A lead section is essential for a summary in the /restbase/
content service. On commits we test the mediawiki endpoint but
against beta cluster we test the restbase endpoint.
I overlooked this in If855c7c0a2ad65d96d03d6a1411b453ecbe8752b
Bug: T214974
Change-Id: I9959d7ae463c4e1d4fa5345fdb59fe1b2152d49e
The previous Popups test page pointed to the "Main page" which as
of Ie15487184a7f9fc08603fc42cfad3aeac6642dcc has specially handling
This makes a new test page "Popups test page 2" that is linked to from
"Popups test page" which previously linked to the Main page which
now leads to the display of a broken Popup
This gets our test fixed but the problem with main page previews
will remain (T215080)
Bug: T214974
Change-Id: If855c7c0a2ad65d96d03d6a1411b453ecbe8752b
This gets rid of a little bit of code duplication, and makes the
interfaces all conform to one standard again after I05ed4b8 left them
in a little inconsistent (but properly documented) state.
Bug: T214970
Change-Id: If8407c1a48aff1cb31fc2e74b3c2b846e79a3cb5
As discussed in Iaadcce9. This does have a few benefits:
* Less code in the already pretty big render.js file.
* The code setting the target attribute is much closer to where it
belongs: in the file that specifies how the content of a reference
popup should look and behave.
* The class name "mwe-popups-extract" is not mentioned in two different
files, but in the same.
Note this changes the signature of this src/ui/templates/… file to not
return an HTML string any more, but a jQuery object. The other templates
still return strings. I believe this is fine, and not that much of a
difference anyway. The signatures don't need to be identical. And the
jQuery object still represents the exact same HTML as before.
If it helps we could change all templates/… signatures accordingly.
Could be done in this or a separate patch.
Bug: T213908
Bug: T214970
Change-Id: I05ed4b886f79c5ae748f53ab9fed965dfd217620
This solves the (I believe) only regression we introduced: A bad fake
reference like <span class="reference">[[Other article#Section]]</span>
showed a page preview for the "Other article" before we introduced
reference previews, but would have shown nothing after I9ec57e0.
Checking if the link is a self-link solves this and possibly more related
issues. Only self-links can point to a footnote on the same page.
Manually created fake-references like
<span class="reference">[[#Section]]</span> still have a chance to show
nothing in case the manually created HTML does not strictly follow the
expectations in the gateway. There is not much we can do about this. We
should not accept any arbitrary HTML but need to make at least *some*
assumptions.
Bug: T214970
Change-Id: I86e91bf45c3ae4c6a4086f7f1c7b1280fd400d17
We updated this documentation just recently via Ie370cfe. We followed
what the createModel() function does. But this is not the only way a
PreviewModel object can be created. Reference previews, for example,
don't use it.
Instead of following createModel(), I checked what the different popup
types actually use.
Bug: T214970
Change-Id: I2c4293a48387836dc30e18d10d952b4a26e6f2b5
I do find these very confusing and would like to remove them:
* The test setup looks like these popup types are going to use
these properties. But they don't. They are not even trying to
access these properties.
* There are no assertions that make sure these properties are
*not* used. It would be possible to add something like this,
but I honestly think this is not worth it.
We might need to reflect this in the PreviewModel documentation
in src/preview/model.js. I would like to do this in a separate
patch.
Bug: T214970
Change-Id: I136112bfea7f732d2673bcb8c69aba9defe6ba85
This tests the newly introduced code that decides if page or reference
previews should be used in the handling of a dwel event.
Bug: T214971
Change-Id: Ib20d00b7b9ee9b1ed82763137ec62e468e8f05f9
This is mainly done to increase testabilty of this part. I am a bit
unsure if this should ( have been ) integrated in the former index.js
that's now the page.js. - See also the refactoring done before.
Bug: T214971
Change-Id: I90d0441510bc1ec0b4900a392afcbaff6a552377
This is as preparation to introduce a gateway switch that decides if the
page or reference gatway should be selected. Moving that code to it's own
realm makes that path better testable.
Bug: T214971
Change-Id: I5efa9fb8f63f1487c627eb9a3f1fe47f43c611cc
This installs a series of safety nets:
* The selector [href*="#"] skips links without a fragment.
* It's still possible that a fragment exists, but is empty.
mwTitle.getFragment() checks this.
* The gateway does not assume the element exists, but checks this first.
If there is no such element, the gateway aborts the request in a way
that no error popup is shown. This is currently only possible with the
`{ textStatus: 'abort', xhr: { readyState: 0 } }` response as seen in
this patch. We might need to introduce a new, more clean way to silently
quit a fetchPreviewForTitle() call.
* The test for the reference gateway finally covers the scraping code.
Bug: T214970
Bug: T214971
Change-Id: I9ec57e0fbb0d21beaaa7b359c1c2bef64d2c14f5
Including tests for all situations.
I believe it is impossible or extremely hard to actually abuse any of
these places. All these data are not extracted from the current page, but
delivered either by MediaWiki's api.php or a RESTful endpoint, as
configured via $wgPopupsGateway and $wgPopupsRestGatewayEndpoint. A
possible attacker would need to write it's own endpoint (which must either
run on the same server or somehow ignore the CSRF token), and set the
value of mw.config.values.wgPopupsRestGatewayEndpoint on the client to
this endpoint – which requires just *another* attack vector to be able to
do this.
It's "the right thing"(tm) to escape all this anyway.
I found two possibly relevant security reviews of this extension, T88171
and T129177, resolved in 2015 and 2016.
Bug: T88171
Bug: T129177
Bug: T214754
Bug: T214971
Change-Id: I1d118c9ccaea434a253a772d18139b9b077118ab
Instead of maintaining a list of named constants (which must be updated
every time we want to add a new test with a new message), the mock now
behaves like MediaWiki's build-in qqx dummy language code and returns
the message key in brackets. The additional benefit of using the
HTML-like <…> characters is that this will automatically test if the
messages are properly HTML escaped.
Bug: T214970
Change-Id: Id7911036a7b582aff21acf911a826b5421a55938
This will affect all links, including [[Other page#Fragment]] for
example. But it will not have much of an effect there. The mw.Title
class is able to understand strings like "Other page#Fragment". All
old code calls title.getPrefixedDb() on the result. This will *not*
include the fragment. Only the new code will use title.getFragment().
I made sure this does not affect regular page previews, even when the
link is something like [[Other page#Fragment]].
Bug: T213415
Change-Id: I15611a44aa0477cc5e48ee4b12aae3cd981d977c
Mocha discourages the usage of arrow functiones in the test specs since
Mocha context can't be accessed from inside.
I stumbled across this when using this.skip(); in the reference preview
selenium tests. Since it took me some time to figure out why it was not
working, I guess it's better to avoid lambdas generally there.
See https://mochajs.org/#arrow-functions
Change-Id: I95cb183ac88e9a624c449a8f9addbe84bf76c335
I tried hard to keep the CSS as small and robust as possible. The
icon will be align with the text by adding a negativ margin. With
that we also decided against using RTL and LTR specific icons that
are positioned at the edge of the canvas for now.
Bug: T213907
Change-Id: I98888114e1c50e249cf31e71749323bd4f69da3f
I guess both is fine: either having the default in the gateway (as it
was before), or in the renderer (as this patch proposes). I, personally,
feel better with having it closer to where it is needed. This way it's
not possible to accidentially deliver a model object with an empty title.
The renderer will catch this.
At the moment we don't know exactly how we will fetch other titles (e.g.
"Book").
This change is split from I15611a4 where it was a little misplaced.
It also includes a test for the default fallback title.
Bug: T213907
Change-Id: I8ec3ddc21a417da7f95feff7b080cbd60d5472e7
Including tests. I also changed the title to include quotes as well,
even if not critical in that case.
Bug: T214754
Change-Id: I2f92a5714f7adc229a003f9167bcc9afdbc55583
Special characters that have a meaning in one of the many different input
formats jQuery accepts must be escaped.
The real-world use-case are references like <ref name=":1"> with a colon.
But it's many more characters that need escaping. See
http://api.jquery.com/category/selectors/
Note this patch misses a test. I already uploaded I9ec57e0 to fix the
currently incomplete tests. But I can't make it work. How do I create an
element in the test environment so that jQuery finds it?
I suggest to merge this and continue working on the tests later, because
this is currently one of the most annoying issues that makes all testing
unreliable.
Bug: T214710
Change-Id: Ifb5fe896936078f799298ac803d019d9caa048c8
The need for this is more a sign for a broken specification than an
actual issue with this code. But better be sure than sorry. More
details at
https://mathiasbynens.github.io/rel-noopener/
Bug: T214776
Change-Id: Idbcfae6d146fbbe3bff730239329beeb3455e18c
This is documented at http://usejsdoc.org/tags-type.html, but not in many
other places, especially not in the JSDuck documentation.
The {!…} syntax means "can not be null". This is the default anyway.
The {?…} syntax means nullable. In a few situation is was used when a
parameter can be undefined. I decided to remove it everywhere and replace
it with {…|null} when appropriate, because this is much more explicit. Less
syntax to remember.
Note I'm intentionally not using the […] syntax when a parameter is followed
by non-optional parameters. Actually skipping a parameter in such a situation
would mess the parameter order up. Having optional parameters not at the end
is sometimes used as a feature in JavaScript code, but not in this codebase,
as far as I can see.
Change-Id: Ie370cfe08c32d1af5b0341951bed044fc3511c57
I finally found the issue. It was an incomplete mock for the
mw.html.escape() function that would return the string unescaped.
Bug: T213415
Bug: T213908
Change-Id: I198393b3c72771e4018f79913ddb9f4cb2c0d4de
Excluding tests for the renderer which keeps failing. This will be
readded in a later patch.
Bug: T213415
Bug: T213908
Change-Id: If79fa3d0a7a20f121b1ceda6e0e33ad691b1ad30
This does make generic `array` type hints more specific when possible.
I'm also applying my personal best practice to not have any @return
documentation on test @dataProviders. These don't provide any useful
information, and can't. The best type we could use is `@return array[]`,
but that would be the same for every single data provider. Copy pasting
these comments around is of no real value.
Also it was already inconsistent as some did not had this comment.
Change-Id: Id401c7e32493b6a9faaf6d47cddc01e2227102af