previous name.
Default supported files need to use consistent names. Bumped version to 1.20.0
ImageFile has been changed to extend MediaFile and rely on it to partially
validate files. This validation has been extended to not rely solely on
Fileinfo, as it is disabled on some places. Now it'll try to use the shell
command `file`, if Fileinfo isn't available.
ImageFile now converts every new upload to PNG, except JPEG and GIF, which
are kept, but still resized (to the same size), to remove possible scripts
embedded therein.
MediaFile::fromUpload will return an ImageFile if the uploaded file is an image
or a MediaFile otherwise.
MediaFile can be constructed with an id with value -1 to denote a temporary
object, which is not added to the DB. This is useful to create a temporary
object for representing images, so it can be used to rescale them.
The supported attachment array needs to be populated with the result of calling
`image_type_to_extension` for the appropriate image type, in the case of images.
This is important so all parts of the code see the same extension for each image
type (jpg vs jpeg).
Added documentation to classes/File.php and to lib/MediaFile and lib/ImageFile