The REST API treats routes without a permission_callback as public. Because this happens without any warning to the user, if the permission callback is unintentionally omitted or misspelled, the endpoint can end up being available to the public. Such a scenario has happened multiple times in the wild, and the results can be catostrophic when it occurs.
For REST API routes that are intended to be public, it is recommended to set the permission callback to the `__return_true` built in function.
Fixes#50075.
Props rmccue, sorenbronsted, whyisjake, SergeyBiryukov, TimothyBlynJacobs.
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* Only query post types with `'show_in_rest' => true` instead of looping over all post types and checking the `show_in_rest` property separately.
* Return from the `foreach()` loop as soon as the permission check succeeded.
Props pbiron, TimothyBlynJacobs, SergeyBiryukov.
Fixes#49118.
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Caches the output of get_item_schema() to avoid redundant recomputation of translatable strings and other computed values. This method is called many times per item in each REST request, and the results of the method should not vary between calls.
Additional schema fields are not cached.
Props kadamwhite, joehoyle, TimothyBlynJacobs.
Fixes#47871.
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Use of `date()` in core depends on PHP timezone set to UTC and not changed by third party code (which cannot be guaranteed).
`gmdate()` is functionally equivalent, but is not affected by PHP timezone setting: it's always UTC, which is the exact behavior the core needs.
Props nielsdeblaauw, Rarst.
Fixes#46438. See #44491.
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When a `PUT` request is performed to update a user, a `rest_user_invalid_email` error is incorrectly being returned when the email exists with different letter casing, even if it belongs to the user being updated. `email_exists()` performs a case insensitive lookup, but the conditional statement following that lookup was performing a strict comparison between the new email and the user’s current email.
This changes that comparison to instead compare the user ID returned by `email_exists()` with the user ID being updated. This more closely matches the logic used in `edit_user()` and allows a user to change the letter casing of their email.
Props fuchsws, rachelbaker, desrosj.
Fixes#44672.
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The existing `rest_insert_*` actions are fired before meta and additional fields are updated. These new `rest_after_*` actions fire after all write operations have completed.
Props timothyblynjacobs, danielbachhuber.
Merges [43737] to trunk.
Fixes#42864.
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WPCS 1.0.0 includes a bunch of new auto-fixers, which drops the number of coding standards issues across WordPress significantly. Prior to running the auto-fixers, there were 15,312 issues detected. With this commit, we now drop to 4,769 issues.
This change includes three notable additions:
- Multiline function calls must now put each parameter on a new line.
- Auto-formatting files is now part of the `grunt precommit` script.
- Auto-fixable coding standards issues will now cause Travis failures.
Fixes#44600.
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Historically, the REST API would generate the entire response object, including running expensive filters, then it would apply the `_fields` parameter, discarding the fields that weren't specificed.
This change causes `_fields` to be applied earlier, so that only requested fields are processed.
Props danielbachhuber.
See #43874.
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Any WordPress user who can `edit_posts` of a post type with `show_in_rest=true` can query for authors. This maps to current WordPress behavior where a WordPress user who can view the Manage Posts view for a post type can see any WordPress user assigned to a post (whether published or draft).
This implementation, over restricting `who=authors` to users with `list_users`, gives us future flexibility in displaying lists of posts. It still respects more restrictive permissions for `context=edit`.
Props danielbachhuber.
Fixes#42202.
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Adds an "include_slug" orderby value for REST API collections to permit returning a collection filtered by slugs in the same order in which those slugs are specified.
Previously, the order of slugs provided with the ?slug query parameter had no effect on the order of the returned records.
Props wonderboymusic, ocean90, boonebgorges.
Fixes#40826.
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While site administrators cannot generally edit users in multisite, they have always been able to change the roles of users on their site. In the REST API however, this has not been possible so far. This changeset brings parity with how it is handled in the administration panel: A REST request to edit only a user's roles succeeds correctly, while a REST request to edit any further details of a user fails.
Props jnylen0.
Fixes#40263.
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Under certain circumstances, it can be necessary that a user should not be added to a site, beyond the restrictions that WordPress core applies. With the new `can_add_user_to_blog` filter, plugin developers can run custom checks and return an error in case of a failure, that will prevent the user from being added.
The user-facing parts and the REST API route that interact with `add_user_to_blog()` have been adjusted accordingly to provide appropriate error feedback when a user could not be added to a site. Furthermore, two existing error feedback messages in the site admin's "New User" screen have been adjusted to properly show inside an error notice instead of a success notice.
Props jmdodd.
Fixes#41101.
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Prior to about 2013, many class methods lacked even access modifiers which made the `@access` notations that much more useful. Now that we've gotten to a point where the codebase is more mature from a maintenance perspective and we can finally remove these notations. Notable exceptions to this change include standalone functions notated as private as well as some classes still considered to represent "private" APIs.
See #41452.
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It has been unintendedly possible to both view and edit users from a different site than the current site in multisite environments. Moreover, when passing roles to a user in an update request, that user would implicitly be added to the current site.
This changeset removes the incorrect behavior for now in order to be able to provide a proper REST API workflow for managing multisite users in the near future. Related unit tests have been adjusted as well.
Props jnylen0, jeremyfelt, johnjamesjacoby.
Fixes#39701.
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The `rest_{$taxonomy}_collection_params` filter in 4.7 is incorrectly using
single quotes instead of double quotes, which means it is not working correctly
as a dynamic filter. This fixes the quotes around the filter name, and also
updates the docblocks for the other 3 similar filters for better conformance to
the documentation standards.
Props shazahm1hotmailcom, JPry, jnylen0.
Fixes#39300.
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In wp-admin, users are removed from individual sites rather than deleted. A user can only be deleted from the network admin.
Until support for a `PUT` request that removes a user's site and content associations is available, `DELETE` requests are disabled to avoid possible issues with lost content.
Props jnylen0, rachelbaker.
Fixes#38962.
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When deleting a user through the WordPress admin, a specific decision is presented - whether to assign all of the user's posts to another user, or to delete all of the posts.
This change requires `reassign` as a parameter in the corresponding REST API endpoint, so that content isn't accidentally lost.
Props jeremyfelt.
Fixes#39000.
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