The template resolver is supposed to determine the handler, format, and
variant from the path in extract_handler_and_format_and_variant.
Previously this behaviour was close but didn't exactly match the
behaviour of finding templates, and in some cases (particularly with
handlers or formats missing) would return incorrect results.
This commit introduces Resolver::PathParser, a class which should be
able to accurately from any path inside a view directory be able to tell
us exactly the prefix, partial, variant, locale, format, variant, and
handler of that template.
This works by building a building a regexp from the known handlers and
file types. This requires that any resolvers have their cache cleared
when new handlers or types are registered (this was already somewhat the
requirement, since resolver lookups are cached, but this makes it
necessary in more situations).
The template resolver is supposed to determine the handler, format, and
variant from the path in extract_handler_and_format_and_variant.
This commit adds tests for how variants are parsed from the filenames
found in the resolver. It includes two skipped tests which currently fail.
Allowing templates with "." introduces some ambiguity. Is index.html.erb
a template named "index" with format "html", or is it a template named
"index.html" without a format? We know it's probably the former, but if
we asked ActionView to render "index.html" we would currently get some
combination of the two: a Template with index.html as the name and
virtual path, but with html as the format.
This deprecates having "." anywhere in the template's name, we should
reserve this character for specifying formats. I think in 99% of cases
this will be people specifying `index.html` instead of simply `index`.
This was actually once deprecated in the 3.x series (removed in
6c57177f2c) but I don't think we can rely
on nobody having introduced this in the past 8 years.
Allowing templates with "." introduces some ambiguity. Is index.html.erb
a template named "index" with format "html", or is it a template named
"index.html" without a format? We know it's probably the former, but if
we asked ActionView to render "index.html" we would currently get some
combination of the two: a Template with index.html as the name and
virtual path, but with html as the format.
This deprecates having "." anywhere in the template's name, we should
reserve this character for specifying formats. I think in 99% of cases
this will be people specifying `index.html` instead of simply `index`.
This was actually once deprecated in the 3.x series (removed in
6c57177f2c) but I don't think we can rely
on nobody having introduced this in the past 8 years.
`OptimizedFileSystemResolver` builds a regular expression to match view
template paths. Prior to this patch, only file globbing special
characters were escaped when building this regular expression, leaving
other regular expression special characters unescaped.
This patch properly escapes all regular expression special characters,
and adds test coverage for paths that include these characters.
Fixes#37107.
Performance cops will be extracted from RuboCop to RuboCop Performance
when next RuboCop 0.68 will be released.
https://github.com/rubocop-hq/rubocop/issues/5977
RuboCop 0.67 is its transition period.
Since rails/rails repository uses Performance cops, This PR added
rubocop-performance gem to Gemfile.
And this PR fixes some offenses using the following auto-correct.
```console
% bundle exec rubocop -a
Offenses:
activerecord/test/cases/connection_adapters/connection_handlers_multi_db_test.rb:212:26:
C: [Corrected] Layout/SpaceAroundOperators: Operator =
> should be surrounded by a single space.
"primary" => { adapter: "sqlite3", database: "db/primary.sqlite3" }
^^
activerecord/test/cases/connection_adapters/connection_handlers_multi_db_test.rb:239:26:
C: [Corrected] Layout/SpaceAroundOperators: Operator => should be
surrounded by a single space.
"primary" => { adapter: "sqlite3", database: "db/primary.sqlite3" }
^^
actionview/test/template/resolver_shared_tests.rb:1:1: C: [Corrected]
Style/FrozenStringLiteralComment: Missing magic comment #
frozen_string_literal: true.
module ResolverSharedTests
^
actionview/test/template/resolver_shared_tests.rb:10:33: C: [Corrected]
Layout/SpaceAroundEqualsInParameterDefault: Surrounding space missing in
default value assignment.
def with_file(filename, source="File at #{filename}")
^
actionview/test/template/resolver_shared_tests.rb:106:5: C: [Corrected]
Rails/RefuteMethods: Prefer assert_not_same over refute_same.
refute_same a, b
^^^^^^^^^^^
2760 files inspected, 5 offenses detected, 5 offenses corrected
```
This adds a bit of complexity, but is necessary for now to avoid holding
extra copies of templates which are resolved from ActionView::Digestor
after disabling cache on the lookup context.
Previously it's possible to have multiple copies of the "same" Template.
For example, if index.html.erb is found both the :en and :fr locale, it
will return a different Template object for each. The same can happen
with formats, variants, and handlers.
This commit de-duplicates templates, there will now only be one template
per file/virtual_path/locals tuple.
We need to consider virtual_path because both `render "index"`, and
`render "index.html"` can both find the same file but will have
different virtual_paths. IMO this is rare and should be
deprecated/removed, but it exists now so we need to consider it in order
to cache correctly.
This commit introduces a new UnboundTemplate class, which represents a
template with unknown locals. Template objects can be built from it by
using `#with_locals`. Currently, this is just a convenience around
caching templates, but I hope it's a helpful concept that could have
more utility in the future.
We didn't previously have many tests directly against the
OptimizedFileSystemResolver or FileSystemResolver, though usually
failures would be exposed through other tests.
It's easier to test some specifics of the behaviour with unit tests.
This also lets us test FileSystemResolver (non-optimized) which I don't
think previously had much testing (other than from classses inheriting
it).