tracks/vendor/rails/activeresource/lib/active_resource/validations.rb
Luke Melia 901a58f8a3 Upgraded to Rails 2.1. This can have wide ranging consequences, so please help track down any issues introduced by the upgrade. Requires environment.rb modifications.
Changes you will need to make:

 * In your environment.rb, you will need to update references to a few files per environment.rb.tmpl
 * In your environment.rb, you will need to specify the local time zone of the computer that is running your Tracks install.

Other notes on my changes:

 * Modified our code to take advantage of Rails 2.1's slick time zone support.
 * Upgraded will_paginate for compatibility
 * Hacked the Selenium on Rails plugin, which has not been updated in some time and does not support Rails 2.1
 * Verified that all tests pass on my machine, including Selenium tests -- I'd like confirmation from others, too.
2008-06-17 01:13:25 -04:00

288 lines
10 KiB
Ruby

module ActiveResource
class ResourceInvalid < ClientError #:nodoc:
end
# Active Resource validation is reported to and from this object, which is used by Base#save
# to determine whether the object in a valid state to be saved. See usage example in Validations.
class Errors
include Enumerable
attr_reader :errors
delegate :empty?, :to => :errors
def initialize(base) # :nodoc:
@base, @errors = base, {}
end
# Add an error to the base Active Resource object rather than an attribute.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_folder = Folder.find(1)
# my_folder.errors.add_to_base("You can't edit an existing folder")
# my_folder.errors.on_base
# # => "You can't edit an existing folder"
#
# my_folder.errors.add_to_base("This folder has been tagged as frozen")
# my_folder.valid?
# # => false
# my_folder.errors.on_base
# # => ["You can't edit an existing folder", "This folder has been tagged as frozen"]
#
def add_to_base(msg)
add(:base, msg)
end
# Adds an error to an Active Resource object's attribute (named for the +attribute+ parameter)
# with the error message in +msg+.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_resource = Node.find(1)
# my_resource.errors.add('name', 'can not be "base"') if my_resource.name == 'base'
# my_resource.errors.on('name')
# # => 'can not be "base"!'
#
# my_resource.errors.add('desc', 'can not be blank') if my_resource.desc == ''
# my_resource.valid?
# # => false
# my_resource.errors.on('desc')
# # => 'can not be blank!'
#
def add(attribute, msg)
@errors[attribute.to_s] = [] if @errors[attribute.to_s].nil?
@errors[attribute.to_s] << msg
end
# Returns true if the specified +attribute+ has errors associated with it.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_resource = Disk.find(1)
# my_resource.errors.add('location', 'must be Main') unless my_resource.location == 'Main'
# my_resource.errors.on('location')
# # => 'must be Main!'
#
# my_resource.errors.invalid?('location')
# # => true
# my_resource.errors.invalid?('name')
# # => false
def invalid?(attribute)
!@errors[attribute.to_s].nil?
end
# A method to return the errors associated with +attribute+, which returns nil, if no errors are
# associated with the specified +attribute+, the error message if one error is associated with the specified +attribute+,
# or an array of error messages if more than one error is associated with the specified +attribute+.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_person = Person.new(params[:person])
# my_person.errors.on('login')
# # => nil
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be empty') if my_person.login == ''
# my_person.errors.on('login')
# # => 'can not be empty'
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be longer than 10 characters') if my_person.login.length > 10
# my_person.errors.on('login')
# # => ['can not be empty', 'can not be longer than 10 characters']
def on(attribute)
errors = @errors[attribute.to_s]
return nil if errors.nil?
errors.size == 1 ? errors.first : errors
end
alias :[] :on
# A method to return errors assigned to +base+ object through add_to_base, which returns nil, if no errors are
# associated with the specified +attribute+, the error message if one error is associated with the specified +attribute+,
# or an array of error messages if more than one error is associated with the specified +attribute+.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_account = Account.find(1)
# my_account.errors.on_base
# # => nil
#
# my_account.errors.add_to_base("This account is frozen")
# my_account.errors.on_base
# # => "This account is frozen"
#
# my_account.errors.add_to_base("This account has been closed")
# my_account.errors.on_base
# # => ["This account is frozen", "This account has been closed"]
#
def on_base
on(:base)
end
# Yields each attribute and associated message per error added.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_person = Person.new(params[:person])
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be empty') if my_person.login == ''
# my_person.errors.add('password', 'can not be empty') if my_person.password == ''
# messages = ''
# my_person.errors.each {|attr, msg| messages += attr.humanize + " " + msg + "<br />"}
# messages
# # => "Login can not be empty<br />Password can not be empty<br />"
#
def each
@errors.each_key { |attr| @errors[attr].each { |msg| yield attr, msg } }
end
# Yields each full error message added. So Person.errors.add("first_name", "can't be empty") will be returned
# through iteration as "First name can't be empty".
#
# ==== Examples
# my_person = Person.new(params[:person])
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be empty') if my_person.login == ''
# my_person.errors.add('password', 'can not be empty') if my_person.password == ''
# messages = ''
# my_person.errors.each_full {|msg| messages += msg + "<br/>"}
# messages
# # => "Login can not be empty<br />Password can not be empty<br />"
#
def each_full
full_messages.each { |msg| yield msg }
end
# Returns all the full error messages in an array.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_person = Person.new(params[:person])
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be empty') if my_person.login == ''
# my_person.errors.add('password', 'can not be empty') if my_person.password == ''
# messages = ''
# my_person.errors.full_messages.each {|msg| messages += msg + "<br/>"}
# messages
# # => "Login can not be empty<br />Password can not be empty<br />"
#
def full_messages
full_messages = []
@errors.each_key do |attr|
@errors[attr].each do |msg|
next if msg.nil?
if attr == "base"
full_messages << msg
else
full_messages << [attr.humanize, msg].join(' ')
end
end
end
full_messages
end
def clear
@errors = {}
end
# Returns the total number of errors added. Two errors added to the same attribute will be counted as such
# with this as well.
#
# ==== Examples
# my_person = Person.new(params[:person])
# my_person.errors.size
# # => 0
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be empty') if my_person.login == ''
# my_person.errors.add('password', 'can not be empty') if my_person.password == ''
# my_person.error.size
# # => 2
#
def size
@errors.values.inject(0) { |error_count, attribute| error_count + attribute.size }
end
alias_method :count, :size
alias_method :length, :size
# Grabs errors from the XML response.
def from_xml(xml)
clear
humanized_attributes = @base.attributes.keys.inject({}) { |h, attr_name| h.update(attr_name.humanize => attr_name) }
messages = Hash.from_xml(xml)['errors']['error'] rescue []
messages.each do |message|
attr_message = humanized_attributes.keys.detect do |attr_name|
if message[0, attr_name.size + 1] == "#{attr_name} "
add humanized_attributes[attr_name], message[(attr_name.size + 1)..-1]
end
end
add_to_base message if attr_message.nil?
end
end
end
# Module to allow validation of Active Resource objects, which creates an Errors instance for every resource.
# Methods are implemented by overriding Base#validate or its variants Each of these methods can inspect
# the state of the object, which usually means ensuring that a number of attributes have a certain value
# (such as not empty, within a given range, matching a certain regular expression and so on).
#
# ==== Example
#
# class Person < ActiveResource::Base
# self.site = "http://www.localhost.com:3000/"
# protected
# def validate
# errors.add_on_empty %w( first_name last_name )
# errors.add("phone_number", "has invalid format") unless phone_number =~ /[0-9]*/
# end
#
# def validate_on_create # is only run the first time a new object is saved
# unless valid_member?(self)
# errors.add("membership_discount", "has expired")
# end
# end
#
# def validate_on_update
# errors.add_to_base("No changes have occurred") if unchanged_attributes?
# end
# end
#
# person = Person.new("first_name" => "Jim", "phone_number" => "I will not tell you.")
# person.save # => false (and doesn't do the save)
# person.errors.empty? # => false
# person.errors.count # => 2
# person.errors.on "last_name" # => "can't be empty"
# person.attributes = { "last_name" => "Halpert", "phone_number" => "555-5555" }
# person.save # => true (and person is now saved to the remote service)
#
module Validations
def self.included(base) # :nodoc:
base.class_eval do
alias_method_chain :save, :validation
end
end
# Validate a resource and save (POST) it to the remote web service.
def save_with_validation
save_without_validation
true
rescue ResourceInvalid => error
errors.from_xml(error.response.body)
false
end
# Checks for errors on an object (i.e., is resource.errors empty?).
#
# ==== Examples
# my_person = Person.create(params[:person])
# my_person.valid?
# # => true
#
# my_person.errors.add('login', 'can not be empty') if my_person.login == ''
# my_person.valid?
# # => false
def valid?
errors.empty?
end
# Returns the Errors object that holds all information about attribute error messages.
def errors
@errors ||= Errors.new(self)
end
end
end