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1 | <?php |
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2 | namespace nochso\Omni; |
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3 | |||
4 | /** |
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5 | * Exec creates objects that help manage `\exec()` calls. |
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6 | * |
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7 | * The returned object itself is callable, which is the same as calling `run()`. |
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8 | * |
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9 | * Arguments are automatically escaped if needed. |
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10 | * |
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11 | * Methods `run()`, `create()` and `__invoke()` take any amount of arguments. |
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12 | * If you have an array of arguments, unpack it first: `run(...$args)` |
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13 | * |
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14 | * @see \nochso\Omni\OS::hasBinary Check if the binary/command is available before you run it. |
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15 | */ |
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16 | class Exec { |
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17 | /** |
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18 | * @var string[] |
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19 | */ |
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20 | private $prefixes; |
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21 | /** |
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22 | * @var string[] |
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23 | */ |
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24 | private $output; |
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25 | /** |
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26 | * @var int |
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27 | */ |
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28 | private $status; |
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29 | /** |
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30 | * @var string |
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31 | */ |
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32 | private $lastCommand; |
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33 | |||
34 | /** |
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35 | * Create a new callable `Exec` object. |
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36 | * |
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37 | * @param string[] $prefixes,... Optional arguments will always be added to the beginning of the command. |
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0 ignored issues
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38 | * |
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39 | * @return \nochso\Omni\Exec |
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40 | */ |
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41 | public static function create(...$prefixes) { |
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42 | $exec = new self(); |
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43 | $exec->prefixes = $prefixes; |
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44 | return $exec; |
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45 | } |
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46 | |||
47 | /** |
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48 | * Run a command with auto-escaped arguments. |
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49 | * |
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50 | * @param string[] $arguments,... Optional arguments will be added after the prefixes. |
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0 ignored issues
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There is no parameter named
$arguments,... . Did you maybe mean $arguments ?
This check looks for PHPDoc comments describing methods or function parameters that do not exist on the corresponding method or function. It has, however, found a similar but not annotated parameter which might be a good fit. Consider the following example. The parameter /**
* @param array $germany
* @param array $ireland
*/
function finale($germany, $island) {
return "2:1";
}
The most likely cause is that the parameter was changed, but the annotation was not. ![]() |
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51 | * |
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52 | * @return $this |
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53 | */ |
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54 | public function run(...$arguments) { |
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55 | $this->lastCommand = $this->getCommand(...$arguments); |
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56 | exec($this->lastCommand, $output, $status); |
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57 | $this->output = $output; |
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0 ignored issues
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It seems like
$output can be null . However, the property $output is declared as array . Maybe change the type of the property to array|null or add a type check?
Our type inference engine has found an assignment of a scalar value (like a string, an integer or null) to a property which is an array. Either this assignment is in error or the assigned type should be added to the documentation/type hint for that property. To type hint that a parameter can be either an array or null, you can set a type hint of array and a default value of null. The PHP interpreter will then accept both an array or null for that parameter. function aContainsB(array $needle = null, array $haystack) {
if (!$needle) {
return false;
}
return array_intersect($haystack, $needle) == $haystack;
}
The function can be called with either null or an array for the parameter ![]() |
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58 | $this->status = $status; |
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59 | return $this; |
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60 | } |
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61 | |||
62 | /** |
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63 | * getCommand returns the string to be used by `\exec()`. |
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64 | * |
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65 | * @param string[] $arguments,... |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There is no parameter named
$arguments,... . Did you maybe mean $arguments ?
This check looks for PHPDoc comments describing methods or function parameters that do not exist on the corresponding method or function. It has, however, found a similar but not annotated parameter which might be a good fit. Consider the following example. The parameter /**
* @param array $germany
* @param array $ireland
*/
function finale($germany, $island) {
return "2:1";
}
The most likely cause is that the parameter was changed, but the annotation was not. ![]() |
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66 | * |
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67 | * @return string |
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68 | */ |
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69 | public function getCommand(...$arguments) { |
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70 | $command = []; |
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71 | $allArguments = array_merge($this->prefixes, $arguments); |
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72 | if (count($allArguments) === 0) { |
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73 | $allArguments[] = ''; |
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74 | } |
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75 | foreach ($allArguments as $argument) { |
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76 | $command[] = $this->escapeArgument($argument); |
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77 | } |
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78 | $commandString = implode(' ', $command); |
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79 | return $commandString; |
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80 | } |
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81 | |||
82 | /** |
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83 | * getLastCommand returns the string last used by a previous call to `run()`. |
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84 | * |
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85 | * @return string|null |
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86 | */ |
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87 | public function getLastCommand() { |
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88 | return $this->lastCommand; |
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89 | } |
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90 | |||
91 | /** |
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92 | * getOutput of last execution. |
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93 | * |
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94 | * @return string[] |
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95 | */ |
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96 | public function getOutput() { |
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97 | return $this->output; |
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98 | } |
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99 | |||
100 | /** |
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101 | * getStatus code of last execution. |
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102 | * |
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103 | * @return int |
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104 | */ |
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105 | public function getStatus() { |
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106 | return $this->status; |
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107 | } |
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108 | |||
109 | /** |
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110 | * __invoke allows using this object as a callable by calling `run()`. |
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111 | * |
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112 | * e.g. `$runner('argument');` |
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113 | * |
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114 | * @param array $arguments,... |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There is no parameter named
$arguments,... . Did you maybe mean $arguments ?
This check looks for PHPDoc comments describing methods or function parameters that do not exist on the corresponding method or function. It has, however, found a similar but not annotated parameter which might be a good fit. Consider the following example. The parameter /**
* @param array $germany
* @param array $ireland
*/
function finale($germany, $island) {
return "2:1";
}
The most likely cause is that the parameter was changed, but the annotation was not. ![]() |
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115 | * |
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116 | * @return \nochso\Omni\Exec |
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117 | */ |
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118 | public function __invoke(...$arguments) { |
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119 | return $this->run(...$arguments); |
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120 | } |
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121 | |||
122 | /** |
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123 | * @param string $argument |
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124 | * |
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125 | * @return string |
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126 | */ |
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127 | private function escapeArgument($argument) { |
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128 | // Always escape an empty argument so it doesn't get lost. |
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129 | if ($argument === '') { |
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130 | return escapeshellarg($argument); |
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131 | } |
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132 | if (!OS::isWindows()) { |
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133 | return $this->escapeLinuxArgument($argument); |
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134 | } |
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135 | return $this->escapeWindowsArgument($argument); |
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136 | } |
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137 | |||
138 | /** |
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139 | * @param string $argument |
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140 | * |
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141 | * @return string |
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142 | */ |
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143 | private function escapeLinuxArgument($argument) { |
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144 | $escapedArgument = escapeshellarg($argument); |
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145 | // Is escaping really needed? |
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146 | if ($argument !== '--' && mb_substr($escapedArgument, 1, -1) === $argument && preg_match('/^[a-z0-9-]+$/i', $argument) === 1) { |
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147 | return $argument; |
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148 | } |
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149 | return $escapedArgument; |
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150 | } |
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151 | |||
152 | /** |
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153 | * @param string $argument |
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154 | * |
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155 | * @return string |
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156 | * |
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157 | * @link https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/twistylittlepassagesallalike/2011/04/23/everyone-quotes-command-line-arguments-the-wrong-way/ |
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158 | */ |
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159 | private function escapeWindowsArgument($argument) { |
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160 | // Check if there's anything to escape |
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161 | if (strpbrk($argument, " \t\n\v\"\\") === false) { |
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162 | return $argument; |
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163 | } |
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164 | $escapedArgument = '"'; |
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165 | $strlen = mb_strlen($argument); |
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166 | for ($i = 0; $i < $strlen; $i++) { |
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167 | $backslashes = 0; |
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168 | while ($i < $strlen && mb_substr($argument, $i, 1) === '\\') { |
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169 | $i++; |
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170 | $backslashes++; |
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171 | } |
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172 | if ($i === $strlen) { |
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173 | // Escape all backslashes, but let the terminating double quote be interpreted as a meta character |
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174 | $escapedArgument .= str_repeat('\\', $backslashes * 2); |
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175 | } elseif (mb_substr($argument, $i, 1) === '"') { |
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176 | // Escape all backslashes and the following quotation mark |
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177 | $escapedArgument .= str_repeat('\\', $backslashes * 2 + 1); |
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178 | $escapedArgument .= '"'; |
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179 | } else { |
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180 | $escapedArgument .= str_repeat('\\', $backslashes); |
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181 | $escapedArgument .= mb_substr($argument, $i, 1); |
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182 | } |
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183 | } |
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184 | $escapedArgument .= '"'; |
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185 | return $escapedArgument; |
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186 | } |
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187 | } |
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188 |
This check looks for PHPDoc comments describing methods or function parameters that do not exist on the corresponding method or function. It has, however, found a similar but not annotated parameter which might be a good fit.
Consider the following example. The parameter
$ireland
is not defined by the methodfinale(...)
.The most likely cause is that the parameter was changed, but the annotation was not.