Previously, `jQuery.ajax` with `dataType: 'json'` with a provided callback was
automatically converted to a jsonp request unless one also specified
`jsonp: false`. Today the preferred way of interacting with a cross-domain
backend is CORS which works in all browsers jQuery 4 will support.
Auto-promoting JSON requests to JSONP ones introduces a security issue as the
developer may be unaware they're not just downloading data but executing code
from a remote domain.
This commit disables the auto-promoting logic.
BREAKING CHANGE: to trigger a JSONP request, it's now required to specify
`dataType: "jsonp"`; previously some requests with `dataType: "json"` were
auto-promoted to JSONP.
Fixes gh-1799
Fixes gh-3376
Closes gh-4754
Concatenating HTML strings in buildFragment is a possible security risk as it
creates an opportunity of escaping the concatenated wrapper. It also makes it
impossible to support secure HTML wrappers like
[trusted types](https://web.dev/trusted-types/). It's safer to create wrapper
elements using `document.createElement` & `appendChild`.
The previous way was needed in jQuery <4 because IE <10 doesn't accept table
parts set via `innerHTML`, even if the element which contents are set is
a proper table element, e.g.:
```js
tr.innerHTML = "<td></td>";
```
The whole structure needs to be passed in one HTML string. jQuery 4 drops
support for IE <11 so this is no longer an issue; in older version we'd have
to duplicate the code paths.
IE <10 needed to have `<option>` elements wrapped in
`<select multiple="multiple">` but we no longer need that on master which
makes the `document.createElement` way shorter as we don't have to call
`setAttribute`.
All these improvements, apart from making logic more secure, decrease the
gzipped size by 58 bytes.
Closes gh-4724
Ref gh-4409
Ref angular/angular.js#17028
Co-authored-by: Richard Gibson <richard.gibson@gmail.com>
The `show()`, `hide()` & `toggle()` methods were included in the 3.x jQuery
slim build. The jQuery master build accidentally started to exclude them as
they were only imported in the effects module and the new Rollup-based build
system follows the module dependency graph when excluding modules.
To resolve the issue, import the `css/showHide.js` file directly in the main
`jquery.js` file.
Closes gh-4704
Ref jquery/jquery-migrate#346
iOS 8-12 parses `<noembed>` tags differently, executing this code. This is no
different to native behavior on that OS, though, so just accept it.
Ref gh-4685
Closes gh-4694
Backport tests from a jQuery 3.x fix that's not needed on `master`.
Also, fix the "focusin from an iframe" test to actually verify the behavior
from commit 1cecf64e5a - the commit that
introduced the regression - to make sure we don't regress on either front.
The main part of the modified test was checking that focusin handling in an
iframe works and that's still checked. The test was also checking that it
doesn't propagate to the parent document, though, and, apparently, in IE it
does. This one test is now blacklisted in IE.
(cherry picked from 9e15d6b469)
(cherry picked from 1a4f10ddc3)
Ref gh-4652
Ref gh-4656
Closes gh-4657
The "jQuery.ajax() - JSONP - Same Domain" test is firing a request with
a duplicate "callback" parameter, something like (simplified):
```
mock.php?action=jsonp&callback=jQuery_1&callback=jQuery_2
```
There was a difference in how the PHP & Node.js implementations of the jsonp
action in the mock server handled situations like that. The PHP implementation
was using the latest parameter while the Node.js one was turning it into an
array but the code didn't handle this situation. Because of how JavaScript
stringifies arrays, while the PHP implementation injected the following code:
```js
jQuery_2(payload)
```
the Node.js one was injecting the following one:
```js
jQuery_1,jQuery_2(payload)
```
This is a comma expression in JavaScript; it so turned out that in the majority
of cases both callbacks were identical so it was more like:
```js
jQuery_1,jQuery_1(payload)
```
which evaluates to `jQuery_1(payload)` when `jQuery_1` is defined, making the
test go as expected. In many cases, though, especially on Travis, the callbacks
were different, triggering an `Uncaught ReferenceError` error & requiring
frequent manual re-runs of Travis builds.
This commit fixes the logic in the mock Node.js server, adding special handling
for arrays.
Closes gh-4687
This fixes the issue of "%20" in POST data being replaced with "+"
even for requests with content-type different from
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded", e.g. for "application/json".
Fixes gh-4119
Closes gh-4650
Co-authored-by: Richard Gibson <richard.gibson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Michał Gołębiowski-Owczarek <m.goleb@gmail.com>
Make sure events & data keys matching Object.prototype properties work.
A separate fix for such events on cloned elements was added as well.
Fixes gh-3256
Closes gh-4603
Node.js code is written more & more commonly in ES6+ so it doesn't make sense
to enable it there. There are many violations in test code so it's disabled
there as well.
Closes gh-4615
1. Support passing custom document to jQuery.globalEval; the script will be
invoked in the context of this document.
2. Fire external scripts appended to iframe contents in that iframe context;
this was already supported & tested for inline scripts but not for external
ones.
Fixes gh-4518
Closes gh-4601
jQuery.event.global has been write-only in the jQuery source for the past few
years; reading from it was removed in c2d6847de0
when fixing the trac-12989 bug.
Closes gh-4602
Before this change, `val()` was stripping out carriage return characters from
the returned value. No test has relied on that. The logic was different for
option elements as its custom defined hook was omitting this stripping logic.
This commit gets rid of the carriage return removal and isolates the IE-only
select val getter to be skipped in other browsers.
Closes gh-4585
PR gh-4550 added support for running ES modules & AMD tests via Karma. This
required reading the `esmodules` & `amd` props from both `QUnit.config` &
`QUnit.urlParams`. By picking these two properties manually, the `dev` one
stopped being respected while ones handled directly by QUnit were fine (like
`hidepassed`). Instead of maintaining the full list of options, the code now
iterates over QUnit URL config and handles the fallbacks in a more generic way.
Apart from that, all jQuery source & test files are now read directly from disk
instead of being cached by Karma so that one can run `grunt karma:chrome-debug`
& work on a fix without restarting that Karma run after each change. A similar
effect could have been achieved by setting `autoWatch` to `true` but then the
main Karma page runs tests in an iframe by default when
`grunt karma:chrome-debug` is run instead of relying on the current debug flow.
Closes gh-4574
Ref gh-4550
This commit fixes unit tests for the following builds:
1. The no-deprecated build: `custom:-deprecated`
2. The current slim build: `custom:-ajax,-effects`
3. The future (#4553) slim build: `custom:-ajax,-callbacks,-deferred,-effects`
It also adds separate Travis jobs for the no-deprecated & slim builds.
Closes gh-4577
Remove the workaround for a broken `:enabled` pseudo-class on anchor elements
in Chrome <=77. These versions of Chrome considers anchor elements with the
`href` attribute as matching `:enabled`.
Closes gh-4569
jQuery source has been migrated in gh-4541 from AMD to ES modules. To maintain
support for consumers of our AMD modules, this commits adds a task transpiling
the ES modules sources in `src/` to AMD in `amd/`.
A "Load with AMD" checkbox was also restored to the QUnit setup. Note that,
contrary to jQuery 3.x, AMD files need to be generated via `grunt amd` or
`grunt` as sources are not authored in ECMAScript modules. To achieve a similar
no-compile experience during jQuery 4.x testing, use the new "Load as modules"
checkbox which works in all supported browsers except for IE & Edge (the
legacy, EdgeHTML-based one).
Ref gh-4541
Closes gh-4554
There was a check in jQuery.event.add that was supposed to make it a noop
for objects that don't accept data like text or comment nodes. The problem was
the check was incorrect: it assumed `dataPriv.get( elem )` returns a falsy
value for an `elem` that doesn't accept data but that's not the case - we get
an empty object then. The check was changed to use `acceptData` directly.
Fixes gh-4397
Closes gh-4558
qSA in IE 11/Edge often (but not always) don't find elements with an empty
name attribute selector (`[name=""]`). Detect that & fall back to Sizzle
traversal.
Interestingly, IE 10 & older don't seem to have the issue.
Fixes gh-4435
Closes gh-4510
Migrate all source AMD modules to ECMAScript modules. The final bundle
is compiled by a custom build process that uses Rollup under the hood.
Test files themselves are still loaded via RequireJS as that has to work in
IE 11.
Tests can now be run in "Load as modules" mode which replaces the previous
"Load with AMD" option. That option of running tests doesn't work in IE
and Edge as it requires support for dynamic imports.
Some of the changes required by the migration:
* check `typeof` of `noGlobal` instead of using the variable directly
as it's not available when modules are used
* change the nonce module to be an object as ECMASscript module exports
are immutable
* remove some unused exports
* import `./core/parseHTML.js` directly in `jquery.js` so that it's not
being cut out when the `ajax` module is excluded in a custom compilation
Closes gh-4541
Sizzle's PR jquery/sizzle#456 introduced a test catching not throwing on
badly-escaped identifiers by Firefox 3.6-5. Unfortunately, it was placed just
before a test Opera 10-11 failed, making Opera fail quicker and not adding
a post-comma invalid selector to rbuggyQSA.
The issue was fixed in jquery/sizzle#463. This jQuery commit backports the test
that Sizzle PR added as no workarounds are needed in browsers jQuery supports.
Closes gh-4516
Ref jquery/sizzle#456
Ref jquery/sizzle#463
The script transport used to evaluate fetched script sources which is
undesirable for unsuccessful HTTP responses. This is different to other data
types where such a convention was fine (e.g. in case of JSON).
Fixes gh-4250
Closes gh-4379
Calling `Array.prototype.concat.apply( [], inputArray )` to flatten `inputArray`
crashes for large arrays; using `Array.prototype.flat` avoids these issues in
browsers that support it. In case it's necessary to support these large arrays
even in older browsers, a polyfill for `Array.prototype.flat` can be loaded.
This is already being done by many applications.
Fixes gh-4320
Closes gh-4459
`:even` & `:odd` are deprecated since jQuery 3.4.0 & will be removed in 4.0.0.
The new `even()` & `odd()` methods will make the migration easier.
Closes gh-4485
With new selector code doing less convoluted support tests, it was possible
to extract a lot of logic out of setDocument & also reduce size.
This commit also backports jquery/sizzle#439 that was reverted by mistake
during a switch from JSHint + JSCS to ESLint.
Closes gh-4462
Ref jquery/sizzle#442
Ref jquery/sizzle#439
Now that Sizzle is gone & we use npm, we can read from node_modules directly
and skip the setup that copies some files to the external directory.
Closes gh-4466
The `:scope` pseudo-class[1] has surprisingly good browser support: Chrome,
Firefox & Safari have supported if for a long time; only IE & Edge lack support.
This commit leverages this pseudo-class to get rid of the ID hack in most cases.
Adding a temporary ID may cause layout thrashing which was reported a few times
in [the past.
We can't completely eliminate the ID hack in modern browses as sibling selectors
require us to change context to the parent and then `:scope` stops applying to
what we'd like. But it'd still improve performance in the vast majority of
cases.
[1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/:scope
Fixes gh-4453
Closes gh-4454
Ref gh-4332
Ref jquery/sizzle#405
A copied comment line was accidentally left out above the line defining
`QUnit.jQuerySelectorsPos`, making the sentence nonsense. This commit removes
that line.
Closes gh-4458
This commit removes Sizzle from jQuery, inlining its code & removing obsolete
workarounds where applicable.
The selector-native module has been removed. Further work on the selector
module may decrease the size enough that it will no longer be necessary. If
it turns out it's still useful, we'll reinstate it but the code will look
different anyway as we'll want to share as much code as possible with
the existing selector module.
The Sizzle AUTHORS.txt file has been merged with the jQuery one - people are
sorted by their first contributions to either of the two repositories.
The commit reduces the gzipped jQuery size by 1460 bytes compared to master.
Closes gh-4395
Apart from porting most Sizzle tests to jQuery (mostly to its selector module),
this commit fixes selector-native so that a jQuery custom compilation that
excludes Sizzle passes all tests as well.
Closes gh-4406