nyacide /
amma
This project does not seem to handle request data directly as such no vulnerable execution paths were found.
include, or for example
via PHP's auto-loading mechanism.
These results are based on our legacy PHP analysis, consider migrating to our new PHP analysis engine instead. Learn more
| 1 | <?php |
||
| 2 | |||
| 3 | namespace App\Services; |
||
| 4 | |||
| 5 | use App\Repositories\UserRepository; |
||
| 6 | use App\Socialite; |
||
| 7 | use Auth; |
||
| 8 | use Laravel\Socialite\Contracts\User as ProviderUser; |
||
| 9 | use App\Repositories\SocialiteRepository; |
||
| 10 | |||
| 11 | class SocialiteUser |
||
| 12 | { |
||
| 13 | /** |
||
| 14 | * @var ProviderUser |
||
| 15 | */ |
||
| 16 | private $user; |
||
| 17 | |||
| 18 | /** |
||
| 19 | * @var string |
||
| 20 | */ |
||
| 21 | private $provider; |
||
| 22 | |||
| 23 | /** |
||
| 24 | * SocialiteUser constructor. |
||
| 25 | */ |
||
| 26 | public function __construct() |
||
| 27 | { |
||
| 28 | $this->socialRepository = $this->getSocialiteRepository(); |
||
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
|
|||
| 29 | } |
||
| 30 | |||
| 31 | /** |
||
| 32 | * @param $provider |
||
| 33 | * @param $callback |
||
| 34 | * @return $this |
||
| 35 | */ |
||
| 36 | public function init($provider, $callback) |
||
| 37 | { |
||
| 38 | $this |
||
| 39 | ->setProvider($provider) |
||
| 40 | ->setUser($callback); |
||
| 41 | |||
| 42 | return $this; |
||
| 43 | } |
||
| 44 | |||
| 45 | /** |
||
| 46 | * Register. |
||
| 47 | * |
||
| 48 | * @return mixed|null |
||
| 49 | */ |
||
| 50 | public function register() |
||
| 51 | { |
||
| 52 | if ($this->socialRepository->checkProviderUser($this->getProvider(), $this->user()->getId())) |
||
| 53 | { |
||
| 54 | $s_user = $this->socialRepository->getUserByProvider( |
||
| 55 | $this->getProvider(), $this->user()->getId() |
||
| 56 | ); |
||
| 57 | |||
| 58 | if($user = $s_user->user) |
||
| 59 | return $user; |
||
| 60 | |||
| 61 | return $this; |
||
| 62 | } |
||
| 63 | |||
| 64 | $social = $this->getOrCreateEmptySocialUser(); |
||
| 65 | |||
| 66 | if($this->checkEmail()) |
||
| 67 | return $this->createSocialUserWithEmail($social); |
||
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
$social is of type null|object<App\Services\SocialiteUser>, but the function expects a object<App\Socialite>.
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling. In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug. We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example: function acceptsInteger($int) { }
$x = '123'; // string "123"
// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);
// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
|
|||
| 68 | |||
| 69 | return $this; |
||
| 70 | } |
||
| 71 | |||
| 72 | /** |
||
| 73 | * @return mixed |
||
| 74 | */ |
||
| 75 | public function getProvider() |
||
| 76 | { |
||
| 77 | return $this->provider; |
||
| 78 | } |
||
| 79 | |||
| 80 | /** |
||
| 81 | * @return ProviderUser |
||
| 82 | */ |
||
| 83 | public function getUser() |
||
| 84 | { |
||
| 85 | return $this->user; |
||
| 86 | } |
||
| 87 | |||
| 88 | /** |
||
| 89 | * Set user. |
||
| 90 | * |
||
| 91 | * @param $user |
||
| 92 | * @return $this |
||
| 93 | */ |
||
| 94 | public function setUser($user) |
||
| 95 | { |
||
| 96 | $this->user = $user; |
||
| 97 | |||
| 98 | return $this; |
||
| 99 | } |
||
| 100 | |||
| 101 | /** |
||
| 102 | * Set provider. |
||
| 103 | * |
||
| 104 | * @param $provider |
||
| 105 | * @return $this |
||
| 106 | */ |
||
| 107 | public function setProvider($provider) |
||
| 108 | { |
||
| 109 | $this->provider = $provider; |
||
| 110 | |||
| 111 | return $this; |
||
| 112 | } |
||
| 113 | |||
| 114 | /** |
||
| 115 | * @return ProviderUser |
||
| 116 | */ |
||
| 117 | protected function user() |
||
| 118 | { |
||
| 119 | return $this->getUser(); |
||
| 120 | } |
||
| 121 | |||
| 122 | /** |
||
| 123 | * Get or create social user |
||
| 124 | * |
||
| 125 | * @return null|static |
||
| 126 | */ |
||
| 127 | protected function getOrCreateEmptySocialUser() |
||
| 128 | { |
||
| 129 | if($this->socialRepository->checkProviderUser($this->getProvider(), $this->user()->getId())) |
||
| 130 | return $this->socialRepository->getUserByProvider($this->getProvider(), $this->user()->getId()); |
||
| 131 | |||
| 132 | return $this->socialRepository->createEmpty( |
||
| 133 | $this->getProvider(), $this->user() |
||
| 134 | ); |
||
| 135 | } |
||
| 136 | |||
| 137 | /** |
||
| 138 | * @return SocialiteRepository |
||
| 139 | */ |
||
| 140 | private function getSocialiteRepository() |
||
| 141 | { |
||
| 142 | return new SocialiteRepository(); |
||
| 143 | } |
||
| 144 | |||
| 145 | /** |
||
| 146 | * @return UserRepository |
||
| 147 | */ |
||
| 148 | private function getUserRepository() |
||
| 149 | { |
||
| 150 | return new UserRepository(); |
||
| 151 | } |
||
| 152 | |||
| 153 | /** |
||
| 154 | * Associate user. |
||
| 155 | * |
||
| 156 | * @param $account |
||
| 157 | * @param null $email |
||
| 158 | * @return mixed |
||
| 159 | */ |
||
| 160 | private function associateSocialiteUser($account, $email = null) |
||
| 161 | { |
||
| 162 | if(! $email) |
||
| 163 | $email = $this->user()->getEmail(); |
||
| 164 | |||
| 165 | $user = $this->getUserRepository()->getByEmail($email); |
||
| 166 | $account->user()->associate($user); |
||
| 167 | $account->save(); |
||
| 168 | |||
| 169 | return $user; |
||
| 170 | } |
||
| 171 | |||
| 172 | /** |
||
| 173 | * Check if email exists; |
||
| 174 | * |
||
| 175 | * @return bool |
||
| 176 | */ |
||
| 177 | private function checkEmail() |
||
| 178 | { |
||
| 179 | return (bool) $this->user()->getEmail(); |
||
| 180 | } |
||
| 181 | |||
| 182 | /** |
||
| 183 | * @param $social |
||
| 184 | * @return bool |
||
| 185 | */ |
||
| 186 | public function tryToAssociateUser($social, $email = null) |
||
| 187 | { |
||
| 188 | if(! $email) |
||
| 189 | $email = $this->user()->getEmail(); |
||
| 190 | |||
| 191 | if($this->getUserRepository()->checkIfUserExists($email)) |
||
| 192 | return $this->associateSocialiteUser($social, $email); |
||
| 193 | |||
| 194 | return false; |
||
| 195 | } |
||
| 196 | |||
| 197 | /** |
||
| 198 | * Create social user. |
||
| 199 | * |
||
| 200 | * @param Socialite $social |
||
| 201 | * @return mixed |
||
| 202 | */ |
||
| 203 | private function createSocialUserWithEmail(Socialite $social) |
||
| 204 | { |
||
| 205 | $this->tryToAssociateUser($social); |
||
| 206 | $names = $this->getFirstAndLustNames(); |
||
| 207 | |||
| 208 | return $this->getUserRepository()->create([ |
||
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
The method
create() does not exist on App\Repositories\UserRepository. Did you maybe mean createSimpleUser()?
This check marks calls to methods that do not seem to exist on an object. This is most likely the result of a method being renamed without all references to it being renamed likewise. Loading history...
|
|||
| 209 | 'email' => $this->user()->getEmail(), |
||
| 210 | 'name' => $this->user()->getName(), |
||
| 211 | 'password' => $this->users->hashPassword(str_random(45)), |
||
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
The property
users 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();
$x->foo = true;
Loading history...
|
|||
| 212 | 'firstname' => @$names[0], |
||
| 213 | 'lastname' => @$names[1] |
||
| 214 | ]); |
||
| 215 | } |
||
| 216 | |||
| 217 | /** |
||
| 218 | * @param null $name |
||
| 219 | * @return array |
||
| 220 | */ |
||
| 221 | public function getFirstAndLustNames($name = null) |
||
| 222 | { |
||
| 223 | if(! $name) |
||
| 224 | $name = $this->user()->getName(); |
||
| 225 | |||
| 226 | return explode(' ', $name); |
||
| 227 | } |
||
| 228 | |||
| 229 | /** |
||
| 230 | * Login the user. |
||
| 231 | * |
||
| 232 | * @param $user |
||
| 233 | */ |
||
| 234 | public function login($user) |
||
| 235 | { |
||
| 236 | \Auth::login($user, true); |
||
| 237 | } |
||
| 238 | |||
| 239 | /** |
||
| 240 | * Add avatar. |
||
| 241 | * |
||
| 242 | * @param $avatar |
||
| 243 | * @return $this |
||
| 244 | */ |
||
| 245 | public function avatar($avatar) |
||
| 246 | { |
||
| 247 | (new ImageProcessor())->changeAvatar($avatar); |
||
| 248 | |||
| 249 | return $this; |
||
| 250 | } |
||
| 251 | } |
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion: