22 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Caitlin Potter
e69c1806a8 style(routeSpec.js): make jshint happy 2014-11-01 18:11:51 -04:00
cmichal
b4770582f8 fix(ngRoute): allow proto inherited properties in route params object
copy route params with angular.copy before using angular.extend which looks only for enumerable own
properties

Closes #8181
Closes #9731
2014-11-01 18:08:24 -04:00
Henry Zhu
d3b1f502e3 style(*): add rule disallowSpacesInAnonymousFunctionExpression beforeOpeningRoundBrace, including i18n generator 2014-10-23 15:59:26 -04:00
Henry Zhu
7f65f97919 style(*): add rule requireSpacesInFunction beforeOpeningCurlyBrace
This rule enforces a space after the curly brace
for function declarations, anonymous function expressions,
and named function expressions.
2014-10-23 15:59:25 -04:00
Michal Cieplucha
52ceec2229 fix(templateRequest): allow empty html template
allow empty html template and not throw error

Closes #9581
2014-10-21 06:31:25 -07:00
Georgios Kalpakas
9db70d3959 test($route): fix typo in test description
Closes #9541
2014-10-10 00:14:52 -07:00
Tobias Bosch
f4ff11b01e feat($route): ability to cancel $routeChangeStart event
Calling `preventDefault()` on a `$routeChangeStart` event will
prevent the route change and also call `preventDefault` on the `$locationChangeStart` event, which prevents the location change as well.

BREAKING CHANGE:

Order of events has changed.
Previously: `$locationChangeStart` -> `$locationChangeSuccess`
  -> `$routeChangeStart` -> `$routeChangeSuccess`

Now: `$locationChangeStart` -> `$routeChangeStart`
  -> `$locationChangeSuccess` ->  -> `$routeChangeSuccess`

Fixes #5581
Closes #5714
Closes #9502
2014-10-08 15:35:04 -07:00
Michał Gołębiowski
6fd36deed9 feat($location): add support for History API state handling
Adds $location state method allowing to get/set a History API state via
pushState & replaceState methods.

Note that:
- Angular treats states undefined and null as the same; trying to change
one to the other without touching the URL won't do anything. This is necessary
to prevent infinite digest loops when setting the URL to itself in IE<10 in
the HTML5 hash fallback mode.
- The state() method is not compatible with browsers not supporting
the HTML5 History API, e.g. IE 9 or Android < 4.0.

Closes #9027
2014-10-07 15:48:10 -07:00
Erin Altenhof-Long
3b5d75c021 feat(ngRoute): alias string as redirectTo property in .otherwise()
Allow `.otherwise()` to interpret a string parameter
as the `redirectTo` property

Closes #7794
2014-08-28 11:58:31 -07:00
Matias Niemelä
a70e2833ea feat($templateRequest): introduce the $templateRequest service
This handy service is designed to download and cache template contents
and to throw an error when a template request fails.

BREAKING CHANGE

Angular will now throw a $compile minErr each a template fails to download
for ngView, directives and ngMessage template requests. This changes the former
behavior of silently ignoring failed HTTP requests--or when the template itself
is empty. Please ensure that all directive, ngView and ngMessage code now properly
addresses this scenario. NgInclude is uneffected from this change.
2014-08-27 23:19:19 -04:00
Jack Wearden
77a1acc7fc feat(ngRoute): add method for changing url params
Add a $route#updateParams method for changing the current route
parameters without having to build a URL and call $location#path.
Useful for apps with a structure involving programmatically moving
between pages on the current route, but with different :param
values.

Properties in the object passed to $route.updateParams() will be
added to the location as queryParams if not contained within the
route's path definition.
2014-08-13 14:11:58 -07:00
Jason Miller
528f56a690 fix(ngRoute): remove unnecessary call to decodeURIComponent
Since `$location.$$path` is already decoded, doing an extra `decodeURIComponent` is both unnecessary
and can cause problems. Specifically, if the path originally includes an encoded `%` (aka `%25`),
then ngRoute will throw "URIError: URI malformed".

Closes #6326
Closes #6327
2014-07-15 13:17:36 +01:00
Shahar Talmi
accd35b747 chore(jshint): enforce jshint for tests
Closes #7264
2014-04-27 21:20:31 +01:00
Igor Minar
308598795a revert: fix($route): update current route upon $route instantiation
This reverts commit 2b344dbd20.

I think I merged this commit prematurely and in addition to that
we found out that it's breaking google apps.

Jen Bourey will provide more info at the original PR #5681
2014-01-13 15:12:17 -08:00
Daniel Zimmermann
2b344dbd20 fix($route): update current route upon $route instantiation
This fixes cases where the first ngView is loaded in a template asynchronously (such as through ngInclude), as the service will miss the first  event otherwise.

Closes #4957
2014-01-10 23:42:36 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin
07272608d8 fix(modules): stop leaking global variables in tests
The routeUtils.js file was declaring a number of functions that were
leaking into other modules such as ngMocks causing tests to pass
incorrectly.

Closes #4360
2013-10-10 11:58:15 -07:00
Nicola Peduzzi
0ff86c3233 fix(routeProvider): parametrized routes do not match against locations that would not valorize each parameters. 2013-10-04 08:45:47 -07:00
Ken Sheedlo
37123cd285 feat(minerr): log minerr doc url in development
Closes #3566
2013-08-15 13:23:18 -07:00
joshrtay
04cebcc133 feat($route): express style route matching
Added new route matching capabilities:
  - optional param
Changed route matching syntax:
 - named wildcard

BREAKING CHANGE: the syntax for named wildcard parameters in routes
    has changed from *wildcard to :wildcard*

    To migrate the code, follow the example below.  Here, *highlight becomes
    :highlight*:

    Before:

    $routeProvider.when('/Book1/:book/Chapter/:chapter/*highlight/edit',
              {controller: noop, templateUrl: 'Chapter.html'});

    After:

    $routeProvider.when('/Book1/:book/Chapter/:chapter/:highlight*/edit',
            {controller: noop, templateUrl: 'Chapter.html'});
2013-08-12 11:04:37 -07:00
Igor Minar
0bf0570505 docs(minErr): rename sce/isecrurl to sce/insecurl 2013-08-08 10:22:32 -07:00
Chirayu Krishnappa
bea9422ebf feat($sce): new $sce service for Strict Contextual Escaping.
$sce is a service that provides Strict Contextual Escaping services to AngularJS.

Strict Contextual Escaping
--------------------------

Strict Contextual Escaping (SCE) is a mode in which AngularJS requires
bindings in certain contexts to result in a value that is marked as safe
to use for that context One example of such a context is binding
arbitrary html controlled by the user via ng-bind-html-unsafe.  We
refer to these contexts as privileged or SCE contexts.

As of version 1.2, Angular ships with SCE enabled by default.

Note:  When enabled (the default), IE8 in quirks mode is not supported.
In this mode, IE8 allows one to execute arbitrary javascript by the use
of the expression() syntax.  Refer
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ie/archive/2008/10/16/ending-expressions.aspx
to learn more about them.  You can ensure your document is in standards
mode and not quirks mode by adding <!doctype html> to the top of your
HTML document.

SCE assists in writing code in way that (a) is secure by default and (b)
makes auditing for security vulnerabilities such as XSS, clickjacking,
etc. a lot easier.

Here's an example of a binding in a privileged context:

  <input ng-model="userHtml">
  <div ng-bind-html-unsafe="{{userHtml}}">

Notice that ng-bind-html-unsafe is bound to {{userHtml}} controlled by
the user.  With SCE disabled, this application allows the user to render
arbitrary HTML into the DIV.  In a more realistic example, one may be
rendering user comments, blog articles, etc. via bindings.  (HTML is
just one example of a context where rendering user controlled input
creates security vulnerabilities.)

For the case of HTML, you might use a library, either on the client side, or on the server side,
to sanitize unsafe HTML before binding to the value and rendering it in the document.

How would you ensure that every place that used these types of bindings was bound to a value that
was sanitized by your library (or returned as safe for rendering by your server?)  How can you
ensure that you didn't accidentally delete the line that sanitized the value, or renamed some
properties/fields and forgot to update the binding to the sanitized value?

To be secure by default, you want to ensure that any such bindings are disallowed unless you can
determine that something explicitly says it's safe to use a value for binding in that
context.  You can then audit your code (a simple grep would do) to ensure that this is only done
for those values that you can easily tell are safe - because they were received from your server,
sanitized by your library, etc.  You can organize your codebase to help with this - perhaps
allowing only the files in a specific directory to do this.  Ensuring that the internal API
exposed by that code doesn't markup arbitrary values as safe then becomes a more manageable task.

In the case of AngularJS' SCE service, one uses $sce.trustAs (and
shorthand methods such as $sce.trustAsHtml, etc.) to obtain values that
will be accepted by SCE / privileged contexts.

In privileged contexts, directives and code will bind to the result of
$sce.getTrusted(context, value) rather than to the value directly.
Directives use $sce.parseAs rather than $parse to watch attribute
bindings, which performs the $sce.getTrusted behind the scenes on
non-constant literals.

As an example, ngBindHtmlUnsafe uses $sce.parseAsHtml(binding
expression).  Here's the actual code (slightly simplified):

  var ngBindHtmlUnsafeDirective = ['$sce', function($sce) {
    return function(scope, element, attr) {
      scope.$watch($sce.parseAsHtml(attr.ngBindHtmlUnsafe), function(value) {
        element.html(value || '');
      });
    };
  }];

Impact on loading templates
---------------------------

This applies both to the ng-include directive as well as templateUrl's
specified by directives.

By default, Angular only loads templates from the same domain and
protocol as the application document.  This is done by calling
$sce.getTrustedResourceUrl on the template URL.  To load templates from
other domains and/or protocols, you may either either whitelist them or
wrap it into a trusted value.

*Please note*:
The browser's Same Origin Policy and Cross-Origin Resource Sharing
(CORS) policy apply in addition to this and may further restrict whether
the template is successfully loaded.  This means that without the right
CORS policy, loading templates from a different domain won't work on all
browsers.  Also, loading templates from file:// URL does not work on
some browsers.

This feels like too much overhead for the developer?
----------------------------------------------------

It's important to remember that SCE only applies to interpolation expressions.

If your expressions are constant literals, they're automatically trusted
and you don't need to call $sce.trustAs on them.
e.g.  <div ng-html-bind-unsafe="'<b>implicitly trusted</b>'"></div> just works.

Additionally, a[href] and img[src] automatically sanitize their URLs and
do not pass them through $sce.getTrusted.  SCE doesn't play a role here.

The included $sceDelegate comes with sane defaults to allow you to load
templates in ng-include from your application's domain without having to
even know about SCE.  It blocks loading templates from other domains or
loading templates over http from an https served document.  You can
change these by setting your own custom whitelists and blacklists for
matching such URLs.

This significantly reduces the overhead.  It is far easier to pay the
small overhead and have an application that's secure and can be audited
to verify that with much more ease than bolting security onto an
application later.
2013-07-25 13:00:35 -07:00
Igor Minar
5599b55b04 refactor($route): pull $route and friends into angular-route.js
$route, $routeParams and ngView have been pulled from core angular.js
to angular-route.js/ngRoute module.

This is was done to in order keep the core focused on most commonly
used functionality and allow community routers to be freely used
instead of $route service.

There is no need to panic, angular-route will keep on being supported
by the angular team.

Note: I'm intentionally not fixing tutorial links. Tutorial will need
bigger changes and those should be done when we update tutorial to
1.2.

BREAKING CHANGE: applications that use $route will now need to load
angular-route.js file and define dependency on ngRoute module.

Before:

```
...
<script src="angular.js"></script>
...
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['someOtherModule']);
...
```

After:

```
...
<script src="angular.js"></script>
<script src="angular-route.js"></script>
...
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['ngRoute', 'someOtherModule']);
...
```

Closes #2804
2013-06-06 17:07:12 -07:00