Telegram Web, preconfigured for usage in I2P.
http://web.telegram.i2p/
You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
911 lines
37 KiB
911 lines
37 KiB
/** |
|
* @license AngularJS v1.7.8 |
|
* (c) 2010-2018 Google, Inc. http://angularjs.org |
|
* License: MIT |
|
*/ |
|
(function(window, angular) {'use strict'; |
|
|
|
var $resourceMinErr = angular.$$minErr('$resource'); |
|
|
|
// Helper functions and regex to lookup a dotted path on an object |
|
// stopping at undefined/null. The path must be composed of ASCII |
|
// identifiers (just like $parse) |
|
var MEMBER_NAME_REGEX = /^(\.[a-zA-Z_$@][0-9a-zA-Z_$@]*)+$/; |
|
|
|
function isValidDottedPath(path) { |
|
return (path != null && path !== '' && path !== 'hasOwnProperty' && |
|
MEMBER_NAME_REGEX.test('.' + path)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
function lookupDottedPath(obj, path) { |
|
if (!isValidDottedPath(path)) { |
|
throw $resourceMinErr('badmember', 'Dotted member path "@{0}" is invalid.', path); |
|
} |
|
var keys = path.split('.'); |
|
for (var i = 0, ii = keys.length; i < ii && angular.isDefined(obj); i++) { |
|
var key = keys[i]; |
|
obj = (obj !== null) ? obj[key] : undefined; |
|
} |
|
return obj; |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Create a shallow copy of an object and clear other fields from the destination |
|
*/ |
|
function shallowClearAndCopy(src, dst) { |
|
dst = dst || {}; |
|
|
|
angular.forEach(dst, function(value, key) { |
|
delete dst[key]; |
|
}); |
|
|
|
for (var key in src) { |
|
if (src.hasOwnProperty(key) && !(key.charAt(0) === '$' && key.charAt(1) === '$')) { |
|
dst[key] = src[key]; |
|
} |
|
} |
|
|
|
return dst; |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @ngdoc module |
|
* @name ngResource |
|
* @description |
|
* |
|
* The `ngResource` module provides interaction support with RESTful services |
|
* via the $resource service. |
|
* |
|
* See {@link ngResource.$resourceProvider} and {@link ngResource.$resource} for usage. |
|
*/ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @ngdoc provider |
|
* @name $resourceProvider |
|
* |
|
* @description |
|
* |
|
* Use `$resourceProvider` to change the default behavior of the {@link ngResource.$resource} |
|
* service. |
|
* |
|
* ## Dependencies |
|
* Requires the {@link ngResource } module to be installed. |
|
* |
|
*/ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @ngdoc service |
|
* @name $resource |
|
* @requires $http |
|
* @requires ng.$log |
|
* @requires $q |
|
* @requires ng.$timeout |
|
* |
|
* @description |
|
* A factory which creates a resource object that lets you interact with |
|
* [RESTful](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer) server-side data sources. |
|
* |
|
* The returned resource object has action methods which provide high-level behaviors without |
|
* the need to interact with the low level {@link ng.$http $http} service. |
|
* |
|
* Requires the {@link ngResource `ngResource`} module to be installed. |
|
* |
|
* By default, trailing slashes will be stripped from the calculated URLs, |
|
* which can pose problems with server backends that do not expect that |
|
* behavior. This can be disabled by configuring the `$resourceProvider` like |
|
* this: |
|
* |
|
* ```js |
|
app.config(['$resourceProvider', function($resourceProvider) { |
|
// Don't strip trailing slashes from calculated URLs |
|
$resourceProvider.defaults.stripTrailingSlashes = false; |
|
}]); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* @param {string} url A parameterized URL template with parameters prefixed by `:` as in |
|
* `/user/:username`. If you are using a URL with a port number (e.g. |
|
* `http://example.com:8080/api`), it will be respected. |
|
* |
|
* If you are using a url with a suffix, just add the suffix, like this: |
|
* `$resource('http://example.com/resource.json')` or `$resource('http://example.com/:id.json')` |
|
* or even `$resource('http://example.com/resource/:resource_id.:format')` |
|
* If the parameter before the suffix is empty, :resource_id in this case, then the `/.` will be |
|
* collapsed down to a single `.`. If you need this sequence to appear and not collapse then you |
|
* can escape it with `/\.`. |
|
* |
|
* @param {Object=} paramDefaults Default values for `url` parameters. These can be overridden in |
|
* `actions` methods. If a parameter value is a function, it will be called every time |
|
* a param value needs to be obtained for a request (unless the param was overridden). The |
|
* function will be passed the current data value as an argument. |
|
* |
|
* Each key value in the parameter object is first bound to url template if present and then any |
|
* excess keys are appended to the url search query after the `?`. |
|
* |
|
* Given a template `/path/:verb` and parameter `{verb: 'greet', salutation: 'Hello'}` results in |
|
* URL `/path/greet?salutation=Hello`. |
|
* |
|
* If the parameter value is prefixed with `@`, then the value for that parameter will be |
|
* extracted from the corresponding property on the `data` object (provided when calling actions |
|
* with a request body). |
|
* For example, if the `defaultParam` object is `{someParam: '@someProp'}` then the value of |
|
* `someParam` will be `data.someProp`. |
|
* Note that the parameter will be ignored, when calling a "GET" action method (i.e. an action |
|
* method that does not accept a request body). |
|
* |
|
* @param {Object.<Object>=} actions Hash with declaration of custom actions that will be available |
|
* in addition to the default set of resource actions (see below). If a custom action has the same |
|
* key as a default action (e.g. `save`), then the default action will be *overwritten*, and not |
|
* extended. |
|
* |
|
* The declaration should be created in the format of {@link ng.$http#usage $http.config}: |
|
* |
|
* { |
|
* action1: {method:?, params:?, isArray:?, headers:?, ...}, |
|
* action2: {method:?, params:?, isArray:?, headers:?, ...}, |
|
* ... |
|
* } |
|
* |
|
* Where: |
|
* |
|
* - **`action`** – {string} – The name of action. This name becomes the name of the method on |
|
* your resource object. |
|
* - **`method`** – {string} – Case insensitive HTTP method (e.g. `GET`, `POST`, `PUT`, |
|
* `DELETE`, `JSONP`, etc). |
|
* - **`params`** – {Object=} – Optional set of pre-bound parameters for this action. If any of |
|
* the parameter value is a function, it will be called every time when a param value needs to |
|
* be obtained for a request (unless the param was overridden). The function will be passed the |
|
* current data value as an argument. |
|
* - **`url`** – {string} – Action specific `url` override. The url templating is supported just |
|
* like for the resource-level urls. |
|
* - **`isArray`** – {boolean=} – If true then the returned object for this action is an array, |
|
* see `returns` section. |
|
* - **`transformRequest`** – |
|
* `{function(data, headersGetter)|Array.<function(data, headersGetter)>}` – |
|
* Transform function or an array of such functions. The transform function takes the http |
|
* request body and headers and returns its transformed (typically serialized) version. |
|
* By default, transformRequest will contain one function that checks if the request data is |
|
* an object and serializes it using `angular.toJson`. To prevent this behavior, set |
|
* `transformRequest` to an empty array: `transformRequest: []` |
|
* - **`transformResponse`** – |
|
* `{function(data, headersGetter, status)|Array.<function(data, headersGetter, status)>}` – |
|
* Transform function or an array of such functions. The transform function takes the HTTP |
|
* response body, headers and status and returns its transformed (typically deserialized) |
|
* version. |
|
* By default, transformResponse will contain one function that checks if the response looks |
|
* like a JSON string and deserializes it using `angular.fromJson`. To prevent this behavior, |
|
* set `transformResponse` to an empty array: `transformResponse: []` |
|
* - **`cache`** – `{boolean|Cache}` – A boolean value or object created with |
|
* {@link ng.$cacheFactory `$cacheFactory`} to enable or disable caching of the HTTP response. |
|
* See {@link $http#caching $http Caching} for more information. |
|
* - **`timeout`** – `{number}` – Timeout in milliseconds.<br /> |
|
* **Note:** In contrast to {@link ng.$http#usage $http.config}, {@link ng.$q promises} are |
|
* **not** supported in `$resource`, because the same value would be used for multiple requests. |
|
* If you are looking for a way to cancel requests, you should use the `cancellable` option. |
|
* - **`cancellable`** – `{boolean}` – If true, the request made by a "non-instance" call will be |
|
* cancelled (if not already completed) by calling `$cancelRequest()` on the call's return |
|
* value. Calling `$cancelRequest()` for a non-cancellable or an already completed/cancelled |
|
* request will have no effect. |
|
* - **`withCredentials`** – `{boolean}` – Whether to set the `withCredentials` flag on the |
|
* XHR object. See |
|
* [XMLHttpRequest.withCredentials](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest/withCredentials) |
|
* for more information. |
|
* - **`responseType`** – `{string}` – See |
|
* [XMLHttpRequest.responseType](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest/responseType). |
|
* - **`interceptor`** – `{Object=}` – The interceptor object has four optional methods - |
|
* `request`, `requestError`, `response`, and `responseError`. See |
|
* {@link ng.$http#interceptors $http interceptors} for details. Note that |
|
* `request`/`requestError` interceptors are applied before calling `$http`, thus before any |
|
* global `$http` interceptors. Also, rejecting or throwing an error inside the `request` |
|
* interceptor will result in calling the `responseError` interceptor. |
|
* The resource instance or collection is available on the `resource` property of the |
|
* `http response` object passed to `response`/`responseError` interceptors. |
|
* Keep in mind that the associated promise will be resolved with the value returned by the |
|
* response interceptors. Make sure you return an appropriate value and not the `response` |
|
* object passed as input. For reference, the default `response` interceptor (which gets applied |
|
* if you don't specify a custom one) returns `response.resource`.<br /> |
|
* See {@link ngResource.$resource#using-interceptors below} for an example of using |
|
* interceptors in `$resource`. |
|
* - **`hasBody`** – `{boolean}` – If true, then the request will have a body. |
|
* If not specified, then only POST, PUT and PATCH requests will have a body. * |
|
* @param {Object} options Hash with custom settings that should extend the |
|
* default `$resourceProvider` behavior. The supported options are: |
|
* |
|
* - **`stripTrailingSlashes`** – {boolean} – If true then the trailing |
|
* slashes from any calculated URL will be stripped. (Defaults to true.) |
|
* - **`cancellable`** – {boolean} – If true, the request made by a "non-instance" call will be |
|
* cancelled (if not already completed) by calling `$cancelRequest()` on the call's return value. |
|
* This can be overwritten per action. (Defaults to false.) |
|
* |
|
* @returns {Object} A resource "class" object with methods for the default set of resource actions |
|
* optionally extended with custom `actions`. The default set contains these actions: |
|
* ```js |
|
* { |
|
* 'get': {method: 'GET'}, |
|
* 'save': {method: 'POST'}, |
|
* 'query': {method: 'GET', isArray: true}, |
|
* 'remove': {method: 'DELETE'}, |
|
* 'delete': {method: 'DELETE'} |
|
* } |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* Calling these methods invoke {@link ng.$http} with the specified http method, destination and |
|
* parameters. When the data is returned from the server then the object is an instance of the |
|
* resource class. The actions `save`, `remove` and `delete` are available on it as methods with |
|
* the `$` prefix. This allows you to easily perform CRUD operations (create, read, update, |
|
* delete) on server-side data like this: |
|
* ```js |
|
* var User = $resource('/user/:userId', {userId: '@id'}); |
|
* User.get({userId: 123}).$promise.then(function(user) { |
|
* user.abc = true; |
|
* user.$save(); |
|
* }); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* It is important to realize that invoking a `$resource` object method immediately returns an |
|
* empty reference (object or array depending on `isArray`). Once the data is returned from the |
|
* server the existing reference is populated with the actual data. This is a useful trick since |
|
* usually the resource is assigned to a model which is then rendered by the view. Having an empty |
|
* object results in no rendering, once the data arrives from the server then the object is |
|
* populated with the data and the view automatically re-renders itself showing the new data. This |
|
* means that in most cases one never has to write a callback function for the action methods. |
|
* |
|
* The action methods on the class object or instance object can be invoked with the following |
|
* parameters: |
|
* |
|
* - "class" actions without a body: `Resource.action([parameters], [success], [error])` |
|
* - "class" actions with a body: `Resource.action([parameters], postData, [success], [error])` |
|
* - instance actions: `instance.$action([parameters], [success], [error])` |
|
* |
|
* |
|
* When calling instance methods, the instance itself is used as the request body (if the action |
|
* should have a body). By default, only actions using `POST`, `PUT` or `PATCH` have request |
|
* bodies, but you can use the `hasBody` configuration option to specify whether an action |
|
* should have a body or not (regardless of its HTTP method). |
|
* |
|
* |
|
* Success callback is called with (value (Object|Array), responseHeaders (Function), |
|
* status (number), statusText (string)) arguments, where `value` is the populated resource |
|
* instance or collection object. The error callback is called with (httpResponse) argument. |
|
* |
|
* Class actions return an empty instance (with the additional properties listed below). |
|
* Instance actions return a promise for the operation. |
|
* |
|
* The Resource instances and collections have these additional properties: |
|
* |
|
* - `$promise`: The {@link ng.$q promise} of the original server interaction that created this |
|
* instance or collection. |
|
* |
|
* On success, the promise is resolved with the same resource instance or collection object, |
|
* updated with data from server. This makes it easy to use in the |
|
* {@link ngRoute.$routeProvider `resolve` section of `$routeProvider.when()`} to defer view |
|
* rendering until the resource(s) are loaded. |
|
* |
|
* On failure, the promise is rejected with the {@link ng.$http http response} object. |
|
* |
|
* If an interceptor object was provided, the promise will instead be resolved with the value |
|
* returned by the response interceptor (on success) or responceError interceptor (on failure). |
|
* |
|
* - `$resolved`: `true` after first server interaction is completed (either with success or |
|
* rejection), `false` before that. Knowing if the Resource has been resolved is useful in |
|
* data-binding. If there is a response/responseError interceptor and it returns a promise, |
|
* `$resolved` will wait for that too. |
|
* |
|
* The Resource instances and collections have these additional methods: |
|
* |
|
* - `$cancelRequest`: If there is a cancellable, pending request related to the instance or |
|
* collection, calling this method will abort the request. |
|
* |
|
* The Resource instances have these additional methods: |
|
* |
|
* - `toJSON`: It returns a simple object without any of the extra properties added as part of |
|
* the Resource API. This object can be serialized through {@link angular.toJson} safely |
|
* without attaching AngularJS-specific fields. Notice that `JSON.stringify` (and |
|
* `angular.toJson`) automatically use this method when serializing a Resource instance |
|
* (see [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/stringify#toJSON%28%29_behavior)). |
|
* |
|
* @example |
|
* |
|
* ### Basic usage |
|
* |
|
```js |
|
// Define a CreditCard class |
|
var CreditCard = $resource('/users/:userId/cards/:cardId', |
|
{userId: 123, cardId: '@id'}, { |
|
charge: {method: 'POST', params: {charge: true}} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
// We can retrieve a collection from the server |
|
var cards = CreditCard.query(); |
|
// GET: /users/123/cards |
|
// server returns: [{id: 456, number: '1234', name: 'Smith'}] |
|
|
|
// Wait for the request to complete |
|
cards.$promise.then(function() { |
|
var card = cards[0]; |
|
|
|
// Each item is an instance of CreditCard |
|
expect(card instanceof CreditCard).toEqual(true); |
|
|
|
// Non-GET methods are mapped onto the instances |
|
card.name = 'J. Smith'; |
|
card.$save(); |
|
// POST: /users/123/cards/456 {id: 456, number: '1234', name: 'J. Smith'} |
|
// server returns: {id: 456, number: '1234', name: 'J. Smith'} |
|
|
|
// Our custom method is mapped as well (since it uses POST) |
|
card.$charge({amount: 9.99}); |
|
// POST: /users/123/cards/456?amount=9.99&charge=true {id: 456, number: '1234', name: 'J. Smith'} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
// We can create an instance as well |
|
var newCard = new CreditCard({number: '0123'}); |
|
newCard.name = 'Mike Smith'; |
|
|
|
var savePromise = newCard.$save(); |
|
// POST: /users/123/cards {number: '0123', name: 'Mike Smith'} |
|
// server returns: {id: 789, number: '0123', name: 'Mike Smith'} |
|
|
|
savePromise.then(function() { |
|
// Once the promise is resolved, the created instance |
|
// is populated with the data returned by the server |
|
expect(newCard.id).toEqual(789); |
|
}); |
|
``` |
|
* |
|
* The object returned from a call to `$resource` is a resource "class" which has one "static" |
|
* method for each action in the definition. |
|
* |
|
* Calling these methods invokes `$http` on the `url` template with the given HTTP `method`, |
|
* `params` and `headers`. |
|
* |
|
* @example |
|
* |
|
* ### Accessing the response |
|
* |
|
* When the data is returned from the server then the object is an instance of the resource type and |
|
* all of the non-GET methods are available with `$` prefix. This allows you to easily support CRUD |
|
* operations (create, read, update, delete) on server-side data. |
|
* |
|
```js |
|
var User = $resource('/users/:userId', {userId: '@id'}); |
|
User.get({userId: 123}).$promise.then(function(user) { |
|
user.abc = true; |
|
user.$save(); |
|
}); |
|
``` |
|
* |
|
* It's worth noting that the success callback for `get`, `query` and other methods gets called with |
|
* the resource instance (populated with the data that came from the server) as well as an `$http` |
|
* header getter function, the HTTP status code and the response status text. So one could rewrite |
|
* the above example and get access to HTTP headers as follows: |
|
* |
|
```js |
|
var User = $resource('/users/:userId', {userId: '@id'}); |
|
User.get({userId: 123}, function(user, getResponseHeaders) { |
|
user.abc = true; |
|
user.$save(function(user, putResponseHeaders) { |
|
// `user` => saved `User` object |
|
// `putResponseHeaders` => `$http` header getter |
|
}); |
|
}); |
|
``` |
|
* |
|
* @example |
|
* |
|
* ### Creating custom actions |
|
* |
|
* In this example we create a custom method on our resource to make a PUT request: |
|
* |
|
```js |
|
var app = angular.module('app', ['ngResource']); |
|
|
|
// Some APIs expect a PUT request in the format URL/object/ID |
|
// Here we are creating an 'update' method |
|
app.factory('Notes', ['$resource', function($resource) { |
|
return $resource('/notes/:id', {id: '@id'}, { |
|
update: {method: 'PUT'} |
|
}); |
|
}]); |
|
|
|
// In our controller we get the ID from the URL using `$location` |
|
app.controller('NotesCtrl', ['$location', 'Notes', function($location, Notes) { |
|
// First, retrieve the corresponding `Note` object from the server |
|
// (Assuming a URL of the form `.../notes?id=XYZ`) |
|
var noteId = $location.search().id; |
|
var note = Notes.get({id: noteId}); |
|
|
|
note.$promise.then(function() { |
|
note.content = 'Hello, world!'; |
|
|
|
// Now call `update` to save the changes on the server |
|
Notes.update(note); |
|
// This will PUT /notes/ID with the note object as the request payload |
|
|
|
// Since `update` is a non-GET method, it will also be available on the instance |
|
// (prefixed with `$`), so we could replace the `Note.update()` call with: |
|
//note.$update(); |
|
}); |
|
}]); |
|
``` |
|
* |
|
* @example |
|
* |
|
* ### Cancelling requests |
|
* |
|
* If an action's configuration specifies that it is cancellable, you can cancel the request related |
|
* to an instance or collection (as long as it is a result of a "non-instance" call): |
|
* |
|
```js |
|
// ...defining the `Hotel` resource... |
|
var Hotel = $resource('/api/hotels/:id', {id: '@id'}, { |
|
// Let's make the `query()` method cancellable |
|
query: {method: 'get', isArray: true, cancellable: true} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
// ...somewhere in the PlanVacationController... |
|
... |
|
this.onDestinationChanged = function onDestinationChanged(destination) { |
|
// We don't care about any pending request for hotels |
|
// in a different destination any more |
|
if (this.availableHotels) { |
|
this.availableHotels.$cancelRequest(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Let's query for hotels in `destination` |
|
// (calls: /api/hotels?location=<destination>) |
|
this.availableHotels = Hotel.query({location: destination}); |
|
}; |
|
``` |
|
* |
|
* @example |
|
* |
|
* ### Using interceptors |
|
* |
|
* You can use interceptors to transform the request or response, perform additional operations, and |
|
* modify the returned instance/collection. The following example, uses `request` and `response` |
|
* interceptors to augment the returned instance with additional info: |
|
* |
|
```js |
|
var Thing = $resource('/api/things/:id', {id: '@id'}, { |
|
save: { |
|
method: 'POST', |
|
interceptor: { |
|
request: function(config) { |
|
// Before the request is sent out, store a timestamp on the request config |
|
config.requestTimestamp = Date.now(); |
|
return config; |
|
}, |
|
response: function(response) { |
|
// Get the instance from the response object |
|
var instance = response.resource; |
|
|
|
// Augment the instance with a custom `saveLatency` property, computed as the time |
|
// between sending the request and receiving the response. |
|
instance.saveLatency = Date.now() - response.config.requestTimestamp; |
|
|
|
// Return the instance |
|
return instance; |
|
} |
|
} |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
Thing.save({foo: 'bar'}).$promise.then(function(thing) { |
|
console.log('That thing was saved in ' + thing.saveLatency + 'ms.'); |
|
}); |
|
``` |
|
* |
|
*/ |
|
angular.module('ngResource', ['ng']). |
|
info({ angularVersion: '1.7.8' }). |
|
provider('$resource', function ResourceProvider() { |
|
var PROTOCOL_AND_IPV6_REGEX = /^https?:\/\/\[[^\]]*][^/]*/; |
|
|
|
var provider = this; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @ngdoc property |
|
* @name $resourceProvider#defaults |
|
* @description |
|
* Object containing default options used when creating `$resource` instances. |
|
* |
|
* The default values satisfy a wide range of usecases, but you may choose to overwrite any of |
|
* them to further customize your instances. The available properties are: |
|
* |
|
* - **stripTrailingSlashes** – `{boolean}` – If true, then the trailing slashes from any |
|
* calculated URL will be stripped.<br /> |
|
* (Defaults to true.) |
|
* - **cancellable** – `{boolean}` – If true, the request made by a "non-instance" call will be |
|
* cancelled (if not already completed) by calling `$cancelRequest()` on the call's return |
|
* value. For more details, see {@link ngResource.$resource}. This can be overwritten per |
|
* resource class or action.<br /> |
|
* (Defaults to false.) |
|
* - **actions** - `{Object.<Object>}` - A hash with default actions declarations. Actions are |
|
* high-level methods corresponding to RESTful actions/methods on resources. An action may |
|
* specify what HTTP method to use, what URL to hit, if the return value will be a single |
|
* object or a collection (array) of objects etc. For more details, see |
|
* {@link ngResource.$resource}. The actions can also be enhanced or overwritten per resource |
|
* class.<br /> |
|
* The default actions are: |
|
* ```js |
|
* { |
|
* get: {method: 'GET'}, |
|
* save: {method: 'POST'}, |
|
* query: {method: 'GET', isArray: true}, |
|
* remove: {method: 'DELETE'}, |
|
* delete: {method: 'DELETE'} |
|
* } |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* #### Example |
|
* |
|
* For example, you can specify a new `update` action that uses the `PUT` HTTP verb: |
|
* |
|
* ```js |
|
* angular. |
|
* module('myApp'). |
|
* config(['$resourceProvider', function ($resourceProvider) { |
|
* $resourceProvider.defaults.actions.update = { |
|
* method: 'PUT' |
|
* }; |
|
* }]); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* Or you can even overwrite the whole `actions` list and specify your own: |
|
* |
|
* ```js |
|
* angular. |
|
* module('myApp'). |
|
* config(['$resourceProvider', function ($resourceProvider) { |
|
* $resourceProvider.defaults.actions = { |
|
* create: {method: 'POST'}, |
|
* get: {method: 'GET'}, |
|
* getAll: {method: 'GET', isArray:true}, |
|
* update: {method: 'PUT'}, |
|
* delete: {method: 'DELETE'} |
|
* }; |
|
* }); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
*/ |
|
this.defaults = { |
|
// Strip slashes by default |
|
stripTrailingSlashes: true, |
|
|
|
// Make non-instance requests cancellable (via `$cancelRequest()`) |
|
cancellable: false, |
|
|
|
// Default actions configuration |
|
actions: { |
|
'get': {method: 'GET'}, |
|
'save': {method: 'POST'}, |
|
'query': {method: 'GET', isArray: true}, |
|
'remove': {method: 'DELETE'}, |
|
'delete': {method: 'DELETE'} |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
this.$get = ['$http', '$log', '$q', '$timeout', function($http, $log, $q, $timeout) { |
|
|
|
var noop = angular.noop, |
|
forEach = angular.forEach, |
|
extend = angular.extend, |
|
copy = angular.copy, |
|
isArray = angular.isArray, |
|
isDefined = angular.isDefined, |
|
isFunction = angular.isFunction, |
|
isNumber = angular.isNumber, |
|
encodeUriQuery = angular.$$encodeUriQuery, |
|
encodeUriSegment = angular.$$encodeUriSegment; |
|
|
|
function Route(template, defaults) { |
|
this.template = template; |
|
this.defaults = extend({}, provider.defaults, defaults); |
|
this.urlParams = {}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
Route.prototype = { |
|
setUrlParams: function(config, params, actionUrl) { |
|
var self = this, |
|
url = actionUrl || self.template, |
|
val, |
|
encodedVal, |
|
protocolAndIpv6 = ''; |
|
|
|
var urlParams = self.urlParams = Object.create(null); |
|
forEach(url.split(/\W/), function(param) { |
|
if (param === 'hasOwnProperty') { |
|
throw $resourceMinErr('badname', 'hasOwnProperty is not a valid parameter name.'); |
|
} |
|
if (!(new RegExp('^\\d+$').test(param)) && param && |
|
(new RegExp('(^|[^\\\\]):' + param + '(\\W|$)').test(url))) { |
|
urlParams[param] = { |
|
isQueryParamValue: (new RegExp('\\?.*=:' + param + '(?:\\W|$)')).test(url) |
|
}; |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
url = url.replace(/\\:/g, ':'); |
|
url = url.replace(PROTOCOL_AND_IPV6_REGEX, function(match) { |
|
protocolAndIpv6 = match; |
|
return ''; |
|
}); |
|
|
|
params = params || {}; |
|
forEach(self.urlParams, function(paramInfo, urlParam) { |
|
val = params.hasOwnProperty(urlParam) ? params[urlParam] : self.defaults[urlParam]; |
|
if (isDefined(val) && val !== null) { |
|
if (paramInfo.isQueryParamValue) { |
|
encodedVal = encodeUriQuery(val, true); |
|
} else { |
|
encodedVal = encodeUriSegment(val); |
|
} |
|
url = url.replace(new RegExp(':' + urlParam + '(\\W|$)', 'g'), function(match, p1) { |
|
return encodedVal + p1; |
|
}); |
|
} else { |
|
url = url.replace(new RegExp('(/?):' + urlParam + '(\\W|$)', 'g'), function(match, |
|
leadingSlashes, tail) { |
|
if (tail.charAt(0) === '/') { |
|
return tail; |
|
} else { |
|
return leadingSlashes + tail; |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
// strip trailing slashes and set the url (unless this behavior is specifically disabled) |
|
if (self.defaults.stripTrailingSlashes) { |
|
url = url.replace(/\/+$/, '') || '/'; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Collapse `/.` if found in the last URL path segment before the query. |
|
// E.g. `http://url.com/id/.format?q=x` becomes `http://url.com/id.format?q=x`. |
|
url = url.replace(/\/\.(?=\w+($|\?))/, '.'); |
|
// Replace escaped `/\.` with `/.`. |
|
// (If `\.` comes from a param value, it will be encoded as `%5C.`.) |
|
config.url = protocolAndIpv6 + url.replace(/\/(\\|%5C)\./, '/.'); |
|
|
|
|
|
// set params - delegate param encoding to $http |
|
forEach(params, function(value, key) { |
|
if (!self.urlParams[key]) { |
|
config.params = config.params || {}; |
|
config.params[key] = value; |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
function resourceFactory(url, paramDefaults, actions, options) { |
|
var route = new Route(url, options); |
|
|
|
actions = extend({}, provider.defaults.actions, actions); |
|
|
|
function extractParams(data, actionParams) { |
|
var ids = {}; |
|
actionParams = extend({}, paramDefaults, actionParams); |
|
forEach(actionParams, function(value, key) { |
|
if (isFunction(value)) { value = value(data); } |
|
ids[key] = value && value.charAt && value.charAt(0) === '@' ? |
|
lookupDottedPath(data, value.substr(1)) : value; |
|
}); |
|
return ids; |
|
} |
|
|
|
function defaultResponseInterceptor(response) { |
|
return response.resource; |
|
} |
|
|
|
function Resource(value) { |
|
shallowClearAndCopy(value || {}, this); |
|
} |
|
|
|
Resource.prototype.toJSON = function() { |
|
var data = extend({}, this); |
|
delete data.$promise; |
|
delete data.$resolved; |
|
delete data.$cancelRequest; |
|
return data; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
forEach(actions, function(action, name) { |
|
var hasBody = action.hasBody === true || (action.hasBody !== false && /^(POST|PUT|PATCH)$/i.test(action.method)); |
|
var numericTimeout = action.timeout; |
|
var cancellable = isDefined(action.cancellable) ? |
|
action.cancellable : route.defaults.cancellable; |
|
|
|
if (numericTimeout && !isNumber(numericTimeout)) { |
|
$log.debug('ngResource:\n' + |
|
' Only numeric values are allowed as `timeout`.\n' + |
|
' Promises are not supported in $resource, because the same value would ' + |
|
'be used for multiple requests. If you are looking for a way to cancel ' + |
|
'requests, you should use the `cancellable` option.'); |
|
delete action.timeout; |
|
numericTimeout = null; |
|
} |
|
|
|
Resource[name] = function(a1, a2, a3, a4) { |
|
var params = {}, data, onSuccess, onError; |
|
|
|
switch (arguments.length) { |
|
case 4: |
|
onError = a4; |
|
onSuccess = a3; |
|
// falls through |
|
case 3: |
|
case 2: |
|
if (isFunction(a2)) { |
|
if (isFunction(a1)) { |
|
onSuccess = a1; |
|
onError = a2; |
|
break; |
|
} |
|
|
|
onSuccess = a2; |
|
onError = a3; |
|
// falls through |
|
} else { |
|
params = a1; |
|
data = a2; |
|
onSuccess = a3; |
|
break; |
|
} |
|
// falls through |
|
case 1: |
|
if (isFunction(a1)) onSuccess = a1; |
|
else if (hasBody) data = a1; |
|
else params = a1; |
|
break; |
|
case 0: break; |
|
default: |
|
throw $resourceMinErr('badargs', |
|
'Expected up to 4 arguments [params, data, success, error], got {0} arguments', |
|
arguments.length); |
|
} |
|
|
|
var isInstanceCall = this instanceof Resource; |
|
var value = isInstanceCall ? data : (action.isArray ? [] : new Resource(data)); |
|
var httpConfig = {}; |
|
var requestInterceptor = action.interceptor && action.interceptor.request || undefined; |
|
var requestErrorInterceptor = action.interceptor && action.interceptor.requestError || |
|
undefined; |
|
var responseInterceptor = action.interceptor && action.interceptor.response || |
|
defaultResponseInterceptor; |
|
var responseErrorInterceptor = action.interceptor && action.interceptor.responseError || |
|
$q.reject; |
|
var successCallback = onSuccess ? function(val) { |
|
onSuccess(val, response.headers, response.status, response.statusText); |
|
} : undefined; |
|
var errorCallback = onError || undefined; |
|
var timeoutDeferred; |
|
var numericTimeoutPromise; |
|
var response; |
|
|
|
forEach(action, function(value, key) { |
|
switch (key) { |
|
default: |
|
httpConfig[key] = copy(value); |
|
break; |
|
case 'params': |
|
case 'isArray': |
|
case 'interceptor': |
|
case 'cancellable': |
|
break; |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
if (!isInstanceCall && cancellable) { |
|
timeoutDeferred = $q.defer(); |
|
httpConfig.timeout = timeoutDeferred.promise; |
|
|
|
if (numericTimeout) { |
|
numericTimeoutPromise = $timeout(timeoutDeferred.resolve, numericTimeout); |
|
} |
|
} |
|
|
|
if (hasBody) httpConfig.data = data; |
|
route.setUrlParams(httpConfig, |
|
extend({}, extractParams(data, action.params || {}), params), |
|
action.url); |
|
|
|
// Start the promise chain |
|
var promise = $q. |
|
resolve(httpConfig). |
|
then(requestInterceptor). |
|
catch(requestErrorInterceptor). |
|
then($http); |
|
|
|
promise = promise.then(function(resp) { |
|
var data = resp.data; |
|
|
|
if (data) { |
|
// Need to convert action.isArray to boolean in case it is undefined |
|
if (isArray(data) !== (!!action.isArray)) { |
|
throw $resourceMinErr('badcfg', |
|
'Error in resource configuration for action `{0}`. Expected response to ' + |
|
'contain an {1} but got an {2} (Request: {3} {4})', name, action.isArray ? 'array' : 'object', |
|
isArray(data) ? 'array' : 'object', httpConfig.method, httpConfig.url); |
|
} |
|
if (action.isArray) { |
|
value.length = 0; |
|
forEach(data, function(item) { |
|
if (typeof item === 'object') { |
|
value.push(new Resource(item)); |
|
} else { |
|
// Valid JSON values may be string literals, and these should not be converted |
|
// into objects. These items will not have access to the Resource prototype |
|
// methods, but unfortunately there |
|
value.push(item); |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
} else { |
|
var promise = value.$promise; // Save the promise |
|
shallowClearAndCopy(data, value); |
|
value.$promise = promise; // Restore the promise |
|
} |
|
} |
|
|
|
resp.resource = value; |
|
response = resp; |
|
return responseInterceptor(resp); |
|
}, function(rejectionOrResponse) { |
|
rejectionOrResponse.resource = value; |
|
response = rejectionOrResponse; |
|
return responseErrorInterceptor(rejectionOrResponse); |
|
}); |
|
|
|
promise = promise['finally'](function() { |
|
value.$resolved = true; |
|
if (!isInstanceCall && cancellable) { |
|
value.$cancelRequest = noop; |
|
$timeout.cancel(numericTimeoutPromise); |
|
timeoutDeferred = numericTimeoutPromise = httpConfig.timeout = null; |
|
} |
|
}); |
|
|
|
// Run the `success`/`error` callbacks, but do not let them affect the returned promise. |
|
promise.then(successCallback, errorCallback); |
|
|
|
if (!isInstanceCall) { |
|
// we are creating instance / collection |
|
// - set the initial promise |
|
// - return the instance / collection |
|
value.$promise = promise; |
|
value.$resolved = false; |
|
if (cancellable) value.$cancelRequest = cancelRequest; |
|
|
|
return value; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// instance call |
|
return promise; |
|
|
|
function cancelRequest(value) { |
|
promise.catch(noop); |
|
if (timeoutDeferred !== null) { |
|
timeoutDeferred.resolve(value); |
|
} |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
Resource.prototype['$' + name] = function(params, success, error) { |
|
if (isFunction(params)) { |
|
error = success; success = params; params = {}; |
|
} |
|
var result = Resource[name].call(this, params, this, success, error); |
|
return result.$promise || result; |
|
}; |
|
}); |
|
|
|
return Resource; |
|
} |
|
|
|
return resourceFactory; |
|
}]; |
|
}); |
|
|
|
|
|
})(window, window.angular);
|
|
|