| Conditions | 3 |
| Paths | 2 |
| Total Lines | 15 |
| Code Lines | 7 |
| Lines | 0 |
| Ratio | 0 % |
| Changes | 1 | ||
| Bugs | 0 | Features | 0 |
| 1 | <?php |
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| 15 | public function handle($request, Closure $next) |
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| 16 | { |
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| 17 | if (!in_array(strtoupper($request->method(), ['PUT', 'POST']))) { |
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| 18 | return $next[$request]; |
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| 19 | } |
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| 20 | |||
| 21 | $input = $request->all(); |
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| 22 | |||
| 23 | array_walk_recursive($input, function(&$input) { |
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| 24 | if (is_string($input)) $input = htmlspecialchars($input, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8'); |
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| 25 | }); |
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| 26 | |||
| 27 | $request->merge($input); |
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| 28 | |||
| 29 | return $next[$request]; |
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| 30 | } |
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| 32 |
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. Please note the @ignore annotation hint above.