Masonite 1.3 comes with a plethora of improvements over previous versioning. This version brings new features such as Queue and Mail drivers as well as various bug fixes.
Previously when a you tried to redirect using the Request.redirect()
method, Masonite would sometimes send the browser to an infinite redirection. This was because masonite was not resetting the redirection attributes of the Request
class.
Previously the content length in the request header was not being set correctly which led to the gunicorn server showing a warning that the content length did not match the content of the output.
Previously the Request class simply got the input data on both POST
and GET
requests by converting the wsgi.input
WSGI parameter into a string and parsing. All POST input data is now retrieved using FieldStorage
which adds support for also getting files from multipart/formdata
requests.
You may now simply upload images to both disk and Amazon S3 storage right out of the box. With the new UploadProvider
service provider you can simply do something like:
As well as support for Amazon S3 by setting the DRIVER
to s3
.
These helper functions are added functions to the builtin Python functions which can be used by simply calling them as usual:
Notice how we never imported anything from the module or Service Container. See the Helper Functions documentation for a more exhaustive list
Very often you will want to have a single variable accessible in all of your views, such as the Request
object or other class. We can use the new View
class for this and put it in it's own service provider:
You can now specify anything that is in the container in your middleware constructor and it will be resolved automatically from the container
Specify the subdomain you want to target with your route. It's common to want to have separate routes for your public site and multi-tenant sites. This will now look something like:
Which will target test.example.com/dashboard
and not example.com/dashboard
. Read more about subdomains in the Routing documentation.
By default, masonite will look for routes in the app/http/controllers
namespace but you can change this for individual routes:
This will look for the controller in the thirdparty.routes
module.
Masonite now ships with a QueueManager
class which can be used to build queue drivers. Masonite ships with an async
driver which sends jobs to a background thread. These queues can process Jobs which ca be created with the new craft job
command. See the Queues and Jobs documentation for more information.