- Since these tests use network resources, they are not enabled by default.
Set the environment variable TEST_HTTP_GET to actually do them.
- Do one request for each provider and check that they are all consistent.
(This works for me, yielding Europe/Amsterdam for all).
- Some providers don't provide a single flat JSON object
(e.g. "{time_zone: foo}") but a nested structure
(e.g. "{location: {time_zone: foo}}"), so allow dots
in the selector to do multi-level selection.
- Some providers return weirdly escaped data; strip out useless
escaping before splitting (there are no characters in correct
time zone names that need escaping)
- Add some tests for TZ splitting
- In GeoIP handler constructors that take a string (to configure the
selector to use), interpret the empty string (which generally isn't
a meaningful selector) as meaning "use the default".
- Drop the no-argument constructors in favor of a default-argument
which is empty.
- GeoIP gets a string selector; the interpretation is up to derived classes.
- GeoIPXML and GeoIPJSON use the selector to select an element by tag
or an attribute, respectively.
- The handler for JSON data should be called that, not named
specially after the original provider it was implemented for.
- Make filename and classname consistent, GeoIPJSON.
- Unchanged config files will continue to use the weird addition
of /json, and interpret JSON data.
- Allow to specify full URL with data format through one of
geoipStyle: json
geoipStyle: xml
- XML support is optional
- Make the BCP47 value explicitly lower-case.
- Add some constness and encapsulation.
- Fix up documentation in the packages module explaining the
format of the ${LOCALE} replacement (now forced to lower-case,
but it is also only the language part, not e.g. en-UK).
FIXES#922
In the timezone widget, locations in the far north -- Inuvik,
Thule, Longyearbyen -- were displayed too far south, because the
map location calculation assumes a linear gradient, which places
90 degrees north at about 70 degrees. Change calculation to
pretend the world is flat south of 62 degrees north, and then
'bend' the remaining 28 degrees of latitude to the top of the
image. This puts most places in the right spot, although Yellowknife
is now on the south shore of Great Slave.
Fort Nelson should be north of Dawson Creek, too -- the math still
needs a little work.
While here, put Antarctica in the south, otherwise Rothera keeps
showing up in Greenland.