Completed
Push — remove/connection-package-mana... ( d84383 )
by Marin
07:31
created

Manager::initialize()   A

Complexity

Conditions 1
Paths 1

Size

Total Lines 3

Duplication

Lines 0
Ratio 0 %

Importance

Changes 0
Metric Value
cc 1
nc 1
nop 1
dl 0
loc 3
rs 10
c 0
b 0
f 0
1
<?php
2
/**
3
 * The Jetpack Connection manager class file.
4
 *
5
 * @package jetpack-connection
6
 */
7
8
namespace Automattic\Jetpack\Connection;
9
10
use Automattic\Jetpack\Constants;
11
use Automattic\Jetpack\Tracking;
12
13
/**
14
 * The Jetpack Connection Manager class that is used as a single gateway between WordPress.com
15
 * and Jetpack.
16
 */
17
class Manager implements Manager_Interface {
18
19
	const SECRETS_MISSING        = 'secrets_missing';
20
	const SECRETS_EXPIRED        = 'secrets_expired';
21
	const SECRETS_OPTION_NAME    = 'jetpack_secrets';
22
	const MAGIC_NORMAL_TOKEN_KEY = ';normal;';
23
	const JETPACK_MASTER_USER    = true;
24
25
	/**
26
	 * The procedure that should be run to generate secrets.
27
	 *
28
	 * @var Callable
29
	 */
30
	protected $secret_callable;
31
32
	/**
33
	 * A copy of the raw POST data for signature verification purposes.
34
	 *
35
	 * @var String
36
	 */
37
	protected $raw_post_data;
38
39
	/**
40
	 * Verification data needs to be stored to properly verify everything.
41
	 *
42
	 * @var Object
43
	 */
44
	private $xmlrpc_verification = null;
45
46
	/**
47
	 * Initializes required listeners. This is done separately from the constructors
48
	 * because some objects sometimes need to instantiate separate objects of this class.
49
	 *
50
	 * @todo Implement a proper nonce verification.
51
	 */
52
	public function init() {
53
54
		$is_jetpack_xmlrpc_request = $this->setup_xmlrpc_handlers(
55
			$_GET,
56
			$this->is_active(),
57
			$this->verify_xml_rpc_signature()
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
It seems like $this->verify_xml_rpc_signature() targeting Automattic\Jetpack\Conne...ify_xml_rpc_signature() can also be of type array; however, Automattic\Jetpack\Conne...setup_xmlrpc_handlers() does only seem to accept boolean, maybe add an additional type check?

This check looks at variables that are passed out again to other methods.

If the outgoing method call has stricter type requirements than the method itself, an issue is raised.

An additional type check may prevent trouble.

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58
		);
59
60
		// All the XMLRPC functionality has been moved into setup_xmlrpc_handlers.
61
		if (
62
			! $is_jetpack_xmlrpc_request
63
			&& is_admin()
64
			&& isset( $_POST['action'] ) // phpcs:ignore WordPress.Security.NonceVerification
65
			&& (
66
				'jetpack_upload_file' === $_POST['action']  // phpcs:ignore WordPress.Security.NonceVerification
67
				|| 'jetpack_update_file' === $_POST['action']  // phpcs:ignore WordPress.Security.NonceVerification
68
			)
69
		) {
70
			$this->require_jetpack_authentication();
71
			$this->add_remote_request_handlers();
0 ignored issues
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Bug introduced by
The method add_remote_request_handlers() does not seem to exist on object<Automattic\Jetpack\Connection\Manager>.

This check looks for calls to methods that do not seem to exist on a given type. It looks for the method on the type itself as well as in inherited classes or implemented interfaces.

This is most likely a typographical error or the method has been renamed.

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72
			return;
73
		}
74
75
		if ( $this->is_active() ) {
76
			add_action( 'login_form_jetpack_json_api_authorization', array( &$this, 'login_form_json_api_authorization' ) );
77
			add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this, 'public_xmlrpc_methods' ) );
78
		} else {
79
			add_action( 'rest_api_init', array( $this, 'initialize_rest_api_registration_connector' ) );
80
		}
81
	}
82
83
	/**
84
	 * Sets up the XMLRPC request handlers.
85
	 *
86
	 * @param Array                  $request_params incoming request parameters.
87
	 * @param Boolean                $is_active whether the connection is currently active.
88
	 * @param Boolean                $is_signed whether the signature check has been successful.
89
	 * @param \Jetpack_XMLRPC_Server $xmlrpc_server (optional) an instance of the server to use instead of instantiating a new one.
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
Should the type for parameter $xmlrpc_server not be null|\Jetpack_XMLRPC_Server?

This check looks for @param annotations where the type inferred by our type inference engine differs from the declared type.

It makes a suggestion as to what type it considers more descriptive.

Most often this is a case of a parameter that can be null in addition to its declared types.

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90
	 */
91
	public function setup_xmlrpc_handlers(
92
		$request_params,
93
		$is_active,
94
		$is_signed,
95
		\Jetpack_XMLRPC_Server $xmlrpc_server = null
96
	) {
97
		if (
98
			! isset( $request_params['for'] )
99
			|| 'jetpack' !== $request_params['for']
100
		) {
101
			return false;
102
		}
103
104
		// Alternate XML-RPC, via ?for=jetpack&jetpack=comms.
105
		if (
106
			isset( $request_params['jetpack'] )
107
			&& 'comms' === $request_params['jetpack']
108
		) {
109
			if ( ! Constants::is_defined( 'XMLRPC_REQUEST' ) ) {
110
				// Use the real constant here for WordPress' sake.
111
				define( 'XMLRPC_REQUEST', true );
112
			}
113
114
			add_action( 'template_redirect', array( $this, 'alternate_xmlrpc' ) );
115
116
			add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this, 'remove_non_jetpack_xmlrpc_methods' ), 1000 );
117
		}
118
119
		if ( ! Constants::get_constant( 'XMLRPC_REQUEST' ) ) {
120
			return false;
121
		}
122
		// Display errors can cause the XML to be not well formed.
123
		@ini_set( 'display_errors', false ); // phpcs:ignore
0 ignored issues
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Security Best Practice introduced by
It seems like you do not handle an error condition here. This can introduce security issues, and is generally not recommended.

If you suppress an error, we recommend checking for the error condition explicitly:

// For example instead of
@mkdir($dir);

// Better use
if (@mkdir($dir) === false) {
    throw new \RuntimeException('The directory '.$dir.' could not be created.');
}
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124
125
		if ( $xmlrpc_server ) {
126
			$this->xmlrpc_server = $xmlrpc_server;
0 ignored issues
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Bug introduced by
The property xmlrpc_server does not exist. Did you maybe forget to declare it?

In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:

class MyClass { }

$x = new MyClass();
$x->foo = true;

Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion:

class MyClass {
    public $foo;
}

$x = new MyClass();
$x->foo = true;
Loading history...
127
		} else {
128
			$this->xmlrpc_server = new \Jetpack_XMLRPC_Server();
129
		}
130
131
		$this->require_jetpack_authentication();
132
133
		if ( $is_active ) {
134
			// Hack to preserve $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA.
135
			add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this, 'xmlrpc_methods' ) );
136
137
			if ( $is_signed ) {
138
				// The actual API methods.
139
				add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this->xmlrpc_server, 'xmlrpc_methods' ) );
140
			} else {
141
				// The jetpack.authorize method should be available for unauthenticated users on a site with an
142
				// active Jetpack connection, so that additional users can link their account.
143
				add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this->xmlrpc_server, 'authorize_xmlrpc_methods' ) );
144
			}
145
		} else {
146
			// The bootstrap API methods.
147
			add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this->xmlrpc_server, 'bootstrap_xmlrpc_methods' ) );
148
149
			if ( $is_signed ) {
150
				// The jetpack Provision method is available for blog-token-signed requests.
151
				add_filter( 'xmlrpc_methods', array( $this->xmlrpc_server, 'provision_xmlrpc_methods' ) );
152
			} else {
153
				new XMLRPC_Connector( $this );
154
			}
155
		}
156
157
		add_filter( 'xmlrpc_blog_options', array( $this, 'xmlrpc_options' ) );
158
159
		add_action( 'jetpack_clean_nonces', array( $this, 'clean_nonces' ) );
160
		if ( ! wp_next_scheduled( 'jetpack_clean_nonces' ) ) {
161
			wp_schedule_event( time(), 'hourly', 'jetpack_clean_nonces' );
162
		}
163
164
		// Now that no one can authenticate, and we're whitelisting all XML-RPC methods, force enable_xmlrpc on.
165
		add_filter( 'pre_option_enable_xmlrpc', '__return_true' );
166
167
		return true;
168
	}
169
170
	/**
171
	 * Initializes the REST API connector on the init hook.
172
	 */
173
	public function initialize_rest_api_registration_connector() {
174
		new REST_Connector( $this );
175
	}
176
177
	/**
178
	 * Since a lot of hosts use a hammer approach to "protecting" WordPress sites,
179
	 * and just blanket block all requests to /xmlrpc.php, or apply other overly-sensitive
180
	 * security/firewall policies, we provide our own alternate XML RPC API endpoint
181
	 * which is accessible via a different URI. Most of the below is copied directly
182
	 * from /xmlrpc.php so that we're replicating it as closely as possible.
183
	 *
184
	 * @todo Tighten $wp_xmlrpc_server_class a bit to make sure it doesn't do bad things.
185
	 */
186
	public function alternate_xmlrpc() {
187
		// phpcs:disable PHPCompatibility.Variables.RemovedPredefinedGlobalVariables.http_raw_post_dataDeprecatedRemoved
188
		// phpcs:disable WordPress.WP.GlobalVariablesOverride.Prohibited
189
		global $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA;
190
191
		// Some browser-embedded clients send cookies. We don't want them.
192
		$_COOKIE = array();
193
194
		// A fix for mozBlog and other cases where '<?xml' isn't on the very first line.
195
		if ( isset( $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA ) ) {
196
			$HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA = trim( $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA );
197
		}
198
199
		// phpcs:enable
200
201
		include_once ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/admin.php';
202
		include_once ABSPATH . WPINC . '/class-IXR.php';
203
		include_once ABSPATH . WPINC . '/class-wp-xmlrpc-server.php';
204
205
		/**
206
		 * Filters the class used for handling XML-RPC requests.
207
		 *
208
		 * @since 3.1.0
209
		 *
210
		 * @param string $class The name of the XML-RPC server class.
211
		 */
212
		$wp_xmlrpc_server_class = apply_filters( 'wp_xmlrpc_server_class', 'wp_xmlrpc_server' );
213
		$wp_xmlrpc_server       = new $wp_xmlrpc_server_class();
214
215
		// Fire off the request.
216
		nocache_headers();
217
		$wp_xmlrpc_server->serve_request();
218
219
		exit;
220
	}
221
222
	/**
223
	 * Removes all XML-RPC methods that are not `jetpack.*`.
224
	 * Only used in our alternate XML-RPC endpoint, where we want to
225
	 * ensure that Core and other plugins' methods are not exposed.
226
	 *
227
	 * @param array $methods a list of registered WordPress XMLRPC methods.
228
	 * @return array filtered $methods
229
	 */
230
	public function remove_non_jetpack_xmlrpc_methods( $methods ) {
231
		$jetpack_methods = array();
232
233
		foreach ( $methods as $method => $callback ) {
234
			if ( 0 === strpos( $method, 'jetpack.' ) ) {
235
				$jetpack_methods[ $method ] = $callback;
236
			}
237
		}
238
239
		return $jetpack_methods;
240
	}
241
242
	/**
243
	 * Removes all other authentication methods not to allow other
244
	 * methods to validate unauthenticated requests.
245
	 */
246
	public function require_jetpack_authentication() {
247
		// Don't let anyone authenticate.
248
		$_COOKIE = array();
249
		remove_all_filters( 'authenticate' );
250
		remove_all_actions( 'wp_login_failed' );
251
252
		if ( $this->is_active() ) {
253
			// Allow Jetpack authentication.
254
			add_filter( 'authenticate', array( $this, 'authenticate_jetpack' ), 10, 3 );
255
		}
256
	}
257
258
	/**
259
	 * Authenticates XML-RPC and other requests from the Jetpack Server
260
	 *
261
	 * @param WP_User|Mixed $user user object if authenticated.
262
	 * @param String        $username username.
263
	 * @param String        $password password string.
264
	 * @return WP_User|Mixed authenticated user or error.
265
	 */
266
	public function authenticate_jetpack( $user, $username, $password ) {
267
		if ( is_a( $user, '\\WP_User' ) ) {
268
			return $user;
269
		}
270
271
		$token_details = $this->verify_xml_rpc_signature();
272
273
		if ( ! $token_details ) {
274
			return $user;
275
		}
276
277
		if ( 'user' !== $token_details['type'] ) {
278
			return $user;
279
		}
280
281
		if ( ! $token_details['user_id'] ) {
282
			return $user;
283
		}
284
285
		nocache_headers();
286
287
		return new \WP_User( $token_details['user_id'] );
288
	}
289
290
	/**
291
	 * Verifies the signature of the current request.
292
	 *
293
	 * @return false|array
294
	 */
295
	public function verify_xml_rpc_signature() {
296
		if ( is_null( $this->xmlrpc_verification ) ) {
297
			$this->xmlrpc_verification = $this->internal_verify_xml_rpc_signature();
298
299
			if ( is_wp_error( $this->xmlrpc_verification ) ) {
300
				/**
301
				 * Action for logging XMLRPC signature verification errors. This data is sensitive.
302
				 *
303
				 * Error codes:
304
				 * - malformed_token
305
				 * - malformed_user_id
306
				 * - unknown_token
307
				 * - could_not_sign
308
				 * - invalid_nonce
309
				 * - signature_mismatch
310
				 *
311
				 * @since 7.5.0
312
				 *
313
				 * @param WP_Error $signature_verification_error The verification error
314
				 */
315
				do_action( 'jetpack_verify_signature_error', $this->xmlrpc_verification );
316
			}
317
		}
318
319
		return is_wp_error( $this->xmlrpc_verification ) ? false : $this->xmlrpc_verification;
320
	}
321
322
	/**
323
	 * Verifies the signature of the current request.
324
	 *
325
	 * This function has side effects and should not be used. Instead,
326
	 * use the memoized version `->verify_xml_rpc_signature()`.
327
	 *
328
	 * @internal
329
	 */
330
	private function internal_verify_xml_rpc_signature() {
331
		// It's not for us.
332
		if ( ! isset( $_GET['token'] ) || empty( $_GET['signature'] ) ) {
333
			return false;
334
		}
335
336
		$signature_details = array(
337
			'token'     => isset( $_GET['token'] ) ? wp_unslash( $_GET['token'] ) : '',
338
			'timestamp' => isset( $_GET['timestamp'] ) ? wp_unslash( $_GET['timestamp'] ) : '',
339
			'nonce'     => isset( $_GET['nonce'] ) ? wp_unslash( $_GET['nonce'] ) : '',
340
			'body_hash' => isset( $_GET['body-hash'] ) ? wp_unslash( $_GET['body-hash'] ) : '',
341
			'method'    => wp_unslash( $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] ),
342
			'url'       => wp_unslash( $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] ), // Temp - will get real signature URL later.
343
			'signature' => isset( $_GET['signature'] ) ? wp_unslash( $_GET['signature'] ) : '',
344
		);
345
346
		@list( $token_key, $version, $user_id ) = explode( ':', wp_unslash( $_GET['token'] ) );
0 ignored issues
show
Security Best Practice introduced by
It seems like you do not handle an error condition here. This can introduce security issues, and is generally not recommended.

If you suppress an error, we recommend checking for the error condition explicitly:

// For example instead of
@mkdir($dir);

// Better use
if (@mkdir($dir) === false) {
    throw new \RuntimeException('The directory '.$dir.' could not be created.');
}
Loading history...
347
		if (
348
			empty( $token_key )
349
		||
350
			empty( $version ) || strval( JETPACK__API_VERSION ) !== $version
351
		) {
352
			return new \WP_Error( 'malformed_token', 'Malformed token in request', compact( 'signature_details' ) );
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'malformed_token'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

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353
		}
354
355
		if ( '0' === $user_id ) {
356
			$token_type = 'blog';
357
			$user_id    = 0;
358
		} else {
359
			$token_type = 'user';
360
			if ( empty( $user_id ) || ! ctype_digit( $user_id ) ) {
361
				return new \WP_Error(
362
					'malformed_user_id',
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'malformed_user_id'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

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363
					'Malformed user_id in request',
364
					compact( 'signature_details' )
365
				);
366
			}
367
			$user_id = (int) $user_id;
368
369
			$user = new \WP_User( $user_id );
370
			if ( ! $user || ! $user->exists() ) {
371
				return new \WP_Error(
372
					'unknown_user',
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'unknown_user'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

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373
					sprintf( 'User %d does not exist', $user_id ),
374
					compact( 'signature_details' )
375
				);
376
			}
377
		}
378
379
		$token = $this->get_access_token( $user_id, $token_key, false );
380
		if ( is_wp_error( $token ) ) {
381
			$token->add_data( compact( 'signature_details' ) );
382
			return $token;
383
		} elseif ( ! $token ) {
384
			return new \WP_Error(
385
				'unknown_token',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'unknown_token'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

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386
				sprintf( 'Token %s:%s:%d does not exist', $token_key, $version, $user_id ),
387
				compact( 'signature_details' )
388
			);
389
		}
390
391
		$jetpack_signature = new \Jetpack_Signature( $token->secret, (int) \Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'time_diff' ) );
392
		// phpcs:disable WordPress.Security.NonceVerification.Missing
393
		if ( isset( $_POST['_jetpack_is_multipart'] ) ) {
394
			$post_data   = $_POST;
395
			$file_hashes = array();
396
			foreach ( $post_data as $post_data_key => $post_data_value ) {
397
				if ( 0 !== strpos( $post_data_key, '_jetpack_file_hmac_' ) ) {
398
					continue;
399
				}
400
				$post_data_key                 = substr( $post_data_key, strlen( '_jetpack_file_hmac_' ) );
401
				$file_hashes[ $post_data_key ] = $post_data_value;
402
			}
403
404
			foreach ( $file_hashes as $post_data_key => $post_data_value ) {
405
				unset( $post_data[ "_jetpack_file_hmac_{$post_data_key}" ] );
406
				$post_data[ $post_data_key ] = $post_data_value;
407
			}
408
409
			ksort( $post_data );
410
411
			$body = http_build_query( stripslashes_deep( $post_data ) );
412
		} elseif ( is_null( $this->raw_post_data ) ) {
413
			$body = file_get_contents( 'php://input' );
414
		} else {
415
			$body = null;
416
		}
417
		// phpcs:enable
418
419
		$signature = $jetpack_signature->sign_current_request(
420
			array( 'body' => is_null( $body ) ? $this->raw_post_data : $body )
421
		);
422
423
		$signature_details['url'] = $jetpack_signature->current_request_url;
424
425
		if ( ! $signature ) {
426
			return new \WP_Error(
427
				'could_not_sign',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'could_not_sign'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
428
				'Unknown signature error',
429
				compact( 'signature_details' )
430
			);
431
		} elseif ( is_wp_error( $signature ) ) {
432
			return $signature;
433
		}
434
435
		$timestamp = (int) $_GET['timestamp'];
436
		$nonce     = stripslashes( (string) $_GET['nonce'] );
437
438
		// Use up the nonce regardless of whether the signature matches.
439
		if ( ! $this->add_nonce( $timestamp, $nonce ) ) {
440
			return new \WP_Error(
441
				'invalid_nonce',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'invalid_nonce'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
442
				'Could not add nonce',
443
				compact( 'signature_details' )
444
			);
445
		}
446
447
		// Be careful about what you do with this debugging data.
448
		// If a malicious requester has access to the expected signature,
449
		// bad things might be possible.
450
		$signature_details['expected'] = $signature;
451
452
		if ( ! hash_equals( $signature, $_GET['signature'] ) ) {
453
			return new \WP_Error(
454
				'signature_mismatch',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'signature_mismatch'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
455
				'Signature mismatch',
456
				compact( 'signature_details' )
457
			);
458
		}
459
460
		/**
461
		 * Action for additional token checking.
462
		 *
463
		 * @since 7.7.0
464
		 *
465
		 * @param Array $post_data request data.
466
		 * @param Array $token_data token data.
467
		 */
468
		return apply_filters(
469
			'jetpack_signature_check_token',
470
			array(
471
				'type'      => $token_type,
472
				'token_key' => $token_key,
473
				'user_id'   => $token->external_user_id,
474
			),
475
			$token,
476
			$this->raw_post_data
477
		);
478
	}
479
480
	/**
481
	 * Returns true if the current site is connected to WordPress.com.
482
	 *
483
	 * @return Boolean is the site connected?
484
	 */
485
	public function is_active() {
486
		return (bool) $this->get_access_token( self::JETPACK_MASTER_USER );
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
self::JETPACK_MASTER_USER is of type boolean, but the function expects a false|integer.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
487
	}
488
489
	/**
490
	 * Returns true if the user with the specified identifier is connected to
491
	 * WordPress.com.
492
	 *
493
	 * @param Integer|Boolean $user_id the user identifier.
494
	 * @return Boolean is the user connected?
495
	 */
496
	public function is_user_connected( $user_id = false ) {
497
		$user_id = false === $user_id ? get_current_user_id() : absint( $user_id );
498
		if ( ! $user_id ) {
499
			return false;
500
		}
501
502
		return (bool) $this->get_access_token( $user_id );
503
	}
504
505
	/**
506
	 * Get the wpcom user data of the current|specified connected user.
507
	 *
508
	 * @param Integer $user_id the user identifier.
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
Should the type for parameter $user_id not be integer|null?

This check looks for @param annotations where the type inferred by our type inference engine differs from the declared type.

It makes a suggestion as to what type it considers more descriptive.

Most often this is a case of a parameter that can be null in addition to its declared types.

Loading history...
509
	 * @return Object the user object.
510
	 */
511 View Code Duplication
	public function get_connected_user_data( $user_id = null ) {
512
		if ( ! $user_id ) {
0 ignored issues
show
Bug Best Practice introduced by
The expression $user_id of type integer|null is loosely compared to false; this is ambiguous if the integer can be zero. You might want to explicitly use === null instead.

In PHP, under loose comparison (like ==, or !=, or switch conditions), values of different types might be equal.

For integer values, zero is a special case, in particular the following results might be unexpected:

0   == false // true
0   == null  // true
123 == false // false
123 == null  // false

// It is often better to use strict comparison
0 === false // false
0 === null  // false
Loading history...
513
			$user_id = get_current_user_id();
514
		}
515
516
		$transient_key    = "jetpack_connected_user_data_$user_id";
517
		$cached_user_data = get_transient( $transient_key );
518
519
		if ( $cached_user_data ) {
520
			return $cached_user_data;
521
		}
522
523
		\Jetpack::load_xml_rpc_client();
524
		$xml = new \Jetpack_IXR_Client(
525
			array(
526
				'user_id' => $user_id,
527
			)
528
		);
529
		$xml->query( 'wpcom.getUser' );
530
		if ( ! $xml->isError() ) {
531
			$user_data = $xml->getResponse();
532
			set_transient( $transient_key, $xml->getResponse(), DAY_IN_SECONDS );
533
			return $user_data;
534
		}
535
536
		return false;
537
	}
538
539
	/**
540
	 * Is the user the connection owner.
541
	 *
542
	 * @param Integer $user_id the user identifier.
543
	 * @return Boolean is the user the connection owner?
544
	 */
545
	public function is_connection_owner( $user_id ) {
546
		return $user_id;
547
	}
548
549
	/**
550
	 * Unlinks the current user from the linked WordPress.com user
551
	 *
552
	 * @param Integer $user_id the user identifier.
553
	 */
554
	public static function disconnect_user( $user_id ) {
555
		return $user_id;
556
	}
557
558
	/**
559
	 * Initializes a transport server, whatever it may be, saves into the object property.
560
	 * Should be changed to be protected.
561
	 */
562
	public function initialize_server() {
563
564
	}
565
566
	/**
567
	 * Checks if the current request is properly authenticated, bails if not.
568
	 * Should be changed to be protected.
569
	 */
570
	public function require_authentication() {
571
572
	}
573
574
	/**
575
	 * Verifies the correctness of the request signature.
576
	 * Should be changed to be protected.
577
	 */
578
	public function verify_signature() {
579
580
	}
581
582
	/**
583
	 * Returns the requested Jetpack API URL.
584
	 *
585
	 * @param String $relative_url the relative API path.
586
	 * @return String API URL.
587
	 */
588
	public function api_url( $relative_url ) {
589
		$api_base = Constants::get_constant( 'JETPACK__API_BASE' );
590
		$version  = Constants::get_constant( 'JETPACK__API_VERSION' );
591
592
		$api_base = $api_base ? $api_base : 'https://jetpack.wordpress.com/jetpack.';
593
		$version  = $version ? '/' . $version . '/' : '/1/';
594
595
		return rtrim( $api_base . $relative_url, '/\\' ) . $version;
596
	}
597
598
	/**
599
	 * Attempts Jetpack registration which sets up the site for connection. Should
600
	 * remain public because the call to action comes from the current site, not from
601
	 * WordPress.com.
602
	 *
603
	 * @param String $api_endpoint (optional) an API endpoint to use, defaults to 'register'.
604
	 * @return Integer zero on success, or a bitmask on failure.
605
	 */
606
	public function register( $api_endpoint = 'register' ) {
607
		add_action( 'pre_update_jetpack_option_register', array( '\\Jetpack_Options', 'delete_option' ) );
608
		$secrets = $this->generate_secrets( 'register', get_current_user_id(), 600 );
609
610
		if (
611
			empty( $secrets['secret_1'] ) ||
612
			empty( $secrets['secret_2'] ) ||
613
			empty( $secrets['exp'] )
614
		) {
615
			return new \WP_Error( 'missing_secrets' );
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'missing_secrets'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
616
		}
617
618
		// Better to try (and fail) to set a higher timeout than this system
619
		// supports than to have register fail for more users than it should.
620
		$timeout = $this->set_min_time_limit( 60 ) / 2;
621
622
		$gmt_offset = get_option( 'gmt_offset' );
623
		if ( ! $gmt_offset ) {
624
			$gmt_offset = 0;
625
		}
626
627
		$stats_options = get_option( 'stats_options' );
628
		$stats_id      = isset( $stats_options['blog_id'] )
629
			? $stats_options['blog_id']
630
			: null;
631
632
		/**
633
		 * Filters the request body for additional property addition.
634
		 *
635
		 * @since 7.7.0
636
		 *
637
		 * @param Array $post_data request data.
638
		 * @param Array $token_data token data.
639
		 */
640
		$body = apply_filters(
641
			'jetpack_register_request_body',
642
			array(
643
				'siteurl'         => site_url(),
644
				'home'            => home_url(),
645
				'gmt_offset'      => $gmt_offset,
646
				'timezone_string' => (string) get_option( 'timezone_string' ),
647
				'site_name'       => (string) get_option( 'blogname' ),
648
				'secret_1'        => $secrets['secret_1'],
649
				'secret_2'        => $secrets['secret_2'],
650
				'site_lang'       => get_locale(),
651
				'timeout'         => $timeout,
652
				'stats_id'        => $stats_id,
653
				'state'           => get_current_user_id(),
654
				'site_created'    => $this->get_assumed_site_creation_date(),
655
				'jetpack_version' => Constants::get_constant( 'JETPACK__VERSION' ),
656
			)
657
		);
658
659
		$args = array(
660
			'method'  => 'POST',
661
			'body'    => $body,
662
			'headers' => array(
663
				'Accept' => 'application/json',
664
			),
665
			'timeout' => $timeout,
666
		);
667
668
		$args['body'] = $this->apply_activation_source_to_args( $args['body'] );
669
670
		// TODO: fix URLs for bad hosts.
671
		$response = Client::_wp_remote_request(
672
			$this->api_url( $api_endpoint ),
673
			$args,
674
			true
675
		);
676
677
		// Make sure the response is valid and does not contain any Jetpack errors.
678
		$registration_details = $this->validate_remote_register_response( $response );
679
680
		if ( is_wp_error( $registration_details ) ) {
681
			return $registration_details;
682
		} elseif ( ! $registration_details ) {
683
			return new \WP_Error(
684
				'unknown_error',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'unknown_error'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
685
				'Unknown error registering your Jetpack site.',
686
				wp_remote_retrieve_response_code( $response )
687
			);
688
		}
689
690
		if ( empty( $registration_details->jetpack_secret ) || ! is_string( $registration_details->jetpack_secret ) ) {
691
			return new \WP_Error(
692
				'jetpack_secret',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'jetpack_secret'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
693
				'Unable to validate registration of your Jetpack site.',
694
				wp_remote_retrieve_response_code( $response )
695
			);
696
		}
697
698
		if ( isset( $registration_details->jetpack_public ) ) {
699
			$jetpack_public = (int) $registration_details->jetpack_public;
700
		} else {
701
			$jetpack_public = false;
702
		}
703
704
		\Jetpack_Options::update_options(
705
			array(
706
				'id'         => (int) $registration_details->jetpack_id,
707
				'blog_token' => (string) $registration_details->jetpack_secret,
708
				'public'     => $jetpack_public,
709
			)
710
		);
711
712
		/**
713
		 * Fires when a site is registered on WordPress.com.
714
		 *
715
		 * @since 3.7.0
716
		 *
717
		 * @param int $json->jetpack_id Jetpack Blog ID.
718
		 * @param string $json->jetpack_secret Jetpack Blog Token.
719
		 * @param int|bool $jetpack_public Is the site public.
720
		 */
721
		do_action(
722
			'jetpack_site_registered',
723
			$registration_details->jetpack_id,
724
			$registration_details->jetpack_secret,
725
			$jetpack_public
726
		);
727
728
		if ( isset( $registration_details->token ) ) {
729
			/**
730
			 * Fires when a user token is sent along with the registration data.
731
			 *
732
			 * @since 7.6.0
733
			 *
734
			 * @param object $token the administrator token for the newly registered site.
735
			 */
736
			do_action( 'jetpack_site_registered_user_token', $registration_details->token );
737
		}
738
739
		return true;
740
	}
741
742
	/**
743
	 * Takes the response from the Jetpack register new site endpoint and
744
	 * verifies it worked properly.
745
	 *
746
	 * @since 2.6
747
	 *
748
	 * @param Mixed $response the response object, or the error object.
749
	 * @return string|WP_Error A JSON object on success or Jetpack_Error on failures
750
	 **/
751
	protected function validate_remote_register_response( $response ) {
752
		if ( is_wp_error( $response ) ) {
753
			return new \WP_Error(
754
				'register_http_request_failed',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'register_http_request_failed'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
755
				$response->get_error_message()
756
			);
757
		}
758
759
		$code   = wp_remote_retrieve_response_code( $response );
760
		$entity = wp_remote_retrieve_body( $response );
761
762
		if ( $entity ) {
763
			$registration_response = json_decode( $entity );
764
		} else {
765
			$registration_response = false;
766
		}
767
768
		$code_type = intval( $code / 100 );
769
		if ( 5 === $code_type ) {
770
			return new \WP_Error( 'wpcom_5??', $code );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'wpcom_5??'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
771
		} elseif ( 408 === $code ) {
772
			return new \WP_Error( 'wpcom_408', $code );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'wpcom_408'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
773
		} elseif ( ! empty( $registration_response->error ) ) {
774
			if (
775
				'xml_rpc-32700' === $registration_response->error
776
				&& ! function_exists( 'xml_parser_create' )
777
			) {
778
				$error_description = __( "PHP's XML extension is not available. Jetpack requires the XML extension to communicate with WordPress.com. Please contact your hosting provider to enable PHP's XML extension.", 'jetpack' );
779
			} else {
780
				$error_description = isset( $registration_response->error_description )
781
					? (string) $registration_response->error_description
782
					: '';
783
			}
784
785
			return new \WP_Error(
786
				(string) $registration_response->error,
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with (string) $registration_response->error.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
787
				$error_description,
788
				$code
789
			);
790
		} elseif ( 200 !== $code ) {
791
			return new \WP_Error( 'wpcom_bad_response', $code );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'wpcom_bad_response'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
792
		}
793
794
		// Jetpack ID error block.
795
		if ( empty( $registration_response->jetpack_id ) ) {
796
			return new \WP_Error(
797
				'jetpack_id',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'jetpack_id'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
798
				/* translators: %s is an error message string */
799
				sprintf( __( 'Error Details: Jetpack ID is empty. Do not publicly post this error message! %s', 'jetpack' ), $entity ),
800
				$entity
801
			);
802
		} elseif ( ! is_scalar( $registration_response->jetpack_id ) ) {
803
			return new \WP_Error(
804
				'jetpack_id',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'jetpack_id'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
805
				/* translators: %s is an error message string */
806
				sprintf( __( 'Error Details: Jetpack ID is not a scalar. Do not publicly post this error message! %s', 'jetpack' ), $entity ),
807
				$entity
808
			);
809
		} elseif ( preg_match( '/[^0-9]/', $registration_response->jetpack_id ) ) {
810
			return new \WP_Error(
811
				'jetpack_id',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'jetpack_id'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
812
				/* translators: %s is an error message string */
813
				sprintf( __( 'Error Details: Jetpack ID begins with a numeral. Do not publicly post this error message! %s', 'jetpack' ), $entity ),
814
				$entity
815
			);
816
		}
817
818
		return $registration_response;
819
	}
820
821
	/**
822
	 * Adds a used nonce to a list of known nonces.
823
	 *
824
	 * @param int    $timestamp the current request timestamp.
825
	 * @param string $nonce the nonce value.
826
	 * @return bool whether the nonce is unique or not.
827
	 */
828
	public function add_nonce( $timestamp, $nonce ) {
829
		global $wpdb;
830
		static $nonces_used_this_request = array();
831
832
		if ( isset( $nonces_used_this_request[ "$timestamp:$nonce" ] ) ) {
833
			return $nonces_used_this_request[ "$timestamp:$nonce" ];
834
		}
835
836
		// This should always have gone through Jetpack_Signature::sign_request() first to check $timestamp an $nonce.
837
		$timestamp = (int) $timestamp;
838
		$nonce     = esc_sql( $nonce );
839
840
		// Raw query so we can avoid races: add_option will also update.
841
		$show_errors = $wpdb->show_errors( false );
842
843
		$old_nonce = $wpdb->get_row(
844
			$wpdb->prepare( "SELECT * FROM `$wpdb->options` WHERE option_name = %s", "jetpack_nonce_{$timestamp}_{$nonce}" )
845
		);
846
847
		if ( is_null( $old_nonce ) ) {
848
			$return = $wpdb->query(
849
				$wpdb->prepare(
850
					"INSERT INTO `$wpdb->options` (`option_name`, `option_value`, `autoload`) VALUES (%s, %s, %s)",
851
					"jetpack_nonce_{$timestamp}_{$nonce}",
852
					time(),
853
					'no'
854
				)
855
			);
856
		} else {
857
			$return = false;
858
		}
859
860
		$wpdb->show_errors( $show_errors );
861
862
		$nonces_used_this_request[ "$timestamp:$nonce" ] = $return;
863
864
		return $return;
865
	}
866
867
	/**
868
	 * Cleans nonces that were saved when calling ::add_nonce.
869
	 *
870
	 * @todo Properly prepare the query before executing it.
871
	 *
872
	 * @param bool $all whether to clean even non-expired nonces.
873
	 */
874
	public function clean_nonces( $all = false ) {
875
		global $wpdb;
876
877
		$sql      = "DELETE FROM `$wpdb->options` WHERE `option_name` LIKE %s";
878
		$sql_args = array( $wpdb->esc_like( 'jetpack_nonce_' ) . '%' );
879
880
		if ( true !== $all ) {
881
			$sql       .= ' AND CAST( `option_value` AS UNSIGNED ) < %d';
882
			$sql_args[] = time() - 3600;
883
		}
884
885
		$sql .= ' ORDER BY `option_id` LIMIT 100';
886
887
		$sql = $wpdb->prepare( $sql, $sql_args ); // phpcs:ignore WordPress.DB.PreparedSQL.NotPrepared
888
889
		for ( $i = 0; $i < 1000; $i++ ) {
890
			if ( ! $wpdb->query( $sql ) ) { // phpcs:ignore WordPress.DB.PreparedSQL.NotPrepared
891
				break;
892
			}
893
		}
894
	}
895
896
	/**
897
	 * Builds the timeout limit for queries talking with the wpcom servers.
898
	 *
899
	 * Based on local php max_execution_time in php.ini
900
	 *
901
	 * @since 5.4
902
	 * @return int
903
	 **/
904
	public function get_max_execution_time() {
905
		$timeout = (int) ini_get( 'max_execution_time' );
906
907
		// Ensure exec time set in php.ini.
908
		if ( ! $timeout ) {
909
			$timeout = 30;
910
		}
911
		return $timeout;
912
	}
913
914
	/**
915
	 * Sets a minimum request timeout, and returns the current timeout
916
	 *
917
	 * @since 5.4
918
	 * @param Integer $min_timeout the minimum timeout value.
919
	 **/
920 View Code Duplication
	public function set_min_time_limit( $min_timeout ) {
921
		$timeout = $this->get_max_execution_time();
922
		if ( $timeout < $min_timeout ) {
923
			$timeout = $min_timeout;
924
			set_time_limit( $timeout );
925
		}
926
		return $timeout;
927
	}
928
929
	/**
930
	 * Get our assumed site creation date.
931
	 * Calculated based on the earlier date of either:
932
	 * - Earliest admin user registration date.
933
	 * - Earliest date of post of any post type.
934
	 *
935
	 * @since 7.2.0
936
	 *
937
	 * @return string Assumed site creation date and time.
938
	 */
939 View Code Duplication
	public function get_assumed_site_creation_date() {
940
		$earliest_registered_users  = get_users(
941
			array(
942
				'role'    => 'administrator',
943
				'orderby' => 'user_registered',
944
				'order'   => 'ASC',
945
				'fields'  => array( 'user_registered' ),
946
				'number'  => 1,
947
			)
948
		);
949
		$earliest_registration_date = $earliest_registered_users[0]->user_registered;
950
951
		$earliest_posts = get_posts(
952
			array(
953
				'posts_per_page' => 1,
954
				'post_type'      => 'any',
955
				'post_status'    => 'any',
956
				'orderby'        => 'date',
957
				'order'          => 'ASC',
958
			)
959
		);
960
961
		// If there are no posts at all, we'll count only on user registration date.
962
		if ( $earliest_posts ) {
963
			$earliest_post_date = $earliest_posts[0]->post_date;
964
		} else {
965
			$earliest_post_date = PHP_INT_MAX;
966
		}
967
968
		return min( $earliest_registration_date, $earliest_post_date );
969
	}
970
971
	/**
972
	 * Adds the activation source string as a parameter to passed arguments.
973
	 *
974
	 * @param Array $args arguments that need to have the source added.
975
	 * @return Array $amended arguments.
976
	 */
977 View Code Duplication
	public static function apply_activation_source_to_args( $args ) {
978
		list( $activation_source_name, $activation_source_keyword ) = get_option( 'jetpack_activation_source' );
979
980
		if ( $activation_source_name ) {
981
			$args['_as'] = urlencode( $activation_source_name );
982
		}
983
984
		if ( $activation_source_keyword ) {
985
			$args['_ak'] = urlencode( $activation_source_keyword );
986
		}
987
988
		return $args;
989
	}
990
991
	/**
992
	 * Returns the callable that would be used to generate secrets.
993
	 *
994
	 * @return Callable a function that returns a secure string to be used as a secret.
995
	 */
996
	protected function get_secret_callable() {
997
		if ( ! isset( $this->secret_callable ) ) {
998
			/**
999
			 * Allows modification of the callable that is used to generate connection secrets.
1000
			 *
1001
			 * @param Callable a function or method that returns a secret string.
1002
			 */
1003
			$this->secret_callable = apply_filters( 'jetpack_connection_secret_generator', 'wp_generate_password' );
1004
		}
1005
1006
		return $this->secret_callable;
1007
	}
1008
1009
	/**
1010
	 * Generates two secret tokens and the end of life timestamp for them.
1011
	 *
1012
	 * @param String  $action  The action name.
1013
	 * @param Integer $user_id The user identifier.
1014
	 * @param Integer $exp     Expiration time in seconds.
1015
	 */
1016
	public function generate_secrets( $action, $user_id, $exp ) {
1017
		$callable = $this->get_secret_callable();
1018
1019
		$secrets = \Jetpack_Options::get_raw_option(
1020
			self::SECRETS_OPTION_NAME,
1021
			array()
1022
		);
1023
1024
		$secret_name = 'jetpack_' . $action . '_' . $user_id;
1025
1026
		if (
1027
			isset( $secrets[ $secret_name ] ) &&
1028
			$secrets[ $secret_name ]['exp'] > time()
1029
		) {
1030
			return $secrets[ $secret_name ];
1031
		}
1032
1033
		$secret_value = array(
1034
			'secret_1' => call_user_func( $callable ),
1035
			'secret_2' => call_user_func( $callable ),
1036
			'exp'      => time() + $exp,
1037
		);
1038
1039
		$secrets[ $secret_name ] = $secret_value;
1040
1041
		\Jetpack_Options::update_raw_option( self::SECRETS_OPTION_NAME, $secrets );
1042
		return $secrets[ $secret_name ];
1043
	}
1044
1045
	/**
1046
	 * Returns two secret tokens and the end of life timestamp for them.
1047
	 *
1048
	 * @param String  $action  The action name.
1049
	 * @param Integer $user_id The user identifier.
1050
	 * @return string|array an array of secrets or an error string.
1051
	 */
1052
	public function get_secrets( $action, $user_id ) {
1053
		$secret_name = 'jetpack_' . $action . '_' . $user_id;
1054
		$secrets     = \Jetpack_Options::get_raw_option(
1055
			self::SECRETS_OPTION_NAME,
1056
			array()
1057
		);
1058
1059
		if ( ! isset( $secrets[ $secret_name ] ) ) {
1060
			return self::SECRETS_MISSING;
1061
		}
1062
1063
		if ( $secrets[ $secret_name ]['exp'] < time() ) {
1064
			$this->delete_secrets( $action, $user_id );
1065
			return self::SECRETS_EXPIRED;
1066
		}
1067
1068
		return $secrets[ $secret_name ];
1069
	}
1070
1071
	/**
1072
	 * Deletes secret tokens in case they, for example, have expired.
1073
	 *
1074
	 * @param String  $action  The action name.
1075
	 * @param Integer $user_id The user identifier.
1076
	 */
1077
	public function delete_secrets( $action, $user_id ) {
1078
		$secret_name = 'jetpack_' . $action . '_' . $user_id;
1079
		$secrets     = \Jetpack_Options::get_raw_option(
1080
			self::SECRETS_OPTION_NAME,
1081
			array()
1082
		);
1083
		if ( isset( $secrets[ $secret_name ] ) ) {
1084
			unset( $secrets[ $secret_name ] );
1085
			\Jetpack_Options::update_raw_option( self::SECRETS_OPTION_NAME, $secrets );
1086
		}
1087
	}
1088
1089
	/**
1090
	 * Responds to a WordPress.com call to register the current site.
1091
	 * Should be changed to protected.
1092
	 *
1093
	 * @param array $registration_data Array of [ secret_1, user_id ].
1094
	 */
1095
	public function handle_registration( array $registration_data ) {
1096
		list( $registration_secret_1, $registration_user_id ) = $registration_data;
1097
		if ( empty( $registration_user_id ) ) {
1098
			return new \WP_Error( 'registration_state_invalid', __( 'Invalid Registration State', 'jetpack' ), 400 );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'registration_state_invalid'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1099
		}
1100
1101
		return $this->verify_secrets( 'register', $registration_secret_1, (int) $registration_user_id );
1102
	}
1103
1104
	/**
1105
	 * Verify a Previously Generated Secret.
1106
	 *
1107
	 * @param string $action   The type of secret to verify.
1108
	 * @param string $secret_1 The secret string to compare to what is stored.
1109
	 * @param int    $user_id  The user ID of the owner of the secret.
1110
	 */
1111
	protected function verify_secrets( $action, $secret_1, $user_id ) {
1112
		$allowed_actions = array( 'register', 'authorize', 'publicize' );
1113
		if ( ! in_array( $action, $allowed_actions, true ) ) {
1114
			return new \WP_Error( 'unknown_verification_action', 'Unknown Verification Action', 400 );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'unknown_verification_action'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1115
		}
1116
1117
		$user = get_user_by( 'id', $user_id );
1118
1119
		/**
1120
		 * We've begun verifying the previously generated secret.
1121
		 *
1122
		 * @since 7.5.0
1123
		 *
1124
		 * @param string   $action The type of secret to verify.
1125
		 * @param \WP_User $user The user object.
1126
		 */
1127
		do_action( 'jetpack_verify_secrets_begin', $action, $user );
1128
1129
		$return_error = function( \WP_Error $error ) use ( $action, $user ) {
1130
			/**
1131
			 * Verifying of the previously generated secret has failed.
1132
			 *
1133
			 * @since 7.5.0
1134
			 *
1135
			 * @param string    $action  The type of secret to verify.
1136
			 * @param \WP_User  $user The user object.
1137
			 * @param \WP_Error $error The error object.
1138
			 */
1139
			do_action( 'jetpack_verify_secrets_fail', $action, $user, $error );
1140
1141
			return $error;
1142
		};
1143
1144
		$stored_secrets = $this->get_secrets( $action, $user_id );
1145
		$this->delete_secrets( $action, $user_id );
1146
1147
		if ( empty( $secret_1 ) ) {
1148
			return $return_error(
1149
				new \WP_Error(
1150
					'verify_secret_1_missing',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'verify_secret_1_missing'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1151
					/* translators: "%s" is the name of a paramter. It can be either "secret_1" or "state". */
1152
					sprintf( __( 'The required "%s" parameter is missing.', 'jetpack' ), 'secret_1' ),
1153
					400
1154
				)
1155
			);
1156
		} elseif ( ! is_string( $secret_1 ) ) {
1157
			return $return_error(
1158
				new \WP_Error(
1159
					'verify_secret_1_malformed',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'verify_secret_1_malformed'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1160
					/* translators: "%s" is the name of a paramter. It can be either "secret_1" or "state". */
1161
					sprintf( __( 'The required "%s" parameter is malformed.', 'jetpack' ), 'secret_1' ),
1162
					400
1163
				)
1164
			);
1165
		} elseif ( empty( $user_id ) ) {
1166
			// $user_id is passed around during registration as "state".
1167
			return $return_error(
1168
				new \WP_Error(
1169
					'state_missing',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'state_missing'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1170
					/* translators: "%s" is the name of a paramter. It can be either "secret_1" or "state". */
1171
					sprintf( __( 'The required "%s" parameter is missing.', 'jetpack' ), 'state' ),
1172
					400
1173
				)
1174
			);
1175
		} elseif ( ! ctype_digit( (string) $user_id ) ) {
1176
			return $return_error(
1177
				new \WP_Error(
1178
					'verify_secret_1_malformed',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'verify_secret_1_malformed'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1179
					/* translators: "%s" is the name of a paramter. It can be either "secret_1" or "state". */
1180
					sprintf( __( 'The required "%s" parameter is malformed.', 'jetpack' ), 'state' ),
1181
					400
1182
				)
1183
			);
1184
		}
1185
1186
		if ( ! $stored_secrets ) {
1187
			return $return_error(
1188
				new \WP_Error(
1189
					'verify_secrets_missing',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'verify_secrets_missing'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1190
					__( 'Verification secrets not found', 'jetpack' ),
1191
					400
1192
				)
1193
			);
1194
		} elseif ( is_wp_error( $stored_secrets ) ) {
1195
			$stored_secrets->add_data( 400 );
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The method add_data cannot be called on $stored_secrets (of type string|array).

Methods can only be called on objects. This check looks for methods being called on variables that have been inferred to never be objects.

Loading history...
1196
			return $return_error( $stored_secrets );
1197
		} elseif ( empty( $stored_secrets['secret_1'] ) || empty( $stored_secrets['secret_2'] ) || empty( $stored_secrets['exp'] ) ) {
1198
			return $return_error(
1199
				new \WP_Error(
1200
					'verify_secrets_incomplete',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'verify_secrets_incomplete'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1201
					__( 'Verification secrets are incomplete', 'jetpack' ),
1202
					400
1203
				)
1204
			);
1205
		} elseif ( ! hash_equals( $secret_1, $stored_secrets['secret_1'] ) ) {
1206
			return $return_error(
1207
				new \WP_Error(
1208
					'verify_secrets_mismatch',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'verify_secrets_mismatch'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1209
					__( 'Secret mismatch', 'jetpack' ),
1210
					400
1211
				)
1212
			);
1213
		}
1214
1215
		/**
1216
		 * We've succeeded at verifying the previously generated secret.
1217
		 *
1218
		 * @since 7.5.0
1219
		 *
1220
		 * @param string   $action The type of secret to verify.
1221
		 * @param \WP_User $user The user object.
1222
		 */
1223
		do_action( 'jetpack_verify_secrets_success', $action, $user );
1224
1225
		return $stored_secrets['secret_2'];
1226
	}
1227
1228
	/**
1229
	 * Responds to a WordPress.com call to authorize the current user.
1230
	 * Should be changed to protected.
1231
	 */
1232
	public function handle_authorization() {
1233
1234
	}
1235
1236
	/**
1237
	 * Builds a URL to the Jetpack connection auth page.
1238
	 * This needs rethinking.
1239
	 *
1240
	 * @param bool        $raw If true, URL will not be escaped.
1241
	 * @param bool|string $redirect If true, will redirect back to Jetpack wp-admin landing page after connection.
1242
	 *                              If string, will be a custom redirect.
1243
	 * @param bool|string $from If not false, adds 'from=$from' param to the connect URL.
1244
	 * @param bool        $register If true, will generate a register URL regardless of the existing token, since 4.9.0.
1245
	 *
1246
	 * @return string Connect URL
1247
	 */
1248
	public function build_connect_url( $raw, $redirect, $from, $register ) {
1249
		return array( $raw, $redirect, $from, $register );
1250
	}
1251
1252
	/**
1253
	 * Disconnects from the Jetpack servers.
1254
	 * Forgets all connection details and tells the Jetpack servers to do the same.
1255
	 */
1256
	public function disconnect_site() {
1257
1258
	}
1259
1260
	/**
1261
	 * The Base64 Encoding of the SHA1 Hash of the Input.
1262
	 *
1263
	 * @param string $text The string to hash.
1264
	 * @return string
1265
	 */
1266
	public function sha1_base64( $text ) {
1267
		return base64_encode( sha1( $text, true ) ); // phpcs:ignore WordPress.PHP.DiscouragedPHPFunctions.obfuscation_base64_encode
1268
	}
1269
1270
	/**
1271
	 * This function mirrors Jetpack_Data::is_usable_domain() in the WPCOM codebase.
1272
	 *
1273
	 * @param string $domain The domain to check.
1274
	 *
1275
	 * @return bool|WP_Error
1276
	 */
1277
	public function is_usable_domain( $domain ) {
1278
1279
		// If it's empty, just fail out.
1280
		if ( ! $domain ) {
1281
			return new \WP_Error(
1282
				'fail_domain_empty',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'fail_domain_empty'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1283
				/* translators: %1$s is a domain name. */
1284
				sprintf( __( 'Domain `%1$s` just failed is_usable_domain check as it is empty.', 'jetpack' ), $domain )
1285
			);
1286
		}
1287
1288
		/**
1289
		 * Skips the usuable domain check when connecting a site.
1290
		 *
1291
		 * Allows site administrators with domains that fail gethostname-based checks to pass the request to WP.com
1292
		 *
1293
		 * @since 4.1.0
1294
		 *
1295
		 * @param bool If the check should be skipped. Default false.
1296
		 */
1297
		if ( apply_filters( 'jetpack_skip_usuable_domain_check', false ) ) {
1298
			return true;
1299
		}
1300
1301
		// None of the explicit localhosts.
1302
		$forbidden_domains = array(
1303
			'wordpress.com',
1304
			'localhost',
1305
			'localhost.localdomain',
1306
			'127.0.0.1',
1307
			'local.wordpress.test',         // VVV pattern.
1308
			'local.wordpress-trunk.test',   // VVV pattern.
1309
			'src.wordpress-develop.test',   // VVV pattern.
1310
			'build.wordpress-develop.test', // VVV pattern.
1311
		);
1312 View Code Duplication
		if ( in_array( $domain, $forbidden_domains, true ) ) {
1313
			return new \WP_Error(
1314
				'fail_domain_forbidden',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'fail_domain_forbidden'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1315
				sprintf(
1316
					/* translators: %1$s is a domain name. */
1317
					__(
1318
						'Domain `%1$s` just failed is_usable_domain check as it is in the forbidden array.',
1319
						'jetpack'
1320
					),
1321
					$domain
1322
				)
1323
			);
1324
		}
1325
1326
		// No .test or .local domains.
1327 View Code Duplication
		if ( preg_match( '#\.(test|local)$#i', $domain ) ) {
1328
			return new \WP_Error(
1329
				'fail_domain_tld',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'fail_domain_tld'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1330
				sprintf(
1331
					/* translators: %1$s is a domain name. */
1332
					__(
1333
						'Domain `%1$s` just failed is_usable_domain check as it uses an invalid top level domain.',
1334
						'jetpack'
1335
					),
1336
					$domain
1337
				)
1338
			);
1339
		}
1340
1341
		// No WPCOM subdomains.
1342 View Code Duplication
		if ( preg_match( '#\.WordPress\.com$#i', $domain ) ) {
1343
			return new \WP_Error(
1344
				'fail_subdomain_wpcom',
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'fail_subdomain_wpcom'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1345
				sprintf(
1346
					/* translators: %1$s is a domain name. */
1347
					__(
1348
						'Domain `%1$s` just failed is_usable_domain check as it is a subdomain of WordPress.com.',
1349
						'jetpack'
1350
					),
1351
					$domain
1352
				)
1353
			);
1354
		}
1355
1356
		// If PHP was compiled without support for the Filter module (very edge case).
1357
		if ( ! function_exists( 'filter_var' ) ) {
1358
			// Just pass back true for now, and let wpcom sort it out.
1359
			return true;
1360
		}
1361
1362
		return true;
1363
	}
1364
1365
	/**
1366
	 * Gets the requested token.
1367
	 *
1368
	 * Tokens are one of two types:
1369
	 * 1. Blog Tokens: These are the "main" tokens. Each site typically has one Blog Token,
1370
	 *    though some sites can have multiple "Special" Blog Tokens (see below). These tokens
1371
	 *    are not associated with a user account. They represent the site's connection with
1372
	 *    the Jetpack servers.
1373
	 * 2. User Tokens: These are "sub-"tokens. Each connected user account has one User Token.
1374
	 *
1375
	 * All tokens look like "{$token_key}.{$private}". $token_key is a public ID for the
1376
	 * token, and $private is a secret that should never be displayed anywhere or sent
1377
	 * over the network; it's used only for signing things.
1378
	 *
1379
	 * Blog Tokens can be "Normal" or "Special".
1380
	 * * Normal: The result of a normal connection flow. They look like
1381
	 *   "{$random_string_1}.{$random_string_2}"
1382
	 *   That is, $token_key and $private are both random strings.
1383
	 *   Sites only have one Normal Blog Token. Normal Tokens are found in either
1384
	 *   Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'blog_token' ) (usual) or the JETPACK_BLOG_TOKEN
1385
	 *   constant (rare).
1386
	 * * Special: A connection token for sites that have gone through an alternative
1387
	 *   connection flow. They look like:
1388
	 *   ";{$special_id}{$special_version};{$wpcom_blog_id};.{$random_string}"
1389
	 *   That is, $private is a random string and $token_key has a special structure with
1390
	 *   lots of semicolons.
1391
	 *   Most sites have zero Special Blog Tokens. Special tokens are only found in the
1392
	 *   JETPACK_BLOG_TOKEN constant.
1393
	 *
1394
	 * In particular, note that Normal Blog Tokens never start with ";" and that
1395
	 * Special Blog Tokens always do.
1396
	 *
1397
	 * When searching for a matching Blog Tokens, Blog Tokens are examined in the following
1398
	 * order:
1399
	 * 1. Defined Special Blog Tokens (via the JETPACK_BLOG_TOKEN constant)
1400
	 * 2. Stored Normal Tokens (via Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'blog_token' ))
1401
	 * 3. Defined Normal Tokens (via the JETPACK_BLOG_TOKEN constant)
1402
	 *
1403
	 * @param int|false    $user_id   false: Return the Blog Token. int: Return that user's User Token.
1404
	 * @param string|false $token_key If provided, check that the token matches the provided input.
1405
	 * @param bool|true    $suppress_errors If true, return a falsy value when the token isn't found; When false, return a descriptive WP_Error when the token isn't found.
1406
	 *
1407
	 * @return object|false
1408
	 */
1409
	public function get_access_token( $user_id = false, $token_key = false, $suppress_errors = true ) {
1410
		$possible_special_tokens = array();
1411
		$possible_normal_tokens  = array();
1412
		$user_tokens             = \Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'user_tokens' );
1413
1414
		if ( $user_id ) {
0 ignored issues
show
Bug Best Practice introduced by
The expression $user_id of type false|integer is loosely compared to true; this is ambiguous if the integer can be zero. You might want to explicitly use !== null instead.

In PHP, under loose comparison (like ==, or !=, or switch conditions), values of different types might be equal.

For integer values, zero is a special case, in particular the following results might be unexpected:

0   == false // true
0   == null  // true
123 == false // false
123 == null  // false

// It is often better to use strict comparison
0 === false // false
0 === null  // false
Loading history...
1415
			if ( ! $user_tokens ) {
1416
				return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'no_user_tokens' );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'no_user_tokens'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1417
			}
1418
			if ( self::JETPACK_MASTER_USER === $user_id ) {
1419
				$user_id = \Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'master_user' );
1420
				if ( ! $user_id ) {
1421
					return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'empty_master_user_option' );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'empty_master_user_option'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1422
				}
1423
			}
1424
			if ( ! isset( $user_tokens[ $user_id ] ) || ! $user_tokens[ $user_id ] ) {
1425
				return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'no_token_for_user', sprintf( 'No token for user %d', $user_id ) );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'no_token_for_user'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1426
			}
1427
			$user_token_chunks = explode( '.', $user_tokens[ $user_id ] );
1428
			if ( empty( $user_token_chunks[1] ) || empty( $user_token_chunks[2] ) ) {
1429
				return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'token_malformed', sprintf( 'Token for user %d is malformed', $user_id ) );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'token_malformed'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1430
			}
1431
			if ( $user_token_chunks[2] !== (string) $user_id ) {
1432
				return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'user_id_mismatch', sprintf( 'Requesting user_id %d does not match token user_id %d', $user_id, $user_token_chunks[2] ) );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'user_id_mismatch'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1433
			}
1434
			$possible_normal_tokens[] = "{$user_token_chunks[0]}.{$user_token_chunks[1]}";
1435
		} else {
1436
			$stored_blog_token = \Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'blog_token' );
1437
			if ( $stored_blog_token ) {
1438
				$possible_normal_tokens[] = $stored_blog_token;
1439
			}
1440
1441
			$defined_tokens_string = Constants::get_constant( 'JETPACK_BLOG_TOKEN' );
1442
1443
			if ( $defined_tokens_string ) {
1444
				$defined_tokens = explode( ',', $defined_tokens_string );
1445
				foreach ( $defined_tokens as $defined_token ) {
1446
					if ( ';' === $defined_token[0] ) {
1447
						$possible_special_tokens[] = $defined_token;
1448
					} else {
1449
						$possible_normal_tokens[] = $defined_token;
1450
					}
1451
				}
1452
			}
1453
		}
1454
1455
		if ( self::MAGIC_NORMAL_TOKEN_KEY === $token_key ) {
1456
			$possible_tokens = $possible_normal_tokens;
1457
		} else {
1458
			$possible_tokens = array_merge( $possible_special_tokens, $possible_normal_tokens );
1459
		}
1460
1461
		if ( ! $possible_tokens ) {
0 ignored issues
show
Bug Best Practice introduced by
The expression $possible_tokens of type array is implicitly converted to a boolean; are you sure this is intended? If so, consider using empty($expr) instead to make it clear that you intend to check for an array without elements.

This check marks implicit conversions of arrays to boolean values in a comparison. While in PHP an empty array is considered to be equal (but not identical) to false, this is not always apparent.

Consider making the comparison explicit by using empty(..) or ! empty(...) instead.

Loading history...
1462
			return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'no_possible_tokens' );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'no_possible_tokens'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1463
		}
1464
1465
		$valid_token = false;
1466
1467
		if ( false === $token_key ) {
1468
			// Use first token.
1469
			$valid_token = $possible_tokens[0];
1470
		} elseif ( self::MAGIC_NORMAL_TOKEN_KEY === $token_key ) {
1471
			// Use first normal token.
1472
			$valid_token = $possible_tokens[0]; // $possible_tokens only contains normal tokens because of earlier check.
1473
		} else {
1474
			// Use the token matching $token_key or false if none.
1475
			// Ensure we check the full key.
1476
			$token_check = rtrim( $token_key, '.' ) . '.';
1477
1478
			foreach ( $possible_tokens as $possible_token ) {
1479
				if ( hash_equals( substr( $possible_token, 0, strlen( $token_check ) ), $token_check ) ) {
1480
					$valid_token = $possible_token;
1481
					break;
1482
				}
1483
			}
1484
		}
1485
1486
		if ( ! $valid_token ) {
1487
			return $suppress_errors ? false : new \WP_Error( 'no_valid_token' );
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to WP_Error::__construct() has too many arguments starting with 'no_valid_token'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
1488
		}
1489
1490
		return (object) array(
1491
			'secret'           => $valid_token,
1492
			'external_user_id' => (int) $user_id,
1493
		);
1494
	}
1495
1496
	/**
1497
	 * In some setups, $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA can be emptied during some IXR_Server paths
1498
	 * since it is passed by reference to various methods.
1499
	 * Capture it here so we can verify the signature later.
1500
	 *
1501
	 * @param Array $methods an array of available XMLRPC methods.
1502
	 * @return Array the same array, since this method doesn't add or remove anything.
1503
	 */
1504
	public function xmlrpc_methods( $methods ) {
1505
		$this->raw_post_data = $GLOBALS['HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA'];
1506
		return $methods;
1507
	}
1508
1509
	/**
1510
	 * Resets the raw post data parameter for testing purposes.
1511
	 */
1512
	public function reset_raw_post_data() {
1513
		$this->raw_post_data = null;
1514
	}
1515
1516
	/**
1517
	 * Registering an additional method.
1518
	 *
1519
	 * @param Array $methods an array of available XMLRPC methods.
1520
	 * @return Array the amended array in case the method is added.
1521
	 */
1522
	public function public_xmlrpc_methods( $methods ) {
1523
		if ( array_key_exists( 'wp.getOptions', $methods ) ) {
1524
			$methods['wp.getOptions'] = array( $this, 'jetpack_getOptions' );
1525
		}
1526
		return $methods;
1527
	}
1528
1529
	/**
1530
	 * Handles a getOptions XMLRPC method call.
1531
	 *
1532
	 * @todo Audit whether we really need to use strings without textdomains.
1533
	 *
1534
	 * @param Array $args method call arguments.
1535
	 * @return an amended XMLRPC server options array.
1536
	 */
1537
	public function jetpack_getOptions( $args ) {
1538
		global $wp_xmlrpc_server;
1539
1540
		$wp_xmlrpc_server->escape( $args );
1541
1542
		$username = $args[1];
1543
		$password = $args[2];
1544
1545
		$user = $wp_xmlrpc_server->login( $username, $password );
1546
		if ( ! $user ) {
1547
			return $wp_xmlrpc_server->error;
1548
		}
1549
1550
		$options   = array();
1551
		$user_data = $this->get_connected_user_data();
1552
		if ( is_array( $user_data ) ) {
1553
			$options['jetpack_user_id']         = array(
1554
				'desc'     => __( 'The WP.com user ID of the connected user' ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.WP.I18n.MissingArgDomain
1555
				'readonly' => true,
1556
				'value'    => $user_data['ID'],
1557
			);
1558
			$options['jetpack_user_login']      = array(
1559
				'desc'     => __( 'The WP.com username of the connected user' ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.WP.I18n.MissingArgDomain
1560
				'readonly' => true,
1561
				'value'    => $user_data['login'],
1562
			);
1563
			$options['jetpack_user_email']      = array(
1564
				'desc'     => __( 'The WP.com user email of the connected user' ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.WP.I18n.MissingArgDomain
1565
				'readonly' => true,
1566
				'value'    => $user_data['email'],
1567
			);
1568
			$options['jetpack_user_site_count'] = array(
1569
				'desc'     => __( 'The number of sites of the connected WP.com user' ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.WP.I18n.MissingArgDomain
1570
				'readonly' => true,
1571
				'value'    => $user_data['site_count'],
1572
			);
1573
		}
1574
		$wp_xmlrpc_server->blog_options = array_merge( $wp_xmlrpc_server->blog_options, $options );
1575
		$args                           = stripslashes_deep( $args );
1576
		return $wp_xmlrpc_server->wp_getOptions( $args );
1577
	}
1578
1579
	/**
1580
	 * Adds Jetpack-specific options to the output of the XMLRPC options method.
1581
	 *
1582
	 * @todo Audit whether we really need to use strings without textdomains.
1583
	 *
1584
	 * @param Array $options standard Core options.
1585
	 * @return Array amended options.
1586
	 */
1587
	public function xmlrpc_options( $options ) {
1588
		$jetpack_client_id = false;
1589
		if ( $this->is_active() ) {
1590
			$jetpack_client_id = \Jetpack_Options::get_option( 'id' );
1591
		}
1592
		$options['jetpack_version'] = array(
1593
			'desc'     => __( 'Jetpack Plugin Version' ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.WP.I18n.MissingArgDomain
1594
			'readonly' => true,
1595
			'value'    => Constants::get_constant( 'JETPACK__VERSION' ),
1596
		);
1597
1598
		$options['jetpack_client_id'] = array(
1599
			'desc'     => __( 'The Client ID/WP.com Blog ID of this site' ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.WP.I18n.MissingArgDomain
1600
			'readonly' => true,
1601
			'value'    => $jetpack_client_id,
1602
		);
1603
		return $options;
1604
	}
1605
1606
	/**
1607
	 * Resets the saved authentication state in between testing requests.
1608
	 */
1609
	public function reset_saved_auth_state() {
1610
		$this->xmlrpc_verification = null;
1611
	}
1612
}
1613