203 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown
203 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: none
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group: unassigned
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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description: 'An introduction to reference parsers and reference filters, and a guide to their implementation.'
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---
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# Reference processing
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[GitLab Flavored Markdown](../user/markdown.md) includes the ability to process
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references to a range of GitLab domain objects. This is implemented by two
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abstractions in the `Banzai` pipeline: `ReferenceFilter` and `ReferenceParser`.
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This page explains what these are, how they are used, and how you would
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implement a new filter/parser pair.
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Each `ReferenceFilter` must have a corresponding `ReferenceParser`.
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It is possible to share reference parsers between filters - if two filters find
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and link the same type of objects (as specified by the `data-reference-type`
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attribute), then we only need one reference parser for that type of domain
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object.
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## Banzai pipeline
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`Banzai` pipeline returns the `result` Hash after being filtered by the Pipeline.
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The `result` Hash is passed to each filter for modification. This is where Filters store extracted information from the content.
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It contains:
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- An `:output` key with the DocumentFragment or String HTML markup based on the output of the last filter in the pipeline.
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- A `:reference_filter_nodes` key with the list of DocumentFragment `nodes` that are ready for processing, updated by each filter in the pipeline.
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## Reference filters
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The first way that references are handled is by reference filters. These are
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the tools that identify short-code and URI references from markup documents and
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transform them into structured links to the resources they represent.
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For example, the class
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[`Banzai::Filter::IssueReferenceFilter`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/banzai/filter/issue_reference_filter.rb)
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is responsible for handling references to issues, such as
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`gitlab-org/gitlab#123` and `https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/200048`.
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All reference filters are instances of [`HTML::Pipeline::Filter`](https://www.rubydoc.info/gems/html-pipeline),
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and inherit (often indirectly) from [`Banzai::Filter::ReferenceFilter`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/banzai/filter/reference_filter.rb).
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`HTML::Pipeline::Filter` has a simple interface consisting of `#call`, a void
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method that mutates the current document. `ReferenceFilter` provides methods
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that make defining suitable `#call` methods easier. Most reference filters
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however do not inherit from either of these classes directly, but from
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[`AbstractReferenceFilter`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/banzai/filter/abstract_reference_filter.rb),
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which provides a higher-level interface.
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Subclasses of `AbstractReferenceFilter` generally do not override `#call`; instead,
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a minimum implementation of `AbstractReferenceFilter` should define:
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- `.reference_type`: The type of domain object.
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This is usually a keyword, and is used to set the `data-reference-type` attribute
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on the generated link, and is an important part of the interaction with the
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corresponding `ReferenceParser` (see below).
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- `.object_class`: a reference to the class of the objects a filter refers to.
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This is used to:
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- Find the regular expressions used to find references. The class should
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include [`Referable`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/models/concerns/referable.rb)
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and thus define two regular expressions: `.link_reference_pattern` and
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`.reference_pattern`, both of which should contain a named capture group
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named the value of `ReferenceFilter.object_sym`.
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- Compute the `.object_name`.
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- Compute the `.object_sym` (the group name in the reference patterns).
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- `.parse_symbol(string)`: parse the text value to an object identifier (`#to_i` by default).
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- `#record_identifier(record)`: the inverse of `.parse_symbol`, that is, transform a domain object to an identifier (`#id` by default).
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- `#url_for_object(object, parent_object)`: generate the URL for a domain object.
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- `#find_object(parent_object, id)`: given the parent (usually a [`Project`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/models/project.rb))
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and an identifier, find the object. For example, this in a reference filter for
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merge requests, this might be `project.merge_requests.where(iid: iid)`.
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### Add a new reference prefix and filter
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For reference filters for new objects, use a prefix format following the pattern
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`^<object_type>#`, because:
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1. Varied single-character prefixes are hard for users to track. Especially for
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lower-use object types, this can diminish value for the feature.
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1. Suitable single-character prefixes are limited.
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1. Following a consistent pattern allows users to infer the existence of new features.
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To add a reference prefix for a new object `apple`,which has both a name and ID,
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format the reference as:
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- `^apple#123` for identification by ID.
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- `^apple#"Granny Smith"` for identification by name.
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### Performance
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#### Find object optimization
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This default implementation is not very efficient, because we need to call
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`#find_object` for each reference, which may require issuing a DB query every
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time. For this reason, most reference filter implementations instead use an
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optimization included in `AbstractReferenceFilter`:
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> `AbstractReferenceFilter` provides a lazily initialized value
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> `#records_per_parent`, which is a mapping from parent object to a collection
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> of domain objects.
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To use this mechanism, the reference filter must implement the
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method: `#parent_records(parent, set_of_identifiers)`, which must return an
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enumerable of domain objects.
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This allows such classes to define `#find_object` (as
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[`IssuableReferenceFilter`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/banzai/filter/issuable_reference_filter.rb)
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does) as:
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```ruby
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def find_object(parent, iid)
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records_per_parent[parent][iid]
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end
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```
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This makes the number of queries linear in the number of projects. We only need
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to implement `parent_records` method when we call `records_per_parent` in our
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reference filter.
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#### Filtering nodes optimization
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Each `ReferenceFilter` would iterate over all `<a>` and `text()` nodes in a document.
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Not all nodes are processed, document is filtered only for nodes that we want to process.
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We are skipping:
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- Link tags already processed by some previous filter (if they have a `gfm` class).
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- Nodes with the ancestor node that we want to ignore (`ignore_ancestor_query`).
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- Empty line.
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- Link tags with the empty `href` attribute.
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To avoid filtering such nodes for each `ReferenceFilter`, we do it only once and store the result in the result Hash of the pipeline as `result[:reference_filter_nodes]`.
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Pipeline `result` is passed to each filter for modification, so every time when `ReferenceFilter` replaces text or link tag, filtered list (`reference_filter_nodes`) are updated for the next filter to use.
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## Reference parsers
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In a number of cases, as a performance optimization, we render Markdown to HTML
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once, cache the result and then present it to users from the cached value. For
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example this happens for notes, issue descriptions, and merge request
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descriptions. A consequence of this is that a rendered document might refer to
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a resource that some subsequent readers should not be able to see.
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For example, you might create an issue, and refer to a confidential issue `#1234`,
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which you have access to. This is rendered in the cached HTML as a link to
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that [confidential issue](../user/project/issues/confidential_issues.md),
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with data attributes containing its ID, the ID of the
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project and other confidential data. A later reader, who has access to your issue
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might not have permission to read issue `#1234`, and so we need to redact
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these sensitive pieces of data. This is what `ReferenceParser` classes do.
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A reference parser is linked to the object that it handles by the link
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advertising this relationship in the `data-reference-type` attribute (set by the
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reference filter). This is used by the
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[`ReferenceRedactor`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/banzai/reference_redactor.rb)
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to compute which nodes should be visible to users:
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```ruby
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def nodes_visible_to_user(nodes)
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per_type = Hash.new { |h, k| h[k] = [] }
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visible = Set.new
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nodes.each do |node|
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per_type[node.attr('data-reference-type')] << node
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end
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per_type.each do |type, nodes|
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parser = Banzai::ReferenceParser[type].new(context)
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visible.merge(parser.nodes_visible_to_user(user, nodes))
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end
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visible
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end
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```
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The key part here is `Banzai::ReferenceParser[type]`, which is used to look up
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the correct reference parser for each type of domain object. This requires that
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each reference parser must:
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- Be placed in the `Banzai::ReferenceParser` namespace.
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- Implement the `.nodes_visible_to_user(user, nodes)` method.
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In practice, all reference parsers inherit from [`BaseParser`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/banzai/reference_parser/base_parser.rb), and are implemented by defining:
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- `.reference_type`, which should equal `ReferenceFilter.reference_type`.
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- And by implementing one or more of:
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- `#nodes_visible_to_user(user, nodes)` for finest grain control.
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- `#can_read_reference?` needed if `nodes_visible_to_user` is not overridden.
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- `#references_relation` an active record relation for objects by ID.
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- `#nodes_user_can_reference(user, nodes)` to filter nodes directly.
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A failure to implement this class for each reference type means that the
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application raises exceptions during Markdown processing.
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