@Ocramius ended up scrapping the repo 'stack-csp', it was never fully functional and had a ton of problems. Working on a new version with a friend. You had the last remaining fork, which has now turned into the official source. So you can mark it as non-working, delete it, or provide support for it (but nobody ever used it) =o( just wanted to give you a heads up. =o) I have no idea how all this stuff works.
People are probably going to hate me for this, but what I just suggested is waht I always do:
$query = 'UPDATE backup_tasks';
$query.= ' SET server_id = :server_id, name = :name, type = :type, start_time = :start_time';
$query.= ' WHERE id = :id';
@AndreaFaulds oh don't get pissed of because of my comment, I really wished you first proposal was already merged on master.
@PeeHaa this reminds me of the JSON license:
> The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software > The Software shall be used for Good, not Evil.
@LeviMorrison not really true, some governments have an absurd vision of good and evil and people are subject to that definition, these people are not stupid.
woot! So I'm working on a bugfix and I rebased with master to get latest stuff. Now when I try to "make" I get the following error:
Generating phar.php
PHP Fatal error: PDO: driver sqlite requires PDO API version 20150127; this is PDO version 20080721 in Unknown on line 0
PHP Fatal error: Unable to start pdo_sqlite module in Unknown on line 0
make: ** [ext/phar/phar.php] Erro 254
What's the correct syntax for a vagrant shared folder from windows to amazon aws? I've tried every variation of c:\\myFolder, //myFolder, /cygdrive/c/myFolder, ./, etc etc.
@nosille which is correct. It's the string you're providing (inputting) the function so it can then search it using the regex. Would it make more sense if instead of $subject it was $searchText? I'm assuming the noun used is what is confusing.
function startwordpress_($root) { define('WP_USE_THEMES', true); require( dirname( __FILE__ ) . $root.'/wp-blog-header.php' ); } starwordpress_('/blog'); it acts strange on some things, custom post types and some plugins. What is the issue there?
@nosille What are you talking about, there's nothing to elaborate on. Though hell, even if you can't figure it out from the text, or the context, you should be able to work it out from any one of the many examples given. I don't think putting the most basic, minimal effort in is too much to ask of a reader.
but sure, blame the documentation if that's below you
@PaulCrovella But I've hit a snag when deploying to AWS. Right now I have my Vagrantfile & puphpet folder in my code repo, so that I can easily vagrant up via phpstorm. But I use a different vagrantfile for AWS, and thus can't really git clone my code otherwise I'd overwrite my AWS vagrantfile. How do you handle that?
@PaulCrovella I think it would be best to provision each machine via vagrant, or not? This is my first time using it, so I don't know how this normally goes. A vagrant for each developer, a vagrant for testing servers, and a vagrant for production servers?
Vagrant isn't for production. Far too much is really, really insecure by default on a vagrant box (ssh keys and such.) It can be used there with some effort, but that's not what it's made for.
some people probably use vagrant too and spend the effort to harden it up, but that seems weird to me
basically the tools used to provision a vagrant box are the same sorts of tools you'd use to provision your production boxes without vagrant being involved at all.
I have some constants in my program like: define('EMAIL', 'a@a.a'); define('BASE_URI', '/var/www/html/projects/a/'); And I want to use them in the controllers. But I don't know how. I can use them by simply ... writing their names and using them! But I don't think that it's a good idea.
well you're on to something, It really isn't a good idea. But the thing is you shouldn't use those defines in the first place, as they pollute global namespace. Instead you can define constant in a class, e.g.
class Something { const SOMETHING = 1; }
Could be json, xml, ini, yaml, whatever ^^
@user3002233 use a configuration file (xml, yaml, ini, ...) and parse it
@MarcelBurkhard I don't think that it's a good idea to define them in the classes. Because for example I use the EMAIL constant in like 5 or 6 classes.
@FlorianMargaine I've only recently started looking at things like that (well, docker, but close enough). I don't know yet how I feel about separation at that level.
How about workpress? When we first enter some information and then install it. It stores the data somewhere and then use them (probably in some classes).
@RonniSkansing, sorry im still new here and a bit overwhelmed with the lingo .. pastie is something .... im not sure what it meant... it meant maybe im pasting the same question everwhere or some spammer thing?
@MarcelBurkhard thanks basically its not running a simple command like touch /tmp/xyz
@RonniSkansing Then how to use $config in the controllers? Should I inject it?
@MarcelBurkhard I'm a little confused. So you mean I should use the constants by entering some words like Sorter::MOVE_UP instead of MOVE_UP? What is the difference? I mean... As we may know, It's better to inject the dependencies (But I'm but sure if I should inject the constants.)
@user3002233 that was just an example to show you that you can use constants across multiple php classes, I wouldn't use that for configuration settings
@user3002233 so yes, inject it. I'm no expert in that but I would do it as follows: load your configuration.php from a folder protected by .htaccess, the configuration.php sets a $config array, inject it into the controller
or even better write another class called Configuration that takes the config array in the constructor and provides getters like getContactFormMailAddress() or getDatabaseHost()
You know what? I'm scared of dependencies! I do everything to avoid using another dependency in my classes. because this is how a class would look like if i want to inject it's dependencies: paste.ofcode.org/37aWyjkjg2xamVgT4wV2dch I mean... What the hell is that? all that lines!
this always happens... I git cloned my empty "btadmin.git" from git shell, added my files from a symfony project, drag&drop'ed the folder into github client and commited the files. Then I press Publish in github client which seems to work (but It doesn't because when I clone the repo its evidently still empty ...) So what I'm going to do now is try again without that Github client
@MarcelBurkhard If it works from CLI, all is fine, GUIs for VCS aren't that good, except for remote code browsing and history (like those things that GitHub does).
@RonniSkansing i did edit the question "warned that this can be fatal if someone executes some random command. I agree to it, but only authorized person can get access to this page. Also if this is not possible what would be the way to run this script with appropriate checks."
- Added: FluentDOM\Loader\Text\CSV loads csv data into a xml document - Added: FluentDOM::registerLoader() as a plugin system for loaders provided by other composer packages - Added: FluentDOM\DocumentFragment is an extended version of the DOMDocum...
on the chat the other day i mentioned that I would put a check in php script that if command contains ans word apart from specific (jus like grep, will see syntax for php) then dont run the command. Please tell whats wrong with this
@Danack getClassName returns string where getClass returns ReflectionClass, this is a non-issue; scalar types won't use the class_name to store type information
@JoeWatkins I don't think how the information is stored is relevant. It's just going to be incredibly surprising when getClassName returns the string of the typehint some of the time, but doesn't in other cases.
Unless there's also getScalarName....which doesn't seem sensible.
it's not called getTypeName, it's not strange that getClass doesn't return a ReflectionClass for array today, and it won't be strange for integer in the future ...
@JoeWatkins Andrea had a good point we don't need to talk about the future; I think the method should return 'array' now for things that are type hinted to be array. Having to have multiple methods to get the type hint string seems nuts you'd have to code something like:
the issue of detecting type in a neat way exists today with isCallable and isArray, this is to be solved in another rfc, the end result of phils rfc should just ensure we can get a name without autoloading the class ...
@AndreaFaulds Ok, but I still think that if you've got a method that's returning the typehint string, it would be more sensible to just have one that covers everything, rather than special casing stuff.
@AndreaFaulds neither is the current API, it's better to extend getType API than add isSomeType methods (which is what we have now in isCallable and isArray)
@AndreaFaulds Well, when I call method like that, mostly I am interested in actual class, because if I have type-hint defined in signature I already know the type at interface level.
@AndreaFaulds Yeah. I really don't like that. It's mixing up special behaviour in getClassName to allow people to determine if something is a class. They should be separate by adding isClass to ReflectionParameter and calling getClassName getType instead.