03d2bf141c
Consider this command: bundle exec rails r "include GitlabMarkdownHelper puts markdown('<span>this is a span</span>', pipeline: :description) puts markdown('<span>this is a span</span>')" And the same in the opposite order: bundle exec rails r "include GitlabMarkdownHelper puts markdown('<span>this is a span</span>') puts markdown('<span>this is a span</span>', pipeline: :description)" Before this change, they would both output: <p><span>this is a span</span></p> <p>this is a span</p> That's because `span` is added to the list of whitelisted elements in the `SanitizationFilter`, but this method tries not to make the same changes multiple times. Unfortunately, `HTML::Pipeline::SanitizationFilter::LIMITED`, which is used by the `DescriptionPipeline`, uses the same Ruby objects for all of its hash values _except_ `:elements`. That means that whichever of `DescriptionPipeline` and `GfmPipeline` is called first would have `span` in its whitelisted elements, and the second wouldn't. Fix this by creating an entirely separate hash, before either pipeline is invoked.
16 lines
437 B
Ruby
16 lines
437 B
Ruby
module Banzai
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module Pipeline
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class DescriptionPipeline < FullPipeline
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WHITELIST = Banzai::Filter::SanitizationFilter::LIMITED.deep_dup.merge(
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elements: Banzai::Filter::SanitizationFilter::LIMITED[:elements] - %w(pre code img ol ul li)
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)
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def self.transform_context(context)
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super(context).merge(
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# SanitizationFilter
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whitelist: WHITELIST
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)
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end
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end
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end
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end
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