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1 | <?php |
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2 | /*************************************************************************************/ |
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3 | /* This file is part of the RewriteUrl module for Thelia. */ |
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4 | /* */ |
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5 | /* Copyright (c) OpenStudio */ |
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6 | /* email : [email protected] */ |
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7 | /* web : http://www.thelia.net */ |
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8 | /* */ |
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9 | /* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE.txt */ |
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10 | /* file that was distributed with this source code. */ |
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11 | /*************************************************************************************/ |
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12 | |||
13 | namespace RewriteUrl; |
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14 | |||
15 | use Propel\Runtime\Connection\ConnectionInterface; |
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16 | use Thelia\Model\ConfigQuery; |
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17 | use Thelia\Model\Map\RewritingUrlTableMap; |
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18 | use Thelia\Model\RewritingUrl; |
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19 | use Thelia\Model\RewritingUrlQuery; |
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20 | use Thelia\Module\BaseModule; |
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21 | |||
22 | /** |
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23 | * Class RewriteUrl |
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24 | * @package RewriteUrl |
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25 | * @author Vincent Lopes <[email protected]> |
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26 | * @author Gilles Bourgeat <[email protected]> |
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27 | */ |
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28 | class RewriteUrl extends BaseModule |
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29 | { |
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30 | /** @var string */ |
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31 | const MODULE_DOMAIN = "rewriteurl"; |
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32 | |||
33 | /** @var string */ |
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34 | const MODULE_NAME = "rewriteurl"; |
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35 | |||
36 | /** @static null|array */ |
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37 | static $unknownSources; |
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0 ignored issues
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38 | |||
39 | /** |
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40 | * @param string $currentVersion |
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41 | * @param string $newVersion |
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42 | * @param ConnectionInterface $con |
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43 | * @throws \Exception |
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44 | * @throws \Propel\Runtime\Exception\PropelException |
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45 | * @since 1.2.3 |
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46 | */ |
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47 | public function update($currentVersion, $newVersion, ConnectionInterface $con = null) |
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48 | { |
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49 | /* |
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50 | * Fix for urls that redirect on itself |
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51 | */ |
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52 | $urls = RewritingUrlQuery::create() |
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53 | ->where(RewritingUrlTableMap::ID . " = " . RewritingUrlTableMap::REDIRECTED) |
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54 | ->find(); |
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55 | |||
56 | /** @var RewritingUrl $url */ |
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57 | foreach ($urls as $url) { |
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58 | $parent = RewritingUrlQuery::create() |
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59 | ->filterByView($url->getView()) |
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60 | ->filterByViewId($url->getViewId()) |
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61 | ->filterByViewLocale($url->getViewLocale()) |
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62 | ->filterByRedirected(null) |
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63 | ->findOne(); |
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64 | |||
65 | $url->setRedirected(($parent === null) ? null : $parent->getId())->save(); |
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66 | } |
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67 | } |
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68 | |||
69 | /** |
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70 | * @return array|null |
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71 | */ |
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72 | public static function getUnknownSources() |
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73 | { |
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74 | if (static::$unknownSources === null) { |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Since
$unknownSources is declared private, accessing it with static will lead to errors in possible sub-classes; consider using self , or increasing the visibility of $unknownSources to at least protected.
Let’s assume you have a class which uses late-static binding: class YourClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return static::$someVariable;
}
}
The code above will run fine in your PHP runtime. However, if you now create a
sub-class and call the class YourSubClass extends YourClass { }
YourSubClass::getSomeVariable(); // Will cause an access error.
In the case above, it makes sense to update class SomeClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return self::$someVariable; // self works fine with private.
}
}
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75 | static::$unknownSources = []; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Since
$unknownSources is declared private, accessing it with static will lead to errors in possible sub-classes; consider using self , or increasing the visibility of $unknownSources to at least protected.
Let’s assume you have a class which uses late-static binding: class YourClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return static::$someVariable;
}
}
The code above will run fine in your PHP runtime. However, if you now create a
sub-class and call the class YourSubClass extends YourClass { }
YourSubClass::getSomeVariable(); // Will cause an access error.
In the case above, it makes sense to update class SomeClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return self::$someVariable; // self works fine with private.
}
}
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76 | if (null !== $config = ConfigQuery::read('obsolete_rewriten_url_view', null)) { |
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77 | static::$unknownSources[] = $config; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Since
$unknownSources is declared private, accessing it with static will lead to errors in possible sub-classes; consider using self , or increasing the visibility of $unknownSources to at least protected.
Let’s assume you have a class which uses late-static binding: class YourClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return static::$someVariable;
}
}
The code above will run fine in your PHP runtime. However, if you now create a
sub-class and call the class YourSubClass extends YourClass { }
YourSubClass::getSomeVariable(); // Will cause an access error.
In the case above, it makes sense to update class SomeClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return self::$someVariable; // self works fine with private.
}
}
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78 | } |
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79 | } |
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80 | return static::$unknownSources; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Since
$unknownSources is declared private, accessing it with static will lead to errors in possible sub-classes; consider using self , or increasing the visibility of $unknownSources to at least protected.
Let’s assume you have a class which uses late-static binding: class YourClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return static::$someVariable;
}
}
The code above will run fine in your PHP runtime. However, if you now create a
sub-class and call the class YourSubClass extends YourClass { }
YourSubClass::getSomeVariable(); // Will cause an access error.
In the case above, it makes sense to update class SomeClass
{
private static $someVariable;
public static function getSomeVariable()
{
return self::$someVariable; // self works fine with private.
}
}
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81 | } |
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82 | } |
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83 |
The PSR-2 coding standard requires that all properties in a class have their visibility explicitly declared. If you declare a property using
the property is implicitly global.
To learn more about the PSR-2, please see the PHP-FIG site on the PSR-2.