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)
# => #<Person id: 1, name: "Francesco", age: 22, role: "user">
It provides two options that controls the top-level behavior of new instances:
-
permit_all_parameters- If it'strue, all the parameters will be permitted by default. The default isfalse. -
action_on_unpermitted_parameters- Allow to control the behavior when parameters that are not explicitly permitted are found. The values can be:logto write a message on the logger or:raiseto raise ActionController::UnpermittedParameters exception. The default value is:login test and development environments,falseotherwise.
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"
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| 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, ] |
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 |
||
| EMPTY_ARRAY | = | [] |
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/strong_parameters.rb, line 122 def self.const_missing(const_name) super unless const_name == :NEVER_UNPERMITTED_PARAMS ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn(" `ActionController::Parameters::NEVER_UNPERMITTED_PARAMS` has been deprecated. Use `ActionController::Parameters.always_permitted_parameters` instead. ".squish) 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) # => #<Person id: nil, name: "Francesco">
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
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.
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.
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
Convert all hashes in values into parameters, then yield each pair like the
same way as Hash#each_pair
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}
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"
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"}}
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/strong_parameters.rb, line 327 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
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) # => #<Person id: nil, name: "Francesco">
Returns true if the parameter is permitted, false
otherwise.
params = ActionController::Parameters.new
params.permitted? # => false
params.permit!
params.permitted? # => true
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
Equivalent to Hash#keep_if, but returns nil if no changes were made.
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) # => {}
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"}
Returns an unsafe, unfiltered Hash representation of this
parameter.
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}