HasPushSubscriptions   A
last analyzed

Complexity

Total Complexity 9

Size/Duplication

Total Lines 82
Duplicated Lines 0 %

Coupling/Cohesion

Components 1
Dependencies 2

Test Coverage

Coverage 0%

Importance

Changes 2
Bugs 0 Features 0
Metric Value
wmc 9
c 2
b 0
f 0
lcom 1
cbo 2
dl 0
loc 82
ccs 0
cts 42
cp 0
rs 10

5 Methods

Rating   Name   Duplication   Size   Complexity  
A pushSubscriptions() 0 4 1
B updatePushSubscription() 0 27 5
A pushSubscriptionBelongsToUser() 0 4 1
A deletePushSubscription() 0 6 1
A routeNotificationForWebPush() 0 4 1
1
<?php
2
3
namespace NotificationChannels\WebPush;
4
5
trait HasPushSubscriptions
6
{
7
    /**
8
     * Get the user's subscriptions.
9
     *
10
     * @return \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\HasMany
11
     */
12
    public function pushSubscriptions()
13
    {
14
        return $this->hasMany(PushSubscription::class);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
It seems like hasMany() must be provided by classes using this trait. How about adding it as abstract method to this trait?

This check looks for methods that are used by a trait but not required by it.

To illustrate, let’s look at the following code example

trait Idable {
    public function equalIds(Idable $other) {
        return $this->getId() === $other->getId();
    }
}

The trait Idable provides a method equalsId that in turn relies on the method getId(). If this method does not exist on a class mixing in this trait, the method will fail.

Adding the getId() as an abstract method to the trait will make sure it is available.

Loading history...
15
    }
16
17
    /**
18
     * Update (or create) user subscription.
19
     *
20
     * @param  string $endpoint
21
     * @param  string|null $key
22
     * @param  string|null $token
23
     * @return \NotificationChannels\WebPush\PushSubscription
24
     */
25
    public function updatePushSubscription($endpoint, $key = null, $token = null, $dd = null, $push_subscription_id = null, $name = null, $language = null, $device = null, $country = null)
26
    {
27
        $subscription = PushSubscription::findByEndpoint($endpoint);
28
        if ($subscription && $this->pushSubscriptionBelongsToUser($subscription)) {
29
            $subscription->public_key = $key;
30
            $subscription->auth_token = $token;
31
            $subscription->browser = $dd;
32
            $subscription->push_subscription_id = $push_subscription_id;
33
            $subscription->name = $name;
34
            $subscription->language = $language;
35
            $subscription->device = $device;
36
            $subscription->country = $country;
37
            $subscription->save();
38
39
            return $subscription;
40
        }
41
42
        if ($subscription && ! $this->pushSubscriptionBelongsToUser($subscription)) {
43
            $subscription->delete();
44
        }
45
46
        return $this->pushSubscriptions()->save(new PushSubscription([
47
            'endpoint' => $endpoint,
48
            'public_key' => $key,
49
            'auth_token' => $token,
50
        ]));
51
    }
52
53
    /**
54
     * Determine if the given subscription belongs to this user.
55
     *
56
     * @param  \NotificationChannels\WebPush\PushSubscription $subscription
57
     * @return bool
58
     */
59
    public function pushSubscriptionBelongsToUser($subscription)
60
    {
61
        return (int) $subscription->user_id === 1;
62
    }
63
64
    /**
65
     * Delete subscription by endpoint.
66
     *
67
     * @param  string $endpoint
68
     * @return void
69
     */
70
    public function deletePushSubscription($endpoint)
71
    {
72
        $this->pushSubscriptions()
73
            ->where('endpoint', $endpoint)
74
            ->delete();
75
    }
76
77
    /**
78
     * Get all subscriptions.
79
     *
80
     * @return \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection
81
     */
82
    public function routeNotificationForWebPush()
83
    {
84
        return $this->pushSubscriptions;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The property pushSubscriptions 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...
85
    }
86
}
87