1 | <?php |
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14 | class CurlCommandFormatter implements Formatter |
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15 | { |
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16 | /** |
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17 | * {@inheritdoc} |
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18 | */ |
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19 | 5 | public function formatRequest(RequestInterface $request) |
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20 | { |
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21 | 5 | $command = sprintf('curl %s', escapeshellarg((string) $request->getUri()->withFragment(''))); |
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22 | 5 | if ('1.0' === $request->getProtocolVersion()) { |
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23 | $command .= ' --http1.0'; |
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24 | 5 | } elseif ('2.0' === $request->getProtocolVersion()) { |
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25 | 1 | $command .= ' --http2'; |
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26 | 1 | } |
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27 | |||
28 | 5 | $method = strtoupper($request->getMethod()); |
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29 | 5 | if ('HEAD' === $method) { |
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30 | $command .= ' --head'; |
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31 | 5 | } elseif ('GET' !== $method) { |
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32 | 3 | $command .= ' --request '.$method; |
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33 | 3 | } |
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34 | |||
35 | 5 | $command .= $this->getHeadersAsCommandOptions($request); |
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36 | |||
37 | 5 | $body = $request->getBody(); |
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38 | 5 | if ($body->getSize() > 0) { |
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39 | 3 | if ($body->isSeekable()) { |
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40 | 2 | $data = $body->__toString(); |
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41 | 2 | $body->rewind(); |
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42 | 2 | if (preg_match('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F]/', $data)) { |
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43 | 1 | $data = '[binary stream omitted]'; |
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44 | 1 | } |
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45 | 2 | } else { |
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46 | 1 | $data = '[non-seekable stream omitted]'; |
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47 | } |
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48 | |||
49 | 3 | $escapedData = @escapeshellarg($data) or |
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50 | die("We couldn't not escape the data properly: error was '$php_errormsg'"); |
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51 | |||
52 | 3 | $command .= sprintf(' --data %s', $escapedData); |
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53 | 3 | } |
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54 | |||
55 | 5 | return $command; |
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56 | } |
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57 | |||
58 | /** |
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59 | * {@inheritdoc} |
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60 | */ |
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61 | 1 | public function formatResponse(ResponseInterface $response) |
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65 | |||
66 | /** |
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67 | * @param RequestInterface $request |
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68 | * |
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69 | * @return string |
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70 | */ |
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71 | 5 | private function getHeadersAsCommandOptions(RequestInterface $request) |
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90 | } |
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91 |
PHP has two types of connecting operators (logical operators, and boolean operators):
and
&&
or
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The difference between these is the order in which they are executed. In most cases, you would want to use a boolean operator like
&&
, or||
.Let’s take a look at a few examples:
Logical Operators are used for Control-Flow
One case where you explicitly want to use logical operators is for control-flow such as this:
Since
die
introduces problems of its own, f.e. it makes our code hardly testable, and prevents any kind of more sophisticated error handling; you probably do not want to use this in real-world code. Unfortunately, logical operators cannot be combined withthrow
at this point:These limitations lead to logical operators rarely being of use in current PHP code.