Historically, extensions using subscribers has caused problems because subscribers were constructed/applied at extension boot. This caused some classes (e.g. UrlGenerator) to be resolved early, breaking parts of Flarum. For this reason, subscriber support wasn't included in the initial version of the Event extender.
However, updating extensions has shown that there is a legitimate use case for subscribers in organizing clean code; for instance, core's own `DiscussionMetadataUpdater`.
This commit introduces support for subscribers, but only applies them after the app has booted, which avoids the early resolution issues. Since event listeners/subscribers are only intended to be used with domain events, which would never be dispatched during app boot, the late activation of subscribers should not cause issue.
Some tests need to change settings, but since MemoryCacheSettingsRepository caches settings in-memory, those changes aren't reflected. The new `purgeSettingsCache` removes it from the container, eliminating that cache.
For UserTest, we also need to regenerate the display name driver, since that's set statically on boot, before we'll get a change to clear the settings cache.
Before transactions, each test class would need to explicitly state starting state for permissions, which made the initial permission configuration somewhat arbitrary. Now, we might as well use the initial state of the default installation.
One of the User show_test tests has been commented out until
Previously, the `prepareDatabase` method would directly modify the database, booting the app in the process. This would prevent any extenders from being applied, since `->extend()` has no effect once the app is booted.
Since the new implementation of `prepareDatabase` simply registers seed data to be applied during app boot, the workaround of sticking this seed data into `prepDb` is no longer necessary, and seed data common to all test cases in a class can be provided in `setUp`.
When needed, app boot is explicitly triggered in individual test cases by calling `$this->app()`.
Policy application has also been refactored, so that policies return one of `allow`, `deny`, `forceAllow`, `forceDeny`. The result of a set of policies is no longer the first non-null result, but rather the highest priority result (forceDeny > forceAllow > deny > allow, so if a single forceDeny is present, that beats out all other returned results). This removes order in which extensions boot as a factor.
- Support slug drivers for core's sluggable models, easily extends to other models
- Add automated testing for affected single-model API routes
- Fix nickname selection UI
- Serialize slugs as `slug` attribute
- Make min search length a constant
- Split DispatchRoute. This allows us to run middleware after we figure out which route we're on, but before we actually execute the controller for that route.
- By making the route name explicitly available to middlewares, applications like CSRF and floodgate can set patterns based on route names instead of the path, which is an implementation detail.
- Support using route name match for CSRF extender, deprecate path match
- Standardize signatures and variable names for extenders that take callbacks
- Adjust model extender docblock to clarify that default calue can't be an invokable class.
- Make invokable classes provided to Model->relationship
- Add integration tests to ensure Model->relationship and User->groupProcessor extenders accept callbacks
- Extract code for wrapping callbacks into central util
- Deprecated all events involved with Formatter
- Refactor ->configure() method on extender not to use events
- Add extender methods for ->render() and ->parse()
- Add integration tests
As discussed in my initial review, it seems unlikely that we need
the ability to remove (or otherwise modify) namespaces again.
Therefore, it seems more consistent with other extenders to go
for a "View" extender with a "namespace" method.
Sorry for the back and forth. ;)
Refs #1891, #2134.
* Deprecate GetDisplayName event
* Add interface for display name driver
* Add username driver as default
* Add code to register supported drivers / used driver as singletons
* Configured User class to use new driver-based system for display names
* Add extender for adding display name driver
* Add integration test for user display name driver
* Add frontend UI for selecting display name driver
This ensures that default values, date attributes and relationships are properly inherited, when we have deeper model class hierarchies.
This also adds test cases to ensure that inheritance order is honored for relationship and default attribute extender. As there's no way to remove date attributes, the order of evaluation there doesn't matter.