It seems like it was my own fault (and when is it not?). I had used an exit in my tearDown because I wanted to prevent cleanup of the database and forgotten to remove it. The execution of tests wasn't influenced because I am using @runTestInSeperateProcesses
Still, I would have liked something other than silent failure
So, to demonstrate why specifically this is a spectacularly bad idea (to put it lightly), let's examine the code that you have:
$input_pass = 'example';
$step1 = md5($input_pass);
Ok, so you generate an MD5, and then completely ignore it...
$t1 = hash('sha512',$input_pass);
Now you hash th...
@ircmaxell , i can start with forward compatibitilty, but it does not take away my responsibility about old API. I think that i can use both approaches.
One thing I absolutely hate about programming is that you can't plan. I planned to successfully finish working on multiple features today and one small mistake has prevented me from finishing the first task. OH GOD WHY!
Hm... while I found @ircmaxell's article a really interesting read and agree with its main points, I would like to point out that forward compatibility is also used to mean something else: making sure older versions of your application can use input generated by newer versions gracefully. It is even more of a mess than backwards compatibility...
For the one project I happen to know they strive for such forward compatibility it was a real mess. Their reasoning actually went: no we can't do that in our current save file format, and we can't change the format, as that would break forward compatibility. So they didn't even really consider implementing the feature.
As I already outlined in a comment above, the root cause of the problems you are having is that PHP has no concept of unsigned integers, and it handles this by converting numbers that overflow the bounds of an integer to floating point (which doesn't play nice with bitwise operations). This means...
Can someone explain the value of.. $answer = $this->db->select("*")->from("table")->where("1=1"); over $answer = $this->db->query("SELECT * FROM table where 1=1");
@AshKetchum , PHP has only two scopes of variable: local and global. Your $db variable in global scope, but you trying to use it from local scope. You must use global or use function param.
Dependency injection is a software design pattern that allows the removal of hard-coded dependencies and makes it possible to change them, whether at run-time or compile-time.
This can be used, for example, as a simple way to load plugins dynamically or to choose stubs or mock objects in test environments vs. real objects in production environments. This software design pattern injects the depended-on element (object or value, etc.) to the destination automatically by knowing the requirement of the destination. Another pattern, called dependency lookup, is a regular process and reverse ...
Well that's a problem then because I am calling the function in the same file and it would be the same problem regardless of whether I put $db in parameters or in the method, since both ways would require access to the $db variable in that file.
I almost don't want to answer, because everyone with an answer here is right to some degree. But I also feel that everyone is also wrong to some degree as well.
To those who say it's secure, they are correct in general. "Double" hashing (or the logical expansion of that, iterating a hash functio...
WHY the heck are you creating a custom MD5 function? This smells of you're doing it horribly wrong. I understand you may find yourself in a situation where this looks like the correct approach, but seriously, it's not. Ever. Fix the original function to use a more appropriate hashing algorithm (like SHA-2 or SHA-3), and migrate the existing hashes. But don't perpetuate the horrors here... — ircmaxell49 secs ago
Programming, like life, is as tough as you want to make it. Life, unlike Programming, is not really an optional direction (discounting the one escape)...
@AshKetchum This could be one way to do it. However I would be leery of getDB() functions in my own code or code I worked with. From an understandability standpoint it seems like you might be connecting to the DB more than one time. Although this might not be the case because of caching I'd still rather see check(PDO $pdo) or some other DB abstraction interface.
But I think your'e looking for a one-size-fits-all, golden hammer rule for dependency management that can be applied to your situation blindly. I don't believe it is that simple. Dependency management is a complex part of any application architecture and the best way to handle that is gonna vary based on your existing architecture, overall design of the system and what you want out of it in the end.
@cspray The problem that I have with the check(PDO $pdo) is that in that specific situation, I am calling the function in the same file, which would then mean that I have to get a reference of the pdo variable from the connection.php in some way.
If you're really just curious as to how I solve the dependency management problem I wrote an article on the subject for how I deal with dependency management in my personal framework. I don't tout this to be the best or only way and it certainly has its drawbacks. But it is testable and, so far, has been relatively simple to work with.
But outside of you just doing research on how to solve this problem from an architectural standpoint I really can't help you out much more than that. You could just slap global on your database connection. I'd advise against it though; you'll gain more out of fixing this architectural problem in the long run and save yourself a future headache
I would definitely check out how projects other than my own solve this problem. Then apply what you've learned to your own code
I guess I could create a separate file, include this function file and then in that separate file, but then I will have the same problem again: how do I reference the db variable without reconnecting there.
@cspray last thing. Should I dive into OOP and just create a new database object with methods I will need and then use them instead?
Create a on object that holds a private PDO Object and define a public query method that accepts table name, column name, and value arguments and can be called repeatedly:
class DatabaseObject{
private $db;
public function __construct() {
$this->createDB();
}
private function creat...
Yes, you can make objects global just like any other variable:
$pdo = new PDO('something');
function foo() {
global $pdo;
$pdo->prepare('...');
}
You may also want to check out the Singleton pattern, which basically is a global, OO-style.
That being said, I'd recommend you not to use gl...
Check what he put under "You should do that instead:"
@cspray I am kinda confused what makes that qualify instead of the previous one. What made you say Yes as soon as you looked at it. Must have been something that stood out?
@AshKetchum The fact that the PDO object is injected directly into the constructor. This immediately tells me that I need a database connection to use your object. It also allows me to write unit tests for how this object interacts with the database because I can replace the object being injected to fit my needs.
@cspray Well, it would be great if you can help as long as you're up. I am not forcing you, but if you could help me get started, it will really help me.
I think you should do some googling and reading. I happen to enjoy Clean Code and recommend it. If you search around there's some other books that people recommend for various different things
@sectus I asked because I still couldn't solve that problem and I am trying to solve it now, not save it for later, but I think you busy with your own problem.
@sectus I have the PDO connection in one file called connection.php. Then in another file, I include that connection.php file and use the $db variable to run queries. Except to do that, I have to make $db global, which is an awful practice and enables dependency injection and all sorts security problems. Need to find a way that doesn't involve making it global
In software engineering, creational design patterns are design patterns that deal with object creation mechanisms, trying to create objects in a manner suitable to the situation. The basic form of object creation could result in design problems or added complexity to the design. Creational design patterns solve this problem by somehow controlling this object creation.
Creational design patterns are composed of two dominant ideas. One is encapsulating knowledge about which concrete classes the system uses. Another is hiding how instances of these concrete classes are created and combined.
...
class TableCreator {
protected $pdo;
public function __construct(PDO $pdo) {
$this->pdo = $pdo;
}
public function createFromId($id) {
$stmt = $this->pdo->prepare('SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE id = ?');
$stmt->execute(array($id));
$rows = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
foreach ($rows as $row) {
// do stuff
}
}
}
@sectus but with that method, I would literally be going around in every file and instantiating a new database object (PDODatabase $db = new PDODatabase)
@Paul but then half the website would be relying on what is passed and the other half would be relying on the global variable.
class TableCreator {
protected $pdo;
public function __construct(PDO $pdo) {
$this->pdo = $pdo;
}
public function createFromId($id) {
$stmt = $this->pdo->prepare('SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE id = ?');
$stmt->execute(array($id));
$rows = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
foreach ($rows as $row) {
// do stuff
}
}
}
You can't really have pure OO everywhere, at the start of your program objects need to be created. But once they are created they can be passed to every other object in the system.
@AshKetchum test.php isn't an object? If it was you could just call new Test($db)
@Paul What I am asking is how do you get access to $db? Even if I have function check($db) and then I call that function, what would I put in the parameters when calling the function?
Also, would it be possible for you to reply a little quicker, since I am here for just a few minutes before I have to leave and I am really trying to get this working before I leave.
@AshKetchum Pass it from the top. You create it at the global scope. You need to create all of your objects first, and then pass them to whatever depends on them.
@AshKetchum There is a difference between the global scope and using global.
There has to be one scope that rules them all, it is the start of your program. But leaving every other part of your system dependent upon that level for storing and retrieving state is a bad idea.
But objects can manage their own state and hide it from the global state which is good.
Your dependency is now injected, so your check function doesn't depend on the global state anymore. You could actually pass it a mock object later when you want to test it (rather than it being hardcoded to global $db).