In order to apply to PHP's POST processing, the MAX_FILE_SIZE field must appear *before* the file upload field. They were incorrectly placed after, where they had no effect on POST processing.
Part of the reported issue was previuosly fixed by dc497ed0 (smaller size images being blanked).
This commit fixes the remaining bug with original-size avatars being left as BMP (which could include the 96px size for instance, which could cause problems in browsers not supporting BMP natively)
Added ImageFile::copyTo() as a convenient alias for resizeTo() when not resizing; this performs the BMP/XPM/XBM->PNG conversion if needed, or copies the original file.
Copying instead of using move_uploaded_file() is fine here since:
a) the files are cleaned up on script completion anyway (vs moving to remove it)
b) we're already performing getimagesize() and possibly load/resize on the file before this point (vs needing to move the file into a usable area to work with open_basedir restrictions that prevent working directly with uploaded files in the temp dir; since this would fail anyway, we lose nothing)
ImageFile::preferredType() now works on $this->type instead of asking for one, to make it handier to use from outside. (This is still needed in order for calling code to generate a target filename.)
Recommended for future:
* additional consolidation between the various ways of uploading avatars (touched avatarsettings, grouplogo, and apiaccountupdateprofileimage with similar minor changes)
* consolidate type checks and file naming into Avatar class
There's a new menu layout in this version of the software. It was
implemented as a plugin in 0.9.x to avoid clashes with existing themes,
but we're going to break that compatibility in this version, so we're just going for it.
This change involved moving all the changes in NewMenuPlugin into the
default code that was calling it. In addition, since
accountsettingsaction and connectsettingsaction differed only by menu,
I removed them, changed all references to them to the settingsmenu, and moved
the combined nav to its own class.
Let's put that episode behind us.
The CSS shim that was loaded by NewMenuPlugin for certain themes and certain actions
was removed.
'admin' is a pretty common username that people try when installing;
it was blacklisted because all of our admin panels were at /admin/*,
which would conflict with the admin user's namespace.
Changed the location of all admin panels to /panel/*, blacklisted the
nickname 'panel', and allowed 'admin'. Tested with a fresh install;
seems to work great.
* 'testing' of gitorious.org:statusnet/mainline: (63 commits)
Add a scary 'experimental feture' warning & are-you-sure prompt on moveuser.php
fix wrong datatypes (saving string instead of array) in AtomPub notice processing
Account moving is a background activity
return a 409 Conflict when subscription already exists
OStatusPlugin does discovery in Profile::fromURI()
considerably more logging and error checking in AccountMover
add a log method to AccountMover
normalize accounts and check for return in HTTP for moving
move account-moving classes to their own libraries
execution protection on discovery.php
PHPCS discovery.php
Move discovery library from OStatus plugin to core
Revert "Revert "0.9.7alpha1""
first example of moving a user
Parse properties of links in XRD files
Add the Atom username to the XRD output
preserve activities in object
let callers pass in an XMLOutputter to output to
execution protection on discovery.php
PHPCS linkheader.php
...
Removed the free calls (unneeded since destructors now work), and added an error check w/ logging & an exception for future attempts to forward calls to nonexistent object.
We were checking the list as comma-delimited (per the description of it as comma-delimited), but in fact spaces are also accepted, and who knows what else.
We can make a lot of HTTP requests from the server side. This change
adds some configuration options for using an HTTP proxy, which can
cache hits from multiple sites (good for status.net-like services, for example).
Version 0.9.6 and below of StatusNet assume anything in <author> is a
Person. So, we include an <activity:subject> element, which will be
checked first by those versions of the code, only for group feeds.
At some point we'll take this out, but it's useful for now.
* adds Right::CREATEGROUP
* logic in Profile::hasRight() checks for silencing
* NewgroupAction checks for the permission before letting you see or process the form in the UI
* User_group::register() logic does a low-level check on the specified initial group admin, and rejects creation if that user doesn't have the right; guaranteeing that API methods etc will also have this restriction applied sensibly.
Moved most of the heavy-lifting for account restoration out of
restoreuser.php and into its own class, with the hope that we'll do
the work from the Web eventually.
The new DeleteaccountAction lets a user delete their own account
(subject to global rights set by the admin). It presents a form to
delete the account, with an "I am sure." text entry box.
It then schedules the account for deletion and logs the user out.
If a cache entry is dependent on the code that's running, upgrading
(or enabling/disabling plugins) can generate hard-to-track
inconsistencies.
This change adds a close-to-unique fingerprint of the running code to
some cache keys, so that if the fingerprint changes, the old values
are ignored and new values are used.
If the automated uniqueness fails, an administrator can add an extra
config value, $config['site']['build'], that's thrown into the key also.
If a cache entry is dependent on the code that's running, upgrading
(or enabling/disabling plugins) can generate hard-to-track
inconsistencies.
This change adds a close-to-unique fingerprint of the running code to
some cache keys, so that if the fingerprint changes, the old values
are ignored and new values are used.
If the automated uniqueness fails, an administrator can add an extra
config value, $config['site']['build'], that's thrown into the key also.
We had two ways to generate an activity entry from a notice; one through
Notice::asAtomEntry() and one through Notice::asActivity() and
Activity::asString(). The code paths had already diverged somewhat. I
took the conditions that were in Notice::asAtomEntry() and made sure
they were replicated in the other two functions. Then, I rewrote
Notice::asAtomEntry() to use the other two functions instead.
This change passes the ActivityGenerationTests unit tests, but there
may be some other stuff that's not getting covered.
common_shorten_links() can only access the web session's logged-in user, so never properly took user options into effect for posting via XMPP, API, mail, etc.
Adds an optional $user parameter on common_shorten_links(), and a $user->shortenLinks() as a clearer interface for that.
Tweaked some lower-level functions so $user gets passed down -- making the $notice_id param previously there for saving URLs at notice save time generalized a little.
Note also ticket #2919: there's a lot of duplicate code calling the shortening, checking the length, and reporting near-identical error messages. These should be consolidated to aid in code and translation maintenance.