1 | <?php |
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9 | abstract class CheckDefinition |
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10 | { |
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11 | /** @var \Spatie\ServerMonitor\Models\Check */ |
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12 | protected $check; |
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13 | |||
14 | /** |
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15 | * @param \Spatie\ServerMonitor\Models\Check $check |
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16 | * |
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17 | * @return $this |
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18 | */ |
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19 | public function setCheck(Check $check) |
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25 | |||
26 | public function getCommand(): string |
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30 | |||
31 | public function handleFinishedProcess(Process $process) |
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47 | |||
48 | abstract public function handleSuccessfulProcess(Process $process); |
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49 | |||
50 | public function handleFailedProcess(Process $process) |
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54 | |||
55 | public function throttleFailingNotificationsForMinutes(): int |
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56 | { |
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57 | return config('server-monitor.notifications.throttle_failing_notifications_for_minutes'); |
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58 | } |
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59 | |||
60 | abstract public function performNextRunInMinutes(): int; |
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61 | } |
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62 |
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: