It seems like you code against a concrete implementation and not the interface Zend\ServiceManager\ServiceLocatorInterface as the method getServiceLocator() does only exist in the following implementations of said interface: Zend\Crypt\SymmetricPluginManager, Zend\Crypt\Symmetric\PaddingPluginManager, Zend\Filter\FilterPluginManager, Zend\Form\FormElementManager, Zend\Hydrator\HydratorPluginManager, Zend\InputFilter\InputFilterPluginManager, Zend\Math\BigInteger\AdapterPluginManager, Zend\Mvc\Controller\ControllerManager, Zend\Mvc\Controller\PluginManager, Zend\Mvc\Router\RoutePluginManager, Zend\ServiceManager\AbstractPluginManager, Zend\Validator\ValidatorPluginManager, Zend\View\HelperPluginManager, Zend\View\Helper\Navigation\PluginManager.
Let’s take a look at an example:
interfaceUser{/** @return string */publicfunctiongetPassword();}classMyUserimplementsUser{publicfunctiongetPassword(){// return something}publicfunctiongetDisplayName(){// return some name.}}classAuthSystem{publicfunctionauthenticate(User$user){$this->logger->info(sprintf('Authenticating %s.',$user->getDisplayName()));// do something.}}
In the above example, the authenticate() method works fine as long as you just pass
instances of MyUser. However, if you now also want to pass a different implementation
of User which does not have a getDisplayName() method, the code will break.
classAuthSystem{publicfunctionauthenticate(User$user){if($userinstanceofMyUser){$this->logger->info(/** ... */);}// or alternativelyif(!$userinstanceofMyUser){thrownew\LogicException('$user must be an instance of MyUser, '.'other instances are not supported.');}}}
Note: PHP Analyzer uses reverse abstract interpretation to narrow down the types
inside the if block in such a case.
The call to UserController::__construct() has too many arguments starting with $redirectCallback.
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 @ignorePhpDoc
annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.
Let’s take a look at an example:
In the above example, the authenticate() method works fine as long as you just pass instances of MyUser. However, if you now also want to pass a different implementation of User which does not have a getDisplayName() method, the code will break.
Available Fixes
Change the type-hint for the parameter:
Add an additional type-check:
Add the method to the interface: