- Apps are marked as removed in 3.0, never officially launched and have been deprecated for at least 2 years.
- We've slowly removed bits that got in our way or were insecure over time meaning they mostly didn't work
- This cleans up the remainder of the logic
- The tables should be cleaned up in a future major
- Apps are marked as removed in 3.0, never officially launched and have been deprecated for at least 2 years.
- We've slowly removed bits that got in our way or were insecure over time meaning they mostly didn't work
- This cleans up the remainder of the logic
- The tables should be cleaned up in a future major
no-issue
Essentially only active users should have their permissions loaded, this
means that suspended or inactive users are stripped of all permissions
until their status is changed.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/11152
- Added subscribers table drop migration
- Removed subscribers from schema
- Removed subscribers controllers/routes/regression tests
- Removed subscriber related API code
- Removed subscribers from internal apps
- Removed subscriber importer
- Removed subscriber model
- Removed subscriber related permissions
- Removed webhook code related to subscribers
- When upgrading to v3 it is on the site admin to migrate all zapps or any other webhook clients to use members
- Removed subscriber-specific translation
- Removed subscriber lab flag
refs #5151
refs #10737
- Removed all uses/references to post's "staticPages" filter
- It was only a feature specific to API v0.1 which doesn't have to take space in the codebase anymore
refs #9865
- Changed id passed for api_key to an object to be able to differenciate between admin and content api requests
- Added integration id to frame context
- Small refactoring of frame context initialization
refs #9865
- Enabled the permissions module to lookup permissions based on an api_key id.
- Updated the "can this" part of the permissions service to load permissions for any api key in the context, and correctly use that to determine whether an action is permissible. It also updates the permissible interface that models can implement to pass in the hasApiKeyPermissions param.
no issue
- this commit cleans up the usages of `include` and `withRelated`.
### API layer (`include`)
- as request parameter e.g. `?include=roles,tags`
- as theme API parameter e.g. `{{get .... include="author"}}`
- as internal API access e.g. `api.posts.browse({include: 'author,tags'})`
- the `include` notation is more readable than `withRelated`
- and it allows us to use a different easier format (comma separated list)
- the API utility transforms these more readable properties into model style (or into Ghost style)
### Model access (`withRelated`)
- e.g. `models.Post.findPage({withRelated: ['tags']})`
- driven by bookshelf
---
Commits explained.
* Reorder the usage of `convertOptions`
- 1. validation
- 2. options convertion
- 3. permissions
- the reason is simple, the permission layer access the model layer
- we have to prepare the options before talking to the model layer
- added `convertOptions` where it was missed (not required, but for consistency reasons)
* Use `withRelated` when accessing the model layer and use `include` when accessing the API layer
* Change `convertOptions` API utiliy
- API Usage
- ghost.api(..., {include: 'tags,authors'})
- `include` should only be used when calling the API (either via request or via manual usage)
- `include` is only for readability and easier format
- Ghost (Model Layer Usage)
- models.Post.findOne(..., {withRelated: ['tags', 'authors']})
- should only use `withRelated`
- model layer cannot read 'tags,authors`
- model layer has no idea what `include` means, speaks a different language
- `withRelated` is bookshelf
- internal usage
* include-count plugin: use `withRelated` instead of `include`
- imagine you outsource this plugin to git and publish it to npm
- `include` is an unknown option in bookshelf
* Updated `permittedOptions` in base model
- `include` is no longer a known option
* Remove all occurances of `include` in the model layer
* Extend `filterOptions` base function
- this function should be called as first action
- we clone the unfiltered options
- check if you are using `include` (this is a protection which could help us in the beginning)
- check for permitted and (later on default `withRelated`) options
- the usage is coming in next commit
* Ensure we call `filterOptions` as first action
- use `ghostBookshelf.Model.filterOptions` as first action
- consistent naming pattern for incoming options: `unfilteredOptions`
- re-added allowed options for `toJSON`
- one unsolved architecture problem:
- if you override a function e.g. `edit`
- then you should call `filterOptions` as first action
- the base implementation of e.g. `edit` will call it again
- future improvement
* Removed `findOne` from Invite model
- no longer needed, the base implementation is the same