An issue has been noticed on one of our old sites running 2.4 where when the user creates a link in the CMS content, selecting an existing page to link to, the link is not being converted to the actual URL on the front end and all links are coming through in the format of <a href="[sitetree_link_id=12]">
What would be causing this and how do I fix it?
The tag looks like it's being set incorrectly. It should be [sitetree_link id=12], not [sitetree_link_id=12].
We later added support to the parser for [sitetree_link,id=12] so that links didn't need to contain spaces, but I can't recall if that's in 2.4 or only 3.0+.
Can you confirm that your WYSIWYG insertion is putting in that errant _? If so, you might want to checkout the handleaction_insert function in tiny_mce_imporvements.js to confirm that it has a line like so:
case 'internal':
href = '[sitetree_link id=' + this.elements.internal.value + ']';
If the inserted links don't actually have the errant _ but they aren't being parsed, then try checking your sapphire/_config.php file for this:
ShortcodeParser::get('default')->register('sitetree_link', array('SiteTree', 'link_shortcode_handler'));
If your site makes changes to the ShortcodeParser at all you might have inadvertently turned off sitetree_link support.
If all of that looks in order, perhaps the ShortcodeParser isn't being called for some reason. In HTMLText::forTemplate(), put a debug statement (I like die("I got here!");) to confirm that HTMLText::forTemplate() is actually getting called. If it's not, you might need to manually call it in some pre-processing of your Content variable. Instead of this:
$content = $this->Content;
Do this:
$content = $this->obj('Content')->forTemplate();
I hope that one of those answers help. Either way, it would be great if you could post back, so we could isolate what caused this. It might help us make the API easier to use in SilverStripe 3.1.
Related
Got an unusual problem that started recently and wonder if anyone has any ideas why it's happening and how to stop it.
Some of my products are getting an underscore added to the url when selected which, naturally, results in a 404 error. It's consistent - either an underscore gets added or it doesn't. It doesn't seem to be related to the GUID or the post_name in the wp_posts table. It also doesn't matter if you call it using the URL or the post ID so the following:-
Bad index.php?page_id=1075707 the-john-rutter-christmas-piano-album-2 https://website-name.com/product/the-john-rutter-christmas-piano-album-2/
Good index.php?page_id=1087442 the-john-rutter-piano-album https://website-name.com/product/the-john-rutter-piano-album/
Bad index.php?page_id=1159681 parable-for-harpsichord https://website-name.com/product/parable-for-harpsichord/
Good index.php?page_id=1159684 jesu-meine-freude-2 https://website-name.com/product/jesu-meine-freude-2/
Bad here meaning that the URL appears with an underscore such as
https://website-name.com/product/parable-for-harpsichord_/
I've also tried this with every single plugin, except WooCommerce, de-activated and with my functions.php disabled. No difference.
I've tried using the URLs as given above, C&P or typed in manually and by directly referencing the post ID (as shown).
This has only recently started and I'm at a bit of a loss here. I don't know how widespread this problem is either since I've over 120,000 products and can't check them all by hand. Fortunately, this isn't live yet.
Any suggestions or ideas here would help me.
There appears to be a hidden character at the end of the post_name field. Deleting and recreating the field got rid of the problem.
I want to give my users the possibility to create document templates (contracts, emails, etc.)
The best option I figured out would be to store these document templates in mongo (maybe I'm wrong...)
I've been searching for a couple of hours now but I can't figure out how to render these document template with their data context.
Example:
Template stored in Mongo: "Dear {{firstname}}"
data context: {firstname: "Tom"}
On Tom's website, He should read: "Dear Tom"
How can I do this?
EDIT
After some researches, I discovered a package called spacebars-compiler that brings the option to compile to the client:
meteor add spacebars-compiler
I then tried something like this:
Template.doctypesList.rendered = ->
content = "<div>" + this.data.content + "</div>"
template = Spacebars.compile content
rendered = UI.dynamic(template,{name:"nicolas"})
UI.insert(rendered, $(this).closest(".widget-body"))
but it doesn't work.
the template gets compiled but then, I don't know how to interpret it with its data context and to send it back to the web page.
EDIT 2
I'm getting closer thanks to Tom.
This is what I did:
Template.doctypesList.rendered = ->
content = this.data.content
console.log content
templateName = "template_#{this.data._id}"
Template.__define__(templateName, () -> content)
rendered = UI.renderWithData(eval("Template.#{templateName}"),{name:"nicolas"})
UI.insert(rendered, $("#content_" + this.data._id).get(0))
This works excepted the fact that the name is not injected into the template. UI.renderWithData renders the template but without the data context...
The thing your are missing is the call to (undocumented!) Template.__define__ which requires the template name (pick something unique and clever) as the first argument and the render function which you get from your space bars compiler. When it is done you can use {{> UI.dynamic}} as #Slava suggested.
There is also another way to do it, by using UI.Component API, but I guess it's pretty unstable at the moment, so maybe I will skip this, at least for now.
Use UI.dynamic: https://www.discovermeteor.com/blog/blaze-dynamic-template-includes/
It is fairly new and didn't make its way to docs for some reason.
There are few ways to achieve what you want, but I would do it like this:
You're probably already using underscore.js, if not Meteor has core package for it.
You could use underscore templates (http://underscorejs.org/#template) like this:
var templateString = 'Dear <%= firstname %>'
and later compile it using
_.template(templateString, {firstname: "Tom"})
to get Dear Tom.
Of course you can store templateString in MongoDB in the meantime.
You can set delimiters to whatever you want, <%= %> is just the default.
Compiled template is essentially htmljs notation Meteor uses (or so I suppose) and it uses Template.template_name.lookup to render correct data. Check in console if Template.template_name.lookup("data_helper")() returns the correct data.
I recently had to solve this exact (or similar) problem of compiling templates client side. You need to make sure the order of things is like this:
Compiled template is present on client
Template data is present (verify with Template.template_name.lookup("data_name")() )
Render the template on page now
To compile the template, as #apendua have suggested, use (this is how I use it and it works for me)
Template.__define__(name, eval(Spacebars.compile(
newHtml, {
isTemplate: true,
sourceName: 'Template "' + name + '"'
}
)));
After this you need to make sure the data you want to render in template is available before you actually render the template on page. This is what I use for rendering template on page:
UI.DomRange.insert(UI.render(Template.template_name).dom, document.body);
Although my use case for rendering templates client side is somewhat different (my task was to live update the changed template overriding meteor's hot code push), but this worked best among different methods of rendering the template.
You can check my very early stage package which does this here: https://github.com/channikhabra/meteor-live-update/blob/master/js/live-update.js
I am fairly new to real-world programming so my code might be ugly, but may be it'll give you some pointers to solve your problem. (If you find me doing something stupid in there, or see something which is better done some other way, please feel free to drop a comment. That's the only way I get feedback for improvement as I am new and essentially code alone sitting in my dark corner).
Background: I downloaded a *.sql backup of my WordPress site's database, and replaced all instances of the old database table prefix with a new one (e.g. from the default wp_ to something like asdfghjkl_).
I've just learnt that WordPress uses serialized PHP strings in the database, and what I did will have messed with the integrity of the serialized string lengths.
The thing is, I deleted the backup file just before I learnt about this (as my website was still functioning fine), and installed a number of plugins since. So, there's no way I can revert back, and I therefore would like to know two things:
How can I fix this, if at all possible?
What kind of problems could this cause?
(This article states that, a WordPress blog for instance, could lose its settings and widgets. But this doesn't seem to have happened to me as all the settings for my blog are still intact. But I have no clue as to what could be broken on the inside, or what issues it'd pose in the future. Hence this question.)
Visit this page: http://unserialize.onlinephpfunctions.com/
On that page you should see this sample serialized string: a:1:{s:4:"Test";s:17:"unserialize here!";}. Take a piece of it-- s:4:"Test";. That means "string", 4 characters, then the actual string. I am pretty sure that what you did caused the numeric character count to be out of sync with the string. Play with the tool on the site mentioned above and you will see that you get an error if you change "Test" to "Tes", for example.
What you need to do is get those character counts to match your new string. If you haven't corrupted any of the other encoding-- removed a colon or something-- that should fix the problem.
I came to this same problem after trying to change the domain from localhost to the real URL. After some searching I found the answer in Wordpress documentation:
https://codex.wordpress.org/Moving_WordPress
I will quote what is written there:
To avoid that serialization issue, you have three options:
Use the Better Search Replace or Velvet Blues Update URLs plugins if you can > access your Dashboard.
Use WP-CLI's search-replace if your hosting provider (or you) have installed WP-CLI.
Run a search and replace query manually on your database. Note: Only perform a search and replace on the wp_posts table.
I ended up using WP-CLI which is able to replace things in the database without breaking serialization: http://wp-cli.org/commands/search-replace/
I know this is an old question, but better late than never, I suppose. I ran into this problem recently, after inheriting a database that had had a find/replace executed on serialized data. After many hours of researching, I discovered that this was because the string counts were off. Unfortunately, there was so much data with lots of escaping and newlines and I didn't know how to count in some cases and I had so much data that I needed something automated.
Along the way, I stumbled across this question and Benubird's post helped put me on the right path. His example code did not work in production use on complex data, containing numerous special characters and HTML, with very deep levels of nesting, and it did not properly handle certain escaped characters and encoding. So I modified it a bit and spent countless hours working through additional bugs to get my version to "fix" the serialized data.
// do some DB query here
while($res = db_fetch($qry)){
$str = $res->data;
$sCount=1; // don't try to count manually, which can be inaccurate; let serialize do its thing
$newstring = unserialize($str);
if(!$newstring) {
preg_match_all('/s:([0-9]+):"(.*?)"(?=;)/su',$str,$m);
# preg_match_all("/s:([0-9]+):(\"[^\"\\\\]*(?:\\\\.[^\"\\\\]*)*\")(?=;)/u",$str,$m); // alternate: almost works but leave quotes in $m[2] output
# print_r($m); exit;
foreach($m[1] as $k => $len) {
/*** Possibly specific to my case: Spyropress Builder in WordPress ***/
$m_clean = str_replace('\"','"',$m[2][$k]); // convert escaped double quotes so that HTML will render properly
// if newline is present, it will output directly in the HTML
// nl2br won't work here (must find literally; not with double quotes!)
$m_clean = str_replace('\n', '<br />', $m_clean);
$m_clean = nl2br($m_clean); // but we DO need to convert actual newlines also
/*********************************************************************/
if($sCount){
$m_new = $m[0][$k].';'; // we must account for the missing semi-colon not captured in regex!
// NOTE: If we don't flush the buffers, things like <img src="http://whatever" can be replaced with <img src="//whatever" and break the serialize count!!!
ob_end_flush(); // not sure why this is necessary but cost me 5 hours!!
$m_ser = serialize($m_clean);
if($m_new != $m_ser) {
print "Replacing: $m_new\n";
print "With: $m_ser\n";
$str = str_replace($m_new, $m_ser, $str);
}
}
else{
$m_len = (strlen($m[2][$k]) - substr_count($m[2][$k],'\n'));
if($len != $m_len) {
$newstr='s:'.$m_len.':"'.$m[2][$k].'"';
echo "Replacing: {$m[0][$k]}\n";
echo "With: $newstr\n\n";
$str = str_replace($m_new, $newstr, $str);
}
}
}
print_r($str); // this is your FIXED serialized data!! Yay!
}
}
A little geeky explanation on my changes:
I found that trying to count with Benubird's code as a base was too inaccurate for large datasets, so I ended up just using serialize to be sure the count was accurate.
I avoided the try/catch because, in my case, the try would succeed but just returned an empty string. So, I check for empty data instead.
I tried numerous regex's but only a mod on Benubird's would accurately handle all cases. Specifically, I had to modify the part that checked for the ";" because it would match on CSS like "width:100%; height:25px;" and broke the output. So, I used a positive lookahead to only match when the ";" was outside of the set of double quotes.
My case had lots of newlines, HTML, and escaped double quotes, so I had to add a block to clean that up.
There were a couple of weird situations where data would be replaced incorrectly by the regex and then the serialize would count it incorrectly as well. I found NOTHING on any sites to help with this and finally thought it might be related to caching or something like that and tried flushing the output buffer (ob_end_flush()), which worked, thank goodness!
Hope this helps someone... Took me almost 20 hours including the research and dealing with weird issues! :)
This script (https://interconnectit.com/products/search-and-replace-for-wordpress-databases/) can help to update an sql database with proper URLs everywhere, without encountering serialized data issues, because it will update the "characters count" that could throw your URLs out of sync whenever serialized data occurs.
The steps would be:
if you already have imported a messed up database (widgets not
working, theme options not there, etc), just drop that database
using PhpMyAdmin. That is, remove everything on it. Then export and
have at hand an un-edited dump of the old database.
Now you have to import the (un-edited) old database into the
newly created one. You can do this via an import, or copying over
the db from PhpMyAdmin. Notice that so far, we haven't done any
search and replace yet; we just have an old database content and
structure into a new database with its own user and password. Your site will be probably unaccessible at this point.
Make sure you have your WordPress files freshly uploaded to the
proper folder on the server, and edit your wp-config.php to make it
connect with the new database.
Upload the script into a "secret" folder - just for security
reasons - at the same level than wp-admin, wp-content, and wp-includes. Do not forget to remove it all once the search and
replace have taken place, because you risk to offer your DB details
open to the whole internet.
Now point your browser to the secret folder, and use the script's fine
interface. It is very self-explanatory. Once used, we proceed to
completely remove it from the server.
This should have your database properly updated, without any serialized data issues around: the new URL will be set everywhere, and serialized data characters counts will be accordingly updated.
Widgets will be passed over, and theme settings as well - two of the typical places that use serialized data in WordPress.
Done and tested solution!
If the error is due to the length of the strings being incorrect (something I have seen frequently), then you should be able to adapt this script to fix it:
foreach($strings as $key => $str)
{
try {
unserialize($str);
} catch(exception $e) {
preg_match_all('#s:([0-9]+):"([^;]+)"#',$str,$m);
foreach($m[1] as $k => $len) {
if($len != strlen($m[2][$k])) {
$newstr='s:'.strlen($m[2][$k]).':"'.$m[2][$k].'"';
echo "len mismatch: {$m[0][$k]}\n";
echo "should be: $newstr\n\n";
$strings[$key] = str_replace($m[0][$k], $newstr, $str);
}
}
}
}
I personally don't like working in PHP, or placing my DB credentials in an public file. I created a ruby script to fix serializations that you can run locally:
https://github.com/wsizoo/wordpress-fix-serialization
Context Edit:
I approached fixing serialization by first identifying serialization via regex, and then recalculating the byte size of the contained data string.
$content_to_fix.gsub!(/s:([0-9]+):\"((.|\n)*?)\";/) {"s:#{$2.bytesize}:\"#{$2}\";"}
I then update the specified data via an escaped sql update query.
escaped_fix_content = client.escape($fixed_content)
query = client.query("UPDATE #{$table} SET #{$column} = '#{escaped_fix_content}' WHERE #{$column_identifier} LIKE '#{$column_identifier_value}'")
I would like to restrict the fields while creating a new post in WordPress. For the title, it should not exceed 40 characters. For the content, it should not exceed 400 characters. If these maximum values are exceeded, I would like to show an error message and not let the user continue. How do I do that in WordPress?
You should be able to use wordpress filters to modify the code that gets outputted when the editor is called. Essentially you would want to use it to insert some javascript and an extra div tag to display your error, then just read the contents of the "editorcontainer" id and show the error once it reaches a certain character limit.
I don't have the time at the moment to write a case example, but depending on your skill level, the functions you are looking for are:
apply_filters("the_editor", "customfunction_limitarea");
Where customfunction_limit area is your created function to insert the javascript. You can see how the_editor is currently called and how the default filters are applied in "wp-includes\general-template.php" on line 1822. The default looks like this:
$the_editor = apply_filters('the_editor', "<div id='editorcontainer'><textarea rows='$rows'$class cols='40' name='$id' tabindex='$tab_index' id='$id'>%s</textarea></div>\n");
I would try modifying that statement by placing a new filter in a functions.php file located in your themes directory, that way you don't have to worry about it getting over-written during an update. Otherwise, if you absolutely have to edit the wordpress core (generally a no-no), general_template.php would be the place to do it I think.
Essentially just read up on wordpress filters a little bit (be warned there's not a ton of documentation or examples available for it other than the basic stuff), and that should provide everything you need. The input verification end is easy enough to find scripts, just google jquery post limiting. Something like this might be exactly what your looking for:
http://swiki.fromdev.com/2010/02/jquery-maximum-limit-texttextarea-with.html
i am having an issue where hook_preprocess_page 's changes to &$variables is not being rendered, even though it is the last item under $theme_registry['page']['preprocess functions']. logging contents of $variables to a file show the contents changed, but contents appear unchanged on the site. flushed all cache on drupal, flushed all browser caches and still the same result.
/**
* Implementation of hook_preprocess_page().
*/
function grinchlist_preprocess_page(&$variables) {
if (grinchlist_usercheck($variables['user']['uid'])) {
$variables['scripts'] = preg_replace('/<script[^>]*christmas_snow.*<\/script>/','',$variables['scripts']);
}
file_put_contents('/tmp/vars.txt',print_r($variables,true));
}
the /tmp/vars.txt shows the variables properly, but the browser still show the script being loaded.
this may be a silly example, but i've had this issue with the hook_preprocess_page in other instances and it would really help out to understand what is going on here...
thanks.
The reported code contains an error. The IF-statement should be corrected from
if (grinchlist_usercheck($variables['user']['uid'])) {
// ...
}
to
if (grinchlist_usercheck($variables['user']->uid)) {
// ...
}
I am using hook_preprocess_page() in one of my modules, and the invoked function does change the content of the variables.
Then, as also Richard M reported, the function should get the list of the included JavaScript files from drupal_get_js().
I think you probably (assuming this works in the same way as CSS includes) need to call drupal_get_js at the end of your function, like so: $variables['scripts'] = drupal_get_js();.
I know this is an old question but I just struck it and I think I know the answer.
I think jquery_update is causing this.
jquery_update implements hook_theme_registry_alter which changes $theme_registry so that jquery_update_preprocess_page runs last. This is despite what Peter sees in $theme_registry because the alter happens after he looks at it.
jquery_update gets $scripts from drupal_add_js(), fiddles with the array and then resets $variables['scripts'] which overwrites any changes made earlier.
I'm not sure what the perfect solution is. I don't think we're really supposed to mess with the scripts string directly. I have a special one page case so I'm probably going to do the somewhat bad thing of calling my code from jquery_update_preprocess_page. jquery_update for Drupal 6 is unlikely to updated now. That seems better than getting into a dueling battle of who comes last.