require 'active_support/core_ext/hash/indifferent_access' require 'active_support/core_ext/array/wrap' require 'active_support/core_ext/string/filters' require 'active_support/deprecation' require 'active_support/rescuable' require 'action_dispatch/http/upload' require 'stringio' require 'set' module ActionController # Raised when a required parameter is missing. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: {}) # params.fetch(:b) # # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: b # params.require(:a) # # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: a class ParameterMissing < KeyError attr_reader :param # :nodoc: def initialize(param) # :nodoc: @param = param super("param is missing or the value is empty: #{param}") end end # Raised when a supplied parameter is not expected and # ActionController::Parameters.action_on_unpermitted_parameters # is set to :raise. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: "123", b: "456") # params.permit(:c) # # => ActionController::UnpermittedParameters: found unpermitted parameters: a, b class UnpermittedParameters < IndexError attr_reader :params # :nodoc: def initialize(params) # :nodoc: @params = params super("found unpermitted parameter#{'s' if params.size > 1 }: #{params.join(", ")}") end end # == Action Controller \Parameters # # Allows to choose which attributes should be whitelisted for mass updating # and thus prevent accidentally exposing that which shouldn't be exposed. # Provides two methods for this purpose: #require and #permit. The former is # used to mark parameters as required. The latter is used to set the parameter # as permitted and limit which attributes should be allowed for mass updating. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new({ # person: { # name: 'Francesco', # age: 22, # role: 'admin' # } # }) # # permitted = params.require(:person).permit(:name, :age) # permitted # => {"name"=>"Francesco", "age"=>22} # permitted.class # => ActionController::Parameters # permitted.permitted? # => true # # Person.first.update!(permitted) # # => # # # It provides two options that controls the top-level behavior of new instances: # # * +permit_all_parameters+ - If it's +true+, all the parameters will be # permitted by default. The default is +false+. # * +action_on_unpermitted_parameters+ - Allow to control the behavior when parameters # that are not explicitly permitted are found. The values can be :log to # write a message on the logger or :raise to raise # ActionController::UnpermittedParameters exception. The default value is :log # in test and development environments, +false+ otherwise. # # Examples: # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new # params.permitted? # => false # # ActionController::Parameters.permit_all_parameters = true # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new # params.permitted? # => true # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: "123", b: "456") # params.permit(:c) # # => {} # # ActionController::Parameters.action_on_unpermitted_parameters = :raise # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: "123", b: "456") # params.permit(:c) # # => ActionController::UnpermittedParameters: found unpermitted keys: a, b # # Please note that these options *are not thread-safe*. In a multi-threaded # environment they should only be set once at boot-time and never mutated at # runtime. # # ActionController::Parameters inherits from # ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess, this means # that you can fetch values using either :key or "key". # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(key: 'value') # params[:key] # => "value" # params["key"] # => "value" class Parameters < ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess cattr_accessor :permit_all_parameters, instance_accessor: false cattr_accessor :action_on_unpermitted_parameters, instance_accessor: false # By default, never raise an UnpermittedParameters exception if these # params are present. The default includes both 'controller' and 'action' # because they are added by Rails and should be of no concern. One way # to change these is to specify `always_permitted_parameters` in your # config. For instance: # # config.always_permitted_parameters = %w( controller action format ) cattr_accessor :always_permitted_parameters self.always_permitted_parameters = %w( controller action ) def self.const_missing(const_name) super unless const_name == :NEVER_UNPERMITTED_PARAMS ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn(<<-MSG.squish) `ActionController::Parameters::NEVER_UNPERMITTED_PARAMS` has been deprecated. Use `ActionController::Parameters.always_permitted_parameters` instead. MSG always_permitted_parameters end # Returns a new instance of ActionController::Parameters. # Also, sets the +permitted+ attribute to the default value of # ActionController::Parameters.permit_all_parameters. # # class Person < ActiveRecord::Base # end # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Francesco') # params.permitted? # => false # Person.new(params) # => ActiveModel::ForbiddenAttributesError # # ActionController::Parameters.permit_all_parameters = true # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Francesco') # params.permitted? # => true # Person.new(params) # => # def initialize(attributes = nil) super(attributes) @permitted = self.class.permit_all_parameters end # Returns a safe +Hash+ representation of this parameter with all # unpermitted keys removed. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new({ # name: 'Senjougahara Hitagi', # oddity: 'Heavy stone crab' # }) # params.to_h # => {} # # safe_params = params.permit(:name) # safe_params.to_h # => {"name"=>"Senjougahara Hitagi"} def to_h if permitted? to_hash else slice(*self.class.always_permitted_parameters).permit!.to_h end end # Returns an unsafe, unfiltered +Hash+ representation of this parameter. def to_unsafe_h to_hash end alias_method :to_unsafe_hash, :to_unsafe_h # Convert all hashes in values into parameters, then yield each pair like # the same way as Hash#each_pair def each_pair(&block) super do |key, value| convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, value) end super end alias_method :each, :each_pair # Attribute that keeps track of converted arrays, if any, to avoid double # looping in the common use case permit + mass-assignment. Defined in a # method to instantiate it only if needed. # # Testing membership still loops, but it's going to be faster than our own # loop that converts values. Also, we are not going to build a new array # object per fetch. def converted_arrays @converted_arrays ||= Set.new end # Returns +true+ if the parameter is permitted, +false+ otherwise. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new # params.permitted? # => false # params.permit! # params.permitted? # => true def permitted? @permitted end # Sets the +permitted+ attribute to +true+. This can be used to pass # mass assignment. Returns +self+. # # class Person < ActiveRecord::Base # end # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(name: 'Francesco') # params.permitted? # => false # Person.new(params) # => ActiveModel::ForbiddenAttributesError # params.permit! # params.permitted? # => true # Person.new(params) # => # def permit! each_pair do |key, value| Array.wrap(value).each do |v| v.permit! if v.respond_to? :permit! end end @permitted = true self end # Ensures that a parameter is present. If it's present, returns # the parameter at the given +key+, otherwise raises an # ActionController::ParameterMissing error. # # ActionController::Parameters.new(person: { name: 'Francesco' }).require(:person) # # => {"name"=>"Francesco"} # # ActionController::Parameters.new(person: nil).require(:person) # # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: person # # ActionController::Parameters.new(person: {}).require(:person) # # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: person def require(key) value = self[key] if value.present? || value == false value else raise ParameterMissing.new(key) end end # Alias of #require. alias :required :require # Returns a new ActionController::Parameters instance that # includes only the given +filters+ and sets the +permitted+ attribute # for the object to +true+. This is useful for limiting which attributes # should be allowed for mass updating. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(user: { name: 'Francesco', age: 22, role: 'admin' }) # permitted = params.require(:user).permit(:name, :age) # permitted.permitted? # => true # permitted.has_key?(:name) # => true # permitted.has_key?(:age) # => true # permitted.has_key?(:role) # => false # # Only permitted scalars pass the filter. For example, given # # params.permit(:name) # # +:name+ passes it is a key of +params+ whose associated value is of type # +String+, +Symbol+, +NilClass+, +Numeric+, +TrueClass+, +FalseClass+, # +Date+, +Time+, +DateTime+, +StringIO+, +IO+, # +ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile+ or +Rack::Test::UploadedFile+. # Otherwise, the key +:name+ is filtered out. # # You may declare that the parameter should be an array of permitted scalars # by mapping it to an empty array: # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(tags: ['rails', 'parameters']) # params.permit(tags: []) # # You can also use +permit+ on nested parameters, like: # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new({ # person: { # name: 'Francesco', # age: 22, # pets: [{ # name: 'Purplish', # category: 'dogs' # }] # } # }) # # permitted = params.permit(person: [ :name, { pets: :name } ]) # permitted.permitted? # => true # permitted[:person][:name] # => "Francesco" # permitted[:person][:age] # => nil # permitted[:person][:pets][0][:name] # => "Purplish" # permitted[:person][:pets][0][:category] # => nil # # Note that if you use +permit+ in a key that points to a hash, # it won't allow all the hash. You also need to specify which # attributes inside the hash should be whitelisted. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new({ # person: { # contact: { # email: 'none@test.com', # phone: '555-1234' # } # } # }) # # params.require(:person).permit(:contact) # # => {} # # params.require(:person).permit(contact: :phone) # # => {"contact"=>{"phone"=>"555-1234"}} # # params.require(:person).permit(contact: [ :email, :phone ]) # # => {"contact"=>{"email"=>"none@test.com", "phone"=>"555-1234"}} def permit(*filters) params = self.class.new filters.flatten.each do |filter| case filter when Symbol, String permitted_scalar_filter(params, filter) when Hash then hash_filter(params, filter) end end unpermitted_parameters!(params) if self.class.action_on_unpermitted_parameters params.permit! end # Returns a parameter for the given +key+. If not found, # returns +nil+. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(person: { name: 'Francesco' }) # params[:person] # => {"name"=>"Francesco"} # params[:none] # => nil def [](key) convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, super) end # Returns a parameter for the given +key+. If the +key+ # can't be found, there are several options: With no other arguments, # it will raise an ActionController::ParameterMissing error; # if more arguments are given, then that will be returned; if a block # is given, then that will be run and its result returned. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(person: { name: 'Francesco' }) # params.fetch(:person) # => {"name"=>"Francesco"} # params.fetch(:none) # => ActionController::ParameterMissing: param not found: none # params.fetch(:none, 'Francesco') # => "Francesco" # params.fetch(:none) { 'Francesco' } # => "Francesco" def fetch(key, *args) convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, super, false) rescue KeyError raise ActionController::ParameterMissing.new(key) end # Returns a new ActionController::Parameters instance that # includes only the given +keys+. If the given +keys+ # don't exist, returns an empty hash. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: 1, b: 2, c: 3) # params.slice(:a, :b) # => {"a"=>1, "b"=>2} # params.slice(:d) # => {} def slice(*keys) new_instance_with_inherited_permitted_status(super) end # Removes and returns the key/value pairs matching the given keys. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: 1, b: 2, c: 3) # params.extract!(:a, :b) # => {"a"=>1, "b"=>2} # params # => {"c"=>3} def extract!(*keys) new_instance_with_inherited_permitted_status(super) end # Returns a new ActionController::Parameters with the results of # running +block+ once for every value. The keys are unchanged. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: 1, b: 2, c: 3) # params.transform_values { |x| x * 2 } # # => {"a"=>2, "b"=>4, "c"=>6} def transform_values if block_given? new_instance_with_inherited_permitted_status(super) else super end end # This method is here only to make sure that the returned object has the # correct +permitted+ status. It should not matter since the parent of # this object is +HashWithIndifferentAccess+ def transform_keys # :nodoc: if block_given? new_instance_with_inherited_permitted_status(super) else super end end # Deletes and returns a key-value pair from +Parameters+ whose key is equal # to key. If the key is not found, returns the default value. If the # optional code block is given and the key is not found, pass in the key # and return the result of block. def delete(key, &block) convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, super, false) end # Equivalent to Hash#keep_if, but returns nil if no changes were made. def select!(&block) convert_value_to_parameters(super) end # Returns an exact copy of the ActionController::Parameters # instance. +permitted+ state is kept on the duped object. # # params = ActionController::Parameters.new(a: 1) # params.permit! # params.permitted? # => true # copy_params = params.dup # => {"a"=>1} # copy_params.permitted? # => true def dup super.tap do |duplicate| duplicate.permitted = @permitted end end protected def permitted=(new_permitted) @permitted = new_permitted end private def new_instance_with_inherited_permitted_status(hash) self.class.new(hash).tap do |new_instance| new_instance.permitted = @permitted end end def convert_hashes_to_parameters(key, value, assign_if_converted=true) converted = convert_value_to_parameters(value) self[key] = converted if assign_if_converted && !converted.equal?(value) converted end def convert_value_to_parameters(value) if value.is_a?(Array) && !converted_arrays.member?(value) converted = value.map { |_| convert_value_to_parameters(_) } converted_arrays << converted converted elsif value.is_a?(Parameters) || !value.is_a?(Hash) value else self.class.new(value) end end def each_element(object) if object.is_a?(Array) object.map { |el| yield el }.compact elsif fields_for_style?(object) hash = object.class.new object.each { |k,v| hash[k] = yield v } hash else yield object end end def fields_for_style?(object) object.is_a?(Hash) && object.all? { |k, v| k =~ /\A-?\d+\z/ && v.is_a?(Hash) } end def unpermitted_parameters!(params) unpermitted_keys = unpermitted_keys(params) if unpermitted_keys.any? case self.class.action_on_unpermitted_parameters when :log name = "unpermitted_parameters.action_controller" ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument(name, keys: unpermitted_keys) when :raise raise ActionController::UnpermittedParameters.new(unpermitted_keys) end end end def unpermitted_keys(params) self.keys - params.keys - self.always_permitted_parameters end # # --- Filtering ---------------------------------------------------------- # # This is a white list of permitted scalar types that includes the ones # supported in XML and JSON requests. # # This list is in particular used to filter ordinary requests, String goes # as first element to quickly short-circuit the common case. # # If you modify this collection please update the API of +permit+ above. PERMITTED_SCALAR_TYPES = [ String, Symbol, NilClass, Numeric, TrueClass, FalseClass, Date, Time, # DateTimes are Dates, we document the type but avoid the redundant check. StringIO, IO, ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile, Rack::Test::UploadedFile, ] def permitted_scalar?(value) PERMITTED_SCALAR_TYPES.any? {|type| value.is_a?(type)} end def permitted_scalar_filter(params, key) if has_key?(key) && permitted_scalar?(self[key]) params[key] = self[key] end keys.grep(/\A#{Regexp.escape(key)}\(\d+[if]?\)\z/) do |k| if permitted_scalar?(self[k]) params[k] = self[k] end end end def array_of_permitted_scalars?(value) if value.is_a?(Array) value.all? {|element| permitted_scalar?(element)} end end def array_of_permitted_scalars_filter(params, key) if has_key?(key) && array_of_permitted_scalars?(self[key]) params[key] = self[key] end end EMPTY_ARRAY = [] def hash_filter(params, filter) filter = filter.with_indifferent_access # Slicing filters out non-declared keys. slice(*filter.keys).each do |key, value| next unless value if filter[key] == EMPTY_ARRAY # Declaration { comment_ids: [] }. array_of_permitted_scalars_filter(params, key) else # Declaration { user: :name } or { user: [:name, :age, { address: ... }] }. params[key] = each_element(value) do |element| if element.is_a?(Hash) element = self.class.new(element) unless element.respond_to?(:permit) element.permit(*Array.wrap(filter[key])) end end end end end end # == Strong \Parameters # # It provides an interface for protecting attributes from end-user # assignment. This makes Action Controller parameters forbidden # to be used in Active Model mass assignment until they have been # whitelisted. # # In addition, parameters can be marked as required and flow through a # predefined raise/rescue flow to end up as a 400 Bad Request with no # effort. # # class PeopleController < ActionController::Base # # Using "Person.create(params[:person])" would raise an # # ActiveModel::ForbiddenAttributes exception because it'd # # be using mass assignment without an explicit permit step. # # This is the recommended form: # def create # Person.create(person_params) # end # # # This will pass with flying colors as long as there's a person key in the # # parameters, otherwise it'll raise an ActionController::MissingParameter # # exception, which will get caught by ActionController::Base and turned # # into a 400 Bad Request reply. # def update # redirect_to current_account.people.find(params[:id]).tap { |person| # person.update!(person_params) # } # end # # private # # Using a private method to encapsulate the permissible parameters is # # just a good pattern since you'll be able to reuse the same permit # # list between create and update. Also, you can specialize this method # # with per-user checking of permissible attributes. # def person_params # params.require(:person).permit(:name, :age) # end # end # # In order to use accepts_nested_attributes_for with Strong \Parameters, you # will need to specify which nested attributes should be whitelisted. # # class Person # has_many :pets # accepts_nested_attributes_for :pets # end # # class PeopleController < ActionController::Base # def create # Person.create(person_params) # end # # ... # # private # # def person_params # # It's mandatory to specify the nested attributes that should be whitelisted. # # If you use `permit` with just the key that points to the nested attributes hash, # # it will return an empty hash. # params.require(:person).permit(:name, :age, pets_attributes: [ :name, :category ]) # end # end # # See ActionController::Parameters.require and ActionController::Parameters.permit # for more information. module StrongParameters extend ActiveSupport::Concern include ActiveSupport::Rescuable # Returns a new ActionController::Parameters object that # has been instantiated with the request.parameters. def params @_params ||= Parameters.new(request.parameters) end # Assigns the given +value+ to the +params+ hash. If +value+ # is a Hash, this will create an ActionController::Parameters # object that has been instantiated with the given +value+ hash. def params=(value) @_params = value.is_a?(Hash) ? Parameters.new(value) : value end end end