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12b811d749
Signed-off-by: Edward Z. Yang <edwardzyang@thewritingpot.com>
212 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
212 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
Considerations for ErrorCollection
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Presently, HTML Purifier takes a code-execution centric approach to handling
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errors. Errors are organized and grouped according to which segment of the
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code triggers them, not necessarily the portion of the input document that
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triggered the error. This means that errors are pseudo-sorted by category,
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rather than location in the document.
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One easy way to "fix" this problem would be to re-sort according to line number.
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However, the "category" style information we derive from naively following
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program execution is still useful. After all, each of the strategies which
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can report errors still process the document mostly linearly. Furthermore,
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not only do they process linearly, but the way they pass off operations to
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sub-systems mirrors that of the document. For example, AttrValidator will
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linearly proceed through elements, and on each element will use AttrDef to
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validate those contents. From there, the attribute might have more
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sub-components, which have execution passed off accordingly.
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In fact, each strategy handles a very specific class of "error."
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RemoveForeignElements - element tokens
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MakeWellFormed - element token ordering
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FixNesting - element token ordering
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ValidateAttributes - attributes of elements
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The crucial point is that while we care about the hierarchy governing these
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different errors, we *don't* care about any other information about what actually
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happens to the elements. This brings up another point: if HTML Purifier fixes
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something, this is not really a notice/warning/error; it's really a suggestion
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of a way to fix the aforementioned defects.
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In short, the refactoring to take this into account kinda sucks.
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Errors should not be recorded in order that they are reported. Instead, they
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should be bound to the line (and preferably element) in which they were found.
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This means we need some way to uniquely identify every element in the document,
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which doesn't presently exist. An easy way of adding this would be to track
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line columns. An important ramification of this is that we *must* use the
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DirectLex implementation.
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1. Implement column numbers for DirectLex [DONE!]
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2. Disable error collection when not using DirectLex [DONE!]
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Next, we need to re-orient all of the error declarations to place CurrentToken
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at utmost important. Since this is passed via Context, it's not always clear
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if that's available. ErrorCollector should complain HARD if it isn't available.
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There are some locations when we don't have a token available. These include:
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* Lexing - this can actually have a row and column, but NOT correspond to
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a token
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* End of document errors - bump this to the end
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Actually, we *don't* have to complain if CurrentToken isn't available; we just
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set it as a document-wide error. And actually, nothing needs to be done here.
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Something interesting to consider is whether or not we care about the locations
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of attributes and CSS properties, i.e. the sub-objects that compose these things.
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In terms of consistency, at the very least attributes should have column/line
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numbers attached to them. However, this may be overkill, as attributes are
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uniquely identifiable. You could go even further, with CSS, but they are also
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uniquely identifiable.
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Bottom-line is, however, this information must be available, in form of the
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CurrentAttribute and CurrentCssProperty (theoretical) context variables, and
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it must be used to organize the errors that the sub-processes may throw.
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There is also a hierarchy of sorts that may make merging this into one context
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variable more sense, if it hadn't been for HTML's reasonably rigid structure.
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A CSS property will never contain an HTML attribute. So we won't ever get
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recursive relations, and having multiple depths won't ever make sense. Leave
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this be.
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We already have this information, and consequently, using start and end is
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*unnecessary*, so long as the context variables are set appropriately. We don't
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care if an error was thrown by an attribute transform or an attribute definition;
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to the end user these are the same (for a developer, they are different, but
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they're better off with a stack trace (which we should add support for) in such
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cases).
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3. Remove start()/end() code. Don't get rid of recursion, though [DONE]
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4. Setup ErrorCollector to use context information to setup hierarchies.
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This may require a different internal format. Use objects if it gets
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complex. [DONE]
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ASIDE
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More on this topic: since we are now binding errors to lines
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and columns, a particular error can have three relationships to that
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specific location:
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1. The token at that location directly
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RemoveForeignElements
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AttrValidator (transforms)
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MakeWellFormed
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2. A "component" of that token (i.e. attribute)
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AttrValidator (removals)
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3. A modification to that node (i.e. contents from start to end
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token) as a whole
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FixNesting
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This needs to be marked accordingly. In the presentation, it might
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make sense keep (3) separate, have (2) a sublist of (1). (1) can
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be a closing tag, in which case (3) makes no sense at all, OR it
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should be related with its opening tag (this may not necessarily
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be possible before MakeWellFormed is run).
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So, the line and column counts as our identifier, so:
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$errors[$line][$col] = ...
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Then, we need to identify case 1, 2 or 3. They are identified as
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such:
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1. Need some sort of semaphore in RemoveForeignElements, etc.
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2. If CurrentAttr/CurrentCssProperty is non-null
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3. Default (FixNesting, MakeWellFormed)
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One consideration about (1) is that it usually is actually a
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(3) modification, but we have no way of knowing about that because
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of various optimizations. However, they can probably be treated
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the same. The other difficulty is that (3) is never a line and
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column; rather, it is a range (i.e. a duple) and telling the user
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the very start of the range may confuse them. For example,
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<b>Foo<div>bar</div></b>
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^ ^
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The node being operated on is <b>, so the error would be assigned
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to the first caret, with a "node reorganized" error. Then, the
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ChildDef would have submitted its own suggestions and errors with
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regard to what's going in the internals. So I suppose this is
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ok. :-)
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Now, the structure of the earlier mentioned ... would be something
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like this:
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object {
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type = (token|attr|property),
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value, // appropriate for type
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errors => array(),
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sub-errors = [recursive],
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}
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This helps us keep things agnostic. It is also sufficiently complex
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enough to warrant an object.
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So, more wanking about the object format is in order. The way HTML Purifier is
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currently setup, the only possible hierarchy is:
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token -> attr -> css property
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These relations do not exist all of the time; a comment or end token would not
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ever have any attributes, and non-style attributes would never have CSS properties
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associated with them.
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I believe that it is worth supporting multiple paths. At some point, we might
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have a hierarchy like:
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* -> syntax
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-> token -> attr -> css property
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-> url
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-> css stylesheet <style>
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et cetera. Now, one of the practical implications of this is that every "node"
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on our tree is well-defined, so in theory it should be possible to either 1.
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create a separate class for each error struct, or 2. embed this information
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directly into HTML Purifier's token stream. Embedding the information in the
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token stream is not a terribly good idea, since tokens can be removed, etc.
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So that leaves us with 1... and if we use a generic interface we can cut down
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on a lot of code we might need. So let's leave it like this.
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~~~~
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Then we setup suggestions.
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5. Setup a separate error class which tells the user any modifications
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HTML Purifier made.
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Some information about this:
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Our current paradigm is to tell the user what HTML Purifier did to the HTML.
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This is the most natural mode of operation, since that's what HTML Purifier
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is all about; it was not meant to be a validator.
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However, most other people have experience dealing with a validator. In cases
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where HTML Purifier unambiguously does the right thing, simply giving the user
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the correct version isn't a bad idea, but problems arise when:
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- The user has such bad HTML we do something odd, when we should have just
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flagged the HTML as an error. Such examples are when we do things like
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remove text from directly inside a <table> tag. It was probably meant to
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be in a <td> tag or be outside the table, but we're not smart enough to
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realize this so we just remove it. In such a case, we should tell the user
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that there was foreign data in the table, but then we shouldn't "demand"
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the user remove the data; it's more of a "here's a possible way of
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rectifying the problem"
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- Giving line context for input is hard enough, but feasible; giving output
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line context will be extremely difficult due to shifting lines; we'd probably
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have to track what the tokens are and then find the appropriate out context
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and it's not guaranteed to work etc etc etc.
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````````````
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Don't forget to spruce up output.
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6. Output needs to automatically give line and column numbers, basically
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"at line" on steroids. Look at W3C's output; it's ok. [PARTIALLY DONE]
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- We need a standard CSS to apply (check demo.css for some starting
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styling; some buttons would also be hip)
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vim: et sw=4 sts=4
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