* Remove AbstractOAuth2Controller
There is no reason to provide an implementation for a specific oAuth2
library in core; it's not generic enough (eg. auth-twitter can't use it).
This code could be moved into another package which auth extensions
depend on, but it's a negligible amount of relatively simple code that
I don't think it's worth the trouble.
* Introduce login providers
Users can have many login providers (a combination of a provider name
and an identifier for that user, eg. their Facebook ID).
After retrieving user data from a provider (eg. Facebook), you pass the
login provider details into the Auth\ResponseFactory. If an associated
user is found, a response that logs them in will be returned. If not, a
registration token will be created so the user can proceed to sign up.
Once the token is fulfilled, the login provider will be associated with
the user.
Refactor Frontend + Asset code
- Use Laravel's Filesystem component for asset IO, meaning theoretically
assets should be storable on S3 etc.
- More reliable checking for asset recompilation when debug mode is on,
so you don't have to constantly delete the compiled assets to force
a recompile. Should also fix issues with locale JS files being
recompiled with the same name and cached.
- Remove JavaScript minification, because it will be done by Webpack
(exception is for the TextFormatter JS).
- Add support for JS sourcemaps.
- Separate frontend view and assets completely. This is an important
distinction because frontend assets are compiled independent of a
request, whereas putting together a view depends on a request.
- Bind frontend view/asset factory instances to the container (in
service providers) rather than subclassing. Asset and content
populators can be added to these factories – these are simply objects
that populate the asset compilers or the view with information.
- Add RouteHandlerFactory functions that make it easy to hook up a
frontend controller with a frontend instance ± some content.
- Remove the need for "nojs"
- Fix cache:clear command
- Recompile assets when settings/enabled extensions change
This finally adopts the new standardized interfaces instead of the
work-in-progress ones with the `Interop\` prefix.
Since we have now updated to PHP 7.1, we can also use Stratigility
3.0 as the middleware dispatcher.
This will be the last PHP requirement upgrade for a while, at least
until stable (and therefore until the next major release).
We have decided to do this now, for the following reasons:
- We want to support MariaDB (and the compatible release of
doctrine/dbal requires 7.1 as well).
- We prefer to upgrade to Laravel 5.6 sooner rather than later.
- Using the PSR-15 middleware standard is easier this way, as we do
not have to switch from zend-stratigility to another PSR-15
implementation. (Stratigility v3, which implements the final
standard, requires 7.1.)
Symfony's component relies on PHP's native session functionality, which
is not ideal. It automatically sets its own cookie headers, resulting in
this issue: https://github.com/flarum/core/issues/1084#issuecomment-364569953
The Illuminate component is more powerful and has a simpler API for
extension with other drivers and such, and fits in nicely with other
components we use (the majority of which are from Illuminate).
* Update FontAwesome to v5.0.6
* Adapt DiscussionListItem-count icon to match FontAwesome 5 syntax
* Change icon name to match FontAwesome 5.0.6 fas icon
* Add font type prefix parameter to icon helper
* Add Enable Icon Prefix to show icon in Extension Page
* Fix invalid icon behavior
* Change icon name to match FontAwesome 5.0.6 far icon
* Use iconPrefix property on component
* Use full icon class name
* Update icon helper docblock
* Full icon class syntax
* Fix dependency version constraint. (Reverts #1066.)
* Allow exceptions to be raised when dispatching middleware.
* Fix our error handler middleware (do not implement Stratigility's
error handler interface, catch exceptions instead).
See https://docs.zendframework.com/zend-stratigility/migration/to-v2/.
Closes#1069.
This seems to be pretty standard. Can just run `vendor/bin/phpunit` without any arguments. Removes the need for `composer test` (which is not ideal anyway as it removes colours from the output).
components/font-awesome is ~8 MB smaller than fortawesome/font-awesome because it excludes all examples/docs. Reducing dependency filesize will be important when we want to package up a .zip for distribution.