- Exposed internals from Mvc.Razor.Host to Mvc.Razor.Test so it can use the MvcRazorHost override that takes the IFileSystem.
- Added end-to-end code generation tests for TagHelpers with ModelExpression properties.
#1241
- Added an end-to-end test that verifies all content behaviors, interactions and functionalities of tag helpers.
- Added some common user scenarios to verify that the system works how we expect.
#1116
- We now new up TagHelper's, requiring them to have parameterless constructors.
- Added test to validate throwing.
- Removed existing tests that expected the constructor injection behavior.
#1303
- The TagHelperActivator enables dependency injection via properties and allows access to the ViewContext.
- This replaces the ICanHasViewContext mechanism that we had in place before.
- Added tests and fixed up existing to work with new format for providing ViewContext.
#1258
- includes new `RazorPage<TModel>.CreateModelExpression<TValue>()` method
- #1240
nit:
- regenerating the resources reordered Microsoft.AspNet.Mvc.Core's Resources.designer.cs
- The CreateTagHelper method is responsible for creating and activating TagHelpers.
- Added the support for requesting the ViewContext.
- Added tests to validate the tag helper creation mechanism.
#1104
- RazorPage now has the ability to use writing scopes to control where things are written.
- This enables RazorPages to use these writing scopes with TagHelpers. TagHelpers use them to buffer attributes that have C# contained within them and to also buffer content of TagHelpers whos ContentBehavior is Modify.
- Added RazorPage tests to validate their functionality.
#1102
IActionConstraint follows a provider model similar to filters. The
attributes that go on actions/controllers can be simple metadata markers,
the 'real' constraint is provided by a set of configurable providers. In
general the simplest thing to do is to be both an
IActionConstraintMetadata and IActionConstraint, and then the default
provider will take care of you.
IActionConstraint now has stages based on the Order property. Each group
of constraints with the same Order will run together on the set of
actions. This process is repeated for each value of Order until we run out
of actions or run out of constraints.
The IActionConstraint interface is beefier than the equivalent in legacy
MVC. This is to support cooperative coding between sets of constraints
that know about each other. See the changes in the sample, which implement
webapi-style overloading.
- only affects an extreme corner case: user sets `metadata.EditFormatString` then reads
`metadata.DisplayFormatString`
- an extreme case because `EditFormatString` is normally set only when
`DisplayFormatString` is set and, if set, it's to the same value
- happened to see this while updating `CachedDataAnnotationsModelMetadata` for this PR
nit: an -> a in an adjacent XML comment in `CachedDataAnnotationsModelMetadata`
1) Implemented FilePathResult to efficiently return files from disk.
2) Implemented FileStreamResult to return content from a stream.
3) Implemented FileContentResult to return content from a byte array.
This change removes WebAPI-style method parameter overloading and the
automatic mapping of 'unnamed' actions based on method names. For all
practicaly purposes, this change restores the MVC5 behavior for action
selection.
WebAPI-style overloading will be brought back in the future via a set of
opt-in constructs.
This adds support for attributes which interact with reflected model.
These conventions are applied after all of our built-in constructs so that
you can see and modify the results.