1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/rails/rails.git synced 2022-11-09 12:12:34 -05:00
rails--rails/actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/strong_parameters.rb
2013-04-24 16:21:42 +04:00

520 lines
18 KiB
Ruby
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

require 'active_support/core_ext/hash/indifferent_access'
require 'active_support/core_ext/array/wrap'
require 'active_support/rescuable'
require 'action_dispatch/http/upload'
require 'stringio'
module ActionController
# Raised when a required parameter is missing.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: {})
# params.fetch(:b)
# # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: b
# params.require(:a)
# # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: a
class ParameterMissing < KeyError
attr_reader :param # :nodoc:
def initialize(param) # :nodoc:
@param = param
super("param not found: #{param}")
end
end
# Raised when a supplied parameter is not expected.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: "123", b: "456")
# params.permit(:c)
# # => ActionController::UnpermittedParameters: found unexpected keys: a, b
class UnpermittedParameters < IndexError
attr_reader :params # :nodoc:
def initialize(params) # :nodoc:
@params = params
super("found unpermitted parameters: #{params.join(", ")}")
end
end
# == Action Controller \Parameters
#
# Allows to choose which attributes should be whitelisted for mass updating
# and thus prevent accidentally exposing that which shouldnt be exposed.
# Provides two methods for this purpose: #require and #permit. The former is
# used to mark parameters as required. The latter is used to set the parameter
# as permitted and limit which attributes should be allowed for mass updating.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new({
# person: {
# name: 'Francesco',
# age: 22,
# role: 'admin'
# }
# })
#
# permitted = params.require(:person).permit(:name, :age)
# permitted # => {"name"=>"Francesco", "age"=>22}
# permitted.class # => ActionController::Parameters
# permitted.permitted? # => true
#
# Person.first.update!(permitted)
# # => #<Person id: 1, name: "Francesco", age: 22, role: "user">
#
# It provides two options that controls the top-level behavior of new instances:
#
# * +permit_all_parameters+ - If it's +true+, all the parameters will be
# permitted by default. The default is +false+.
# * +action_on_unpermitted_parameters+ - Allow to control the behavior when parameters
# that are not explicitly permitted are found. The values can be <tt>:log</tt> to
# write a message on the logger or <tt>:raise</tt> to raise
# ActionController::UnpermittedParameters exception. The default value is <tt>:log</tt>
# in test and development environments, +false+ otherwise.
#
# Examples:
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new
# params.permitted? # => false
#
# ActionController::Parameters.permit_all_parameters = true
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new
# params.permitted? # => true
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: "123", b: "456")
# params.permit(:c)
# # => {}
#
# ActionController::Parameters.action_on_unpermitted_parameters = :raise
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: "123", b: "456")
# params.permit(:c)
# # => ActionController::UnpermittedParameters: found unpermitted keys: a, b
#
# <tt>ActionController::Parameters</tt> is inherited from
# <tt>ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess</tt>, this means
# that you can fetch values using either <tt>:key</tt> or <tt>"key"</tt>.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(key: 'value')
# params[:key] # => "value"
# params["key"] # => "value"
class Parameters < ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess
cattr_accessor :permit_all_parameters, instance_accessor: false
cattr_accessor :action_on_unpermitted_parameters, instance_accessor: false
# Never raise an UnpermittedParameters exception because of these params
# are present. They are added by Rails and it's of no concern.
NEVER_UNPERMITTED_PARAMS = %w( controller action )
# Returns a new instance of <tt>ActionController::Parameters</tt>.
# Also, sets the +permitted+ attribute to the default value of
# <tt>ActionController::Parameters.permit_all_parameters</tt>.
#
# class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
# end
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Francesco')
# params.permitted? # => false
# Person.new(params) # => ActiveModel::ForbiddenAttributesError
#
# ActionController::Parameters.permit_all_parameters = true
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Francesco')
# params.permitted? # => true
# Person.new(params) # => #<Person id: nil, name: "Francesco">
def initialize(attributes = nil)
super(attributes)
@permitted = self.class.permit_all_parameters
end
# Returns +true+ if the parameter is permitted, +false+ otherwise.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new
# params.permitted? # => false
# params.permit!
# params.permitted? # => true
def permitted?
@permitted
end
# Sets the +permitted+ attribute to +true+. This can be used to pass
# mass assignment. Returns +self+.
#
# class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
# end
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Francesco')
# params.permitted? # => false
# Person.new(params) # => ActiveModel::ForbiddenAttributesError
# params.permit!
# params.permitted? # => true
# Person.new(params) # => #<Person id: nil, name: "Francesco">
def permit!
each_pair do |key, value|
convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, value)
self[key].permit! if self[key].respond_to? :permit!
end
@permitted = true
self
end
# Ensures that a parameter is present. If it's present, returns
# the parameter at the given +key+, otherwise raises an
# <tt>ActionController::ParameterMissing</tt> error.
#
# ActionController::Parameters.new(person: { name: 'Francesco' }).require(:person)
# # => {"name"=>"Francesco"}
#
# ActionController::Parameters.new(person: nil).require(:person)
# # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: person
#
# ActionController::Parameters.new(person: {}).require(:person)
# # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: person
def require(key)
self[key].presence || raise(ParameterMissing.new(key))
end
# Alias of #require.
alias :required :require
# Returns a new <tt>ActionController::Parameters</tt> instance that
# includes only the given +filters+ and sets the +permitted+ attribute
# for the object to +true+. This is useful for limiting which attributes
# should be allowed for mass updating.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(user: { name: 'Francesco', age: 22, role: 'admin' })
# permitted = params.require(:user).permit(:name, :age)
# permitted.permitted? # => true
# permitted.has_key?(:name) # => true
# permitted.has_key?(:age) # => true
# permitted.has_key?(:role) # => false
#
# Only permitted scalars pass the filter. For example, given
#
# params.permit(:name)
#
# +:name+ passes it is a key of +params+ whose associated value is of type
# +String+, +Symbol+, +NilClass+, +Numeric+, +TrueClass+, +FalseClass+,
# +Date+, +Time+, +DateTime+, +StringIO+, +IO+,
# +ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile+ or +Rack::Test::UploadedFile+.
# Otherwise, the key +:name+ is filtered out.
#
# You may declare that the parameter should be an array of permitted scalars
# by mapping it to an empty array:
#
# params.permit(tags: [])
#
# You can also use +permit+ on nested parameters, like:
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new({
# person: {
# name: 'Francesco',
# age: 22,
# pets: [{
# name: 'Purplish',
# category: 'dogs'
# }]
# }
# })
#
# permitted = params.permit(person: [ :name, { pets: :name } ])
# permitted.permitted? # => true
# permitted[:person][:name] # => "Francesco"
# permitted[:person][:age] # => nil
# permitted[:person][:pets][0][:name] # => "Purplish"
# permitted[:person][:pets][0][:category] # => nil
#
# Note that if you use +permit+ in a key that points to a hash,
# it won't allow all the hash. You also need to specify which
# attributes inside the hash should be whitelisted.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new({
# person: {
# contact: {
# email: 'none@test.com',
# phone: '555-1234'
# }
# }
# })
#
# params.require(:person).permit(:contact)
# # => {}
#
# params.require(:person).permit(contact: :phone)
# # => {"contact"=>{"phone"=>"555-1234"}}
#
# params.require(:person).permit(contact: [ :email, :phone ])
# # => {"contact"=>{"email"=>"none@test.com", "phone"=>"555-1234"}}
def permit(*filters)
params = self.class.new
filters.flatten.each do |filter|
case filter
when Symbol, String
permitted_scalar_filter(params, filter)
when Hash then
hash_filter(params, filter)
end
end
unpermitted_parameters!(params) if self.class.action_on_unpermitted_parameters
params.permit!
end
# Returns a parameter for the given +key+. If not found,
# returns +nil+.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(person: { name: 'Francesco' })
# params[:person] # => {"name"=>"Francesco"}
# params[:none] # => nil
def [](key)
convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, super)
end
# Returns a parameter for the given +key+. If the +key+
# can't be found, there are several options: With no other arguments,
# it will raise an <tt>ActionController::ParameterMissing</tt> error;
# if more arguments are given, then that will be returned; if a block
# is given, then that will be run and its result returned.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(person: { name: 'Francesco' })
# params.fetch(:person) # => {"name"=>"Francesco"}
# params.fetch(:none) # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: none
# params.fetch(:none, 'Francesco') # => "Francesco"
# params.fetch(:none) { 'Francesco' } # => "Francesco"
def fetch(key, *args)
convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, super)
rescue KeyError
raise ActionController::ParameterMissing.new(key)
end
# Returns a new <tt>ActionController::Parameters</tt> instance that
# includes only the given +keys+. If the given +keys+
# don't exist, returns an empty hash.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: 1, b: 2, c: 3)
# params.slice(:a, :b) # => {"a"=>1, "b"=>2}
# params.slice(:d) # => {}
def slice(*keys)
self.class.new(super).tap do |new_instance|
new_instance.instance_variable_set :@permitted, @permitted
end
end
# Returns an exact copy of the <tt>ActionController::Parameters</tt>
# instance. +permitted+ state is kept on the duped object.
#
# params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: 1)
# params.permit!
# params.permitted? # => true
# copy_params = params.dup # => {"a"=>1}
# copy_params.permitted? # => true
def dup
super.tap do |duplicate|
duplicate.instance_variable_set :@permitted, @permitted
end
end
private
def convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, value)
if value.is_a?(Parameters) || !value.is_a?(Hash)
value
else
# Convert to Parameters on first access
self[key] = self.class.new(value)
end
end
def each_element(object)
if object.is_a?(Array)
object.map { |el| yield el }.compact
elsif object.is_a?(Hash) && object.keys.all? { |k| k =~ /\A-?\d+\z/ }
hash = object.class.new
object.each { |k,v| hash[k] = yield v }
hash
else
yield object
end
end
def unpermitted_parameters!(params)
unpermitted_keys = unpermitted_keys(params)
if unpermitted_keys.any?
case self.class.action_on_unpermitted_parameters
when :log
name = "unpermitted_parameters.action_controller"
ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument(name, keys: unpermitted_keys)
when :raise
raise ActionController::UnpermittedParameters.new(unpermitted_keys)
end
end
end
def unpermitted_keys(params)
self.keys - params.keys - NEVER_UNPERMITTED_PARAMS
end
#
# --- Filtering ----------------------------------------------------------
#
# This is a white list of permitted scalar types that includes the ones
# supported in XML and JSON requests.
#
# This list is in particular used to filter ordinary requests, String goes
# as first element to quickly short-circuit the common case.
#
# If you modify this collection please update the API of +permit+ above.
PERMITTED_SCALAR_TYPES = [
String,
Symbol,
NilClass,
Numeric,
TrueClass,
FalseClass,
Date,
Time,
# DateTimes are Dates, we document the type but avoid the redundant check.
StringIO,
IO,
ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile,
Rack::Test::UploadedFile,
]
def permitted_scalar?(value)
PERMITTED_SCALAR_TYPES.any? {|type| value.is_a?(type)}
end
def permitted_scalar_filter(params, key)
if has_key?(key) && permitted_scalar?(self[key])
params[key] = self[key]
end
keys.grep(/\A#{Regexp.escape(key)}\(\d+[if]?\)\z/) do |k|
if permitted_scalar?(self[k])
params[k] = self[k]
end
end
end
def array_of_permitted_scalars?(value)
if value.is_a?(Array)
value.all? {|element| permitted_scalar?(element)}
end
end
def array_of_permitted_scalars_filter(params, key)
if has_key?(key) && array_of_permitted_scalars?(self[key])
params[key] = self[key]
end
end
EMPTY_ARRAY = []
def hash_filter(params, filter)
filter = filter.with_indifferent_access
# Slicing filters out non-declared keys.
slice(*filter.keys).each do |key, value|
return unless value
if filter[key] == EMPTY_ARRAY
# Declaration { comment_ids: [] }.
array_of_permitted_scalars_filter(params, key)
else
# Declaration { user: :name } or { user: [:name, :age, { address: ... }] }.
params[key] = each_element(value) do |element|
if element.is_a?(Hash)
element = self.class.new(element) unless element.respond_to?(:permit)
element.permit(*Array.wrap(filter[key]))
end
end
end
end
end
end
# == Strong \Parameters
#
# It provides an interface for protecting attributes from end-user
# assignment. This makes Action Controller parameters forbidden
# to be used in Active Model mass assignment until they have been
# whitelisted.
#
# In addition, parameters can be marked as required and flow through a
# predefined raise/rescue flow to end up as a 400 Bad Request with no
# effort.
#
# class PeopleController < ActionController::Base
# # Using "Person.create(params[:person])" would raise an
# # ActiveModel::ForbiddenAttributes exception because it'd
# # be using mass assignment without an explicit permit step.
# # This is the recommended form:
# def create
# Person.create(person_params)
# end
#
# # This will pass with flying colors as long as there's a person key in the
# # parameters, otherwise it'll raise an ActionController::MissingParameter
# # exception, which will get caught by ActionController::Base and turned
# # into a 400 Bad Request reply.
# def update
# redirect_to current_account.people.find(params[:id]).tap { |person|
# person.update!(person_params)
# }
# end
#
# private
# # Using a private method to encapsulate the permissible parameters is
# # just a good pattern since you'll be able to reuse the same permit
# # list between create and update. Also, you can specialize this method
# # with per-user checking of permissible attributes.
# def person_params
# params.require(:person).permit(:name, :age)
# end
# end
#
# In order to use <tt>accepts_nested_attribute_for</tt> with Strong \Parameters, you
# will need to specify which nested attributes should be whitelisted.
#
# class Person
# has_many :pets
# accepts_nested_attributes_for :pets
# end
#
# class PeopleController < ActionController::Base
# def create
# Person.create(person_params)
# end
#
# ...
#
# private
#
# def person_params
# # It's mandatory to specify the nested attributes that should be whitelisted.
# # If you use `permit` with just the key that points to the nested attributes hash,
# # it will return an empty hash.
# params.require(:person).permit(:name, :age, pets_attributes: [ :name, :category ])
# end
# end
#
# See ActionController::Parameters.require and ActionController::Parameters.permit
# for more information.
module StrongParameters
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
include ActiveSupport::Rescuable
# Returns a new ActionController::Parameters object that
# has been instantiated with the <tt>request.parameters</tt>.
def params
@_params ||= Parameters.new(request.parameters)
end
# Assigns the given +value+ to the +params+ hash. If +value+
# is a Hash, this will create an ActionController::Parameters
# object that has been instantiated with the given +value+ hash.
def params=(value)
@_params = value.is_a?(Hash) ? Parameters.new(value) : value
end
end
end