files and directories starting with '.' are considered hidden in linux, and generally won't appear unless you specify an 'all' flag on the list command
I'm wondering what you save in cookies and session variables when a user is authenticated. And how you know to "trust" when you check these variables. What I'm doing right now is saving the "userid" and a generated key (stored in the user table) in the current session. Then every time a page loads, getting the user id and key, querying for the user, checking against the results from the database, etc. On every request. Is there a more efficient way to do this, rather than query db every time.
@Andrea Let me just say this: on more than 1 occasion I had refrained from using (and possibly contributing because of this) a GPL licensed project because of the license. I have never had any issue with MIT licensed projects
hmm.. if I have a cache->has($key) and cache->get($key) would it make it sense that get($key) throws an exception if the data at $key is not found. I was thinking in a case of first checking if the cache has some data, if it does, get it.. but in that fraction of time, the cache might have been deleted, hence the exception
I do not think so, it just tells me if the data is available at the moment I call it, if I call get afterwards its reasonable to think I will retrieve it, if not, I can handle the exception of the missing cache, by for example building the cache
TypeError: Argument 1 passed to Aerys\Session::Aerys\{closure}() must be of the type array, object given ← That's not how that the FQN should be printed, right? /cc @bwoebi