debian-mirror-gitlab/app/models/concerns/routable.rb
2018-11-18 11:00:15 +05:30

145 lines
3.9 KiB
Ruby

# Store object full path in separate table for easy lookup and uniq validation
# Object must have name and path db fields and respond to parent and parent_changed? methods.
module Routable
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
included do
# Remove `inverse_of: source` when upgraded to rails 5.2
# See https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/28808
has_one :route, as: :source, autosave: true, dependent: :destroy, inverse_of: :source # rubocop:disable Cop/ActiveRecordDependent
has_many :redirect_routes, as: :source, autosave: true, dependent: :destroy # rubocop:disable Cop/ActiveRecordDependent
validates :route, presence: true
scope :with_route, -> { includes(:route) }
after_validation :set_path_errors
before_validation do
if full_path_changed? || full_name_changed?
prepare_route
end
end
end
class_methods do
# Finds a single object by full path match in routes table.
#
# Usage:
#
# Klass.find_by_full_path('gitlab-org/gitlab-ce')
#
# Returns a single object, or nil.
def find_by_full_path(path, follow_redirects: false)
# On MySQL we want to ensure the ORDER BY uses a case-sensitive match so
# any literal matches come first, for this we have to use "BINARY".
# Without this there's still no guarantee in what order MySQL will return
# rows.
#
# Why do we do this?
#
# Even though we have Rails validation on Route for unique paths
# (case-insensitive), there are old projects in our DB (and possibly
# clients' DBs) that have the same path with different cases.
# See https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/18603. Also note that
# our unique index is case-sensitive in Postgres.
binary = Gitlab::Database.mysql? ? 'BINARY' : ''
order_sql = "(CASE WHEN #{binary} routes.path = #{connection.quote(path)} THEN 0 ELSE 1 END)"
found = where_full_path_in([path]).reorder(order_sql).take
return found if found
if follow_redirects
if Gitlab::Database.postgresql?
joins(:redirect_routes).find_by("LOWER(redirect_routes.path) = LOWER(?)", path)
else
joins(:redirect_routes).find_by(redirect_routes: { path: path })
end
end
end
# Builds a relation to find multiple objects by their full paths.
#
# Usage:
#
# Klass.where_full_path_in(%w{gitlab-org/gitlab-ce gitlab-org/gitlab-ee})
#
# Returns an ActiveRecord::Relation.
def where_full_path_in(paths)
wheres = []
cast_lower = Gitlab::Database.postgresql?
paths.each do |path|
path = connection.quote(path)
where =
if cast_lower
"(LOWER(routes.path) = LOWER(#{path}))"
else
"(routes.path = #{path})"
end
wheres << where
end
if wheres.empty?
none
else
joins(:route).where(wheres.join(' OR '))
end
end
end
def full_name
route&.name || build_full_name
end
def full_path
route&.path || build_full_path
end
def full_path_components
full_path.split('/')
end
def build_full_path
if parent && path
parent.full_path + '/' + path
else
path
end
end
# Group would override this to check from association
def owned_by?(user)
owner == user
end
private
def set_path_errors
route_path_errors = self.errors.delete(:"route.path")
self.errors[:path].concat(route_path_errors) if route_path_errors
end
def full_name_changed?
name_changed? || parent_changed?
end
def full_path_changed?
path_changed? || parent_changed?
end
def build_full_name
if parent && name
parent.human_name + ' / ' + name
else
name
end
end
def prepare_route
route || build_route(source: self)
route.path = build_full_path
route.name = build_full_name
end
end