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15:05
Hey guys, got a little question for you
Is it possible to detect if your visitor has TLS protocol enabled on their browser, and if so which version?
with PHP
@Orangepill but as I said, I have not really explored PSR7 stuff
@teresko it seems that without a mechanism to branch execution or exit early that implementation would be next to useless.
and branching would make it a lot more complicated
hey would websockets allow for a stateful MVC php experience?
maybe, but why would you want to?
15:13
@teresko yeah... there are much cleaner ways to handle branching.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier So something changes in the model, say an entity, and the view is automagically updated to match (in sync) right, because of the bidirectional communication
^ why do that?
@Orangepill throw new NoMoreMiddlewarePleaseException()
@AlmaDo No need to request when data has changed on the server, it's "pushed" to the client
exceptions for normal code flow is bad mmmkay.
15:14
But I said please!!
well I guess it's okay then
@Jimbo okay, will it work for 100k+ clients simultaneously ?
dunno. maybe spirit of contradiciton
@AlmaDo doesn't that depend on the underlying event lib?
A thought which came to mind after reading the post on ircmaxwell blog's about mvc
15:16
@Jimbo doesn't that depend on underlying hardware restrictions? (:
@AlmaDo Well that's something that's not too expensive relatively and is also within the realms of our control
@RandomCouch Probably not. The communications layer is handled by your web server. If it's possible at all, it would have to be Apache + mod_php, where PHP is loaded inside Apache
Ah I see, thanks @Machavity, do you think it would be possible with JS, since it runs on the client's browser?
@RandomCouch I'll be honest. Since none of the SSL protocols are safe to use anymore, you should only be using TLS at this point
Oh yeah absolutely, I am @Machavity, it's just that TLS 1.0 is also unsafe anymore and because of that, my Hosting Provider has disabled TLS 1.0 on the server, and because of that IE10 users in an enterprise environment cannot access my websites when they're in HTTPS, because IE10 has only TLS 1.0 by default, and they need admin privileges to enable higher TLS versions
so I thought if I manage to detect what TLS protocol is enabled, and if TLS 1.1 and higher is not enabled on the client's browser, I could display a message telling them they either need to upgrade browsers or try to enable TLS 1.1 and 1.2 on their browser
15:22
That doesn't sound right. TLS 1.0 itself doesn't have any issues. Some of the protocols it can use are insecure but that means you just remove those from the list of accepted protocols. Turning off TLS 1.0 is going to cause a LOT of headaches
I know, but unfortunately, as only the developer in the company I have no choice over the matter, it sucks. We want to remain PCI compliant, and if we have TLS 1.0 we are no longer PCI compliant
TLS 1.0 is on notice as of PCI DSS 3.1
Note: SSL and early TLS are not
considered strong cryptography and
cannot be used as a security control
after June 30, 2016. Prior to this date,
existing implementations that use SSL
and/or early TLS must have a formal
Risk Mitigation and Migration Plan in
place.
Effective immediately, new
implementations must not use SSL or
early TLS.
What will happen at Jun 30/2016?
@RandomCouch TLS 1.0 is on notice only and only bad for NEW applications. Doesn't sound like yours it
@AlmaDo Sounds like PCI compliance will force dropping TLS 1.0
That's true @Machavity, I would have to try and convince my Hosting provider, who seems to be convinced that because of the cryptographic weaknesses in TLS 1.0 it must be disabled
Entities using
SSL and early TLS must work towards upgrading to a
strong cryptographic protocol as soon as possible.
The only good news I have for you is that July 29 is when Win10 hits for free. Hopefully your IE10 users go to Edge 12 as a result
15:29
Oh yeah I'd love that, I mean even IE11 has TLS 1.1 by default at least
so IE11 users have no issues
IE10 should automatically update for them, but like I said, enterprise environment. They need an IT guy to do that
But yeah I understand my hosting company disabling TLS 1.0
it's to remain PCI compliant. Because if they have it enabled, we get this message:
This vulnerability is not recognized in the National Vulnerability Database. TLS v1.0 violates PCI DSS and is considered an automatic failing condition.
when it's scanned for pci compliance
This is in effect already
See that's just stupid
If there were a CVE out for TLS 1.0 I could see it but it's just weaker is all
Yep, this will have a huge impact
on a lot of websites
There is a user who answered "PCI DSS does prohibit TLSv1.0. No you wont be able to show a message to TLSv1.0 users without violating PCI DSS, because showing a message to end users means you have to finish TLSv1.0 negotiation. Technically its possible to configure the server side script to check the SSL enviroment variables for TLSv1.0 and show a error message in that case, but thats not allowed per PCI DSS."
So that kind of sucks for me, I can't even display a message telling users to upgrade browsers
At least some pages will be in http
so for the https links, if I can detect which TLS version the user has on their browser, I can change those links to link to a page with the message
otherwise I'd have to detect the browser and to thhis for IE10 and lower, and for IE10 users who have TLS 1.1 and/or 1.2 enabled, the message page will display a link to Continue to the selected page or go back, but at least they'll see a message tellign them at least TLS 1.1 is required
15:45
The only other thing you can do is tell them to use Chrome/Firefox instead of IE10. Which corporate environments won't like but they're going to have to make that move sooner or later
Actually Chrome is way better for corporate envs anyway, it's got a lot more granular control via gpo than IE
Ugh, meme on reddit about a confession bear of a guy saying his company think he's an expert but googles everything he ever writes. Comments are full of "Me too, that's fine". ITT fake developers.
you might be noticing a hard break in generations
most of people here grew up before google was source of all the knowledge
but we are seeing first people from generation where google has always been there
it's also the same group of people who are not aware that there are other search engines out there
It makes me question a lot of professions. Like all medical doctors are labelled "doctors" like you can brand us all "developers". Big difference in caliber of developers, think that translates to doctors too?
be scared, be very scared
/me looks at still stress-fractured right tibia
you shouldnt be jumping from second floor at your age
lol. Gotta remember that I am not @Jimbo's face young anymore.
I'm not that young looking am I? And that's with facial hair
15:57
I'll flash my ROM with avocados, see if I can reconnect a severed artery.
lol yeah
@Jimbo It'll pay off in 15 years.
You'll have to start paying adult bus fare though.
lol @tereško. That's the level of stupid that is so stupid you have to assume it's a troll for your own sanity.
I pegged you as about 23-24 years old.
15:59
Me, @igorw, @Danack's beard competitor and another guy... wish I'd actually learned their names, awesome crew
learnt*. We're British, gotta keep our pride.
@Trowski I added it to Packagist within minutes of the initial push to GitHub: packagist.org/packages/sebastian/resource-operations
@NikiC just pushed the phpdbg tests :-) Is it better than before?^^
Anyway, going to use C# to build a tomato to download more ram so I can teleport home as it's 5pm. Catch you guys later.
@Fabor I really suspect that most of these people are genuine
16:02
posted on July 20, 2015 by kbironneau

/* by Alex */

@RandomCouch This gets worse for you if true. CloudFlare says TLS 1.1 is also out under PCI 3.1
@Trowski And "composer install" on PHPUnit's master works just fine. Although it was really slow last time I did it (WLAN over the Atlantic is slow) ...
@SebastianBergmann Weird... I swear it wasn't there when I searched for it.
@SebastianBergmann Install fails for me because it can't find ~1.0 of resource-operations.
@Trowski PHPUnit's master has "minimum-stability": "dev". Why would it need a release?
16:06
@Machavity Well I suppose I'll detect the visitors browser with PHP and change the HTTPS links to link to a warning page
Shouldn't be too difficult of a workaround
user895378
@RandomCouch This doesn't represent a problem at all. If the user has negotiated an insufficient TLS version you simply don't proceed with the transaction in the first place. Instead you show them a message saying it's not secure.
user895378
Of course, the real problem here is the php web sapi in which you can't access this kind of information ;)
@SebastianBergmann Ah, that was my problem. I was requiring 5.0.x-dev as a dependency on a project, but I didn't add "minimum-stability": "dev".
@rdlowrey It does actually, because TLS 1.0 is no longer supported on my server, users who have only TLS 1.0 on their browser cannot get to my https page at all, but like I said what I will do is, on the http version of the website, I will detect the user's browser, and if it's IE, any link to https version will be replaced with a link to a warning page displaying a message
16:07
@Trowski Ah, layer 8 problem ;-)
user895378
@RandomCouch That's not your problem, though.
user895378
@RandomCouch I would seriously advise against trying to detect the user's browser here as it's trivial for me to maliciously fake my user agent and take advantage of your "check"
@rdlowrey Haha yeah I agree that it shouldn't be! :P Unfortunately I work for a company who produces websites that are visited by a lot of people working in the government
@rdlowrey that's true but the purpose of the check is to either replace the https links or not to a page that has a message, even if you mask your user browser you will not gain anything out of it
user895378
My point is this: new PCI requirements exist for a reason. You can't thwart that and your company will be liable if you implement this check via user-agent strings.
Talking about sebastian/resource-operations. Any feedback on github.com/sebastianbergmann/resource-operations would be appreciated. Basically I need a list of functions that operates on resources. Best way I could think of was to use the information Rasmus put together in raw.githubusercontent.com/rlerdorf/phan/master/includes/…
That information is required for github.com/sebastianbergmann/phpunit/issues/1604 to work.
16:10
...
@SebastianBergmann Usually is :-)
@rdlowrey well of course, that's why TLS 1.0 is disabled now, but is getting the user's browser via user-agent strings something that will break PCI compliance?
user895378
@RandomCouch You have two options: don't allow connections using < TLS 1.2 or use a server technology that gives you access to the TLS protocol in use inside the dynamic application. This is not a difficult problem.
user895378
@RandomCouch It is if you use that to determine if it's okay to proceed (Because you can't equate the user-agent with the TLS protocol in use)
user895378
Things like apache will allow you to require TLS1.2 only for specific resources, though.
user895378
16:11
DO NOT try to use a user-agent string to determine if the TLS protocol in use is acceptable.
Right, but let's say the user is using IE10 with TLS 1.0, and clicks "proceed" after they see a warning that if they don't have at least TLS 1.1 the page won't load
in either case
it will do what it's supposed to right?
user895378
I can only get the browser, not the TLS protocol
user895378
@RandomCouch Which is why it's 100% unsafe.
if I detect IE I display a message that says they need to upgrade browsers or enable TLS 1.2
16:12
@SebastianBergmann just fyi: I/O (like on databases via PDO or mysqli) doesn't always use resources
user895378
I can send a request with an IE user agent and use TLS 1.1 to do so.
user895378
I then automate the process and "click" proceed.
user895378
You simply cannot rely on that.
user895378
The only thing you can rely on is disallowing TLS protocol negotations < 1.2 on the specific resources requiring PCI compliance.
@NikiC the list of phpdbg tests until now: github.com/php/php-src/tree/master/sapi/phpdbg/tests
16:14
@SebastianBergmann how have you generated the list? Is there a way to do it programmatically perhaps?
@rdlowrey why are we excluding TLS 1.1 though
I think it's safe, no?
user895378
@RandomCouch makes no difference if it's safe or not. PCI says you can't use it.
user895378
12 mins ago, by Machavity
@RandomCouch This gets worse for you if true. CloudFlare says TLS 1.1 is also out under PCI 3.1
Also I'm sorry but I still don't understand how someone can take advantage of the user agent check, sure they can fake it, but what they get out of it is just replaced links. They will still only be able to access the HTTPS version if TLS 1.1 or higher is enabled on their browser, therefore it's still safe
damn
@rdlowrey I think you're misunderstanding his dilemma. He has a lot of users on IE10 who ONLY have IE10 (yay gov/enterprise admins with their heads up their rear ends). So if they try to access his website they won't get anything except an IE10 failure notice. His bosses want him to tell those users that they have to upgrade/change browsers. So he wants to detect the user agent and send a message that way. otherwise they get a failure without any understandable error
16:16
@rdlowrey although a PCI compliance test was done and my server was PCI compliant
although it supports 1.1
user895378
@Machavity Which is why he simply needs to configure his webserver to require 1.2 for the specific resources dealing with credit card information.
well it does use 1.2
@RandomCouch Based on more reading there's strong hints that 3.2 will nix 1.1 but it's not nixed now
it disallows 1.0
says 1.1 and 1.2 is enabled
user895378
@RandomCouch Right, and if 1.1 is allowed then I can force the server to negotiate a 1.1 setting.
16:17
Ah I see, good to know @Machavity, I don't know what nixing is exactly but I'll look it up :P
user895378
This conversation is why I'm terrified to use credit cards online.
@rdlowrey That's the point. IE10 won't work with his web server at all RIGHT NOW. IE10 does not support TLS > 1.0
lol, I understand the risks don't worry, however why would we remain PCI compliant if 1.1 is not OFFICIALY unsafe
is unsafe*
user895378
@RandomCouch There is no "OFFICIALLY" ... you have until June 30 of next year to completely disallow TLS1.1
user895378
The end.
16:19
ooh
Yes I know I know
That's already being worked out
My boss always follows up with PCI compliance
user895378
Anyway ... I'm done here. If you decide to use user-agent strings for anything please let me know the URL of your website so I can steal your users' credit card information.
Can you explain to me how that can be done
from just using the check to have links replaced
@SebastianBergmann Could you explain the reasoning behind the assumption that a test using a resource cannot be a small test?
@RandomCouch Also, regardless of what PCI says, I always aim for an A on SSL Labs. PCI doesn't talk at all about the insecure exchanges but that's no reason to allow them
Same @Machavity and my server has A
16:21
@Trowski it's unlikely to be a true unit test
@Machavity although when I scan it, it says TLS 1.1 and 1.2 are supported
user895378
@Machavity You can get an A on the qualys test but not be pci compliant.
@rdlowrey Never claimed otherwise. But PCI is silent about, say, Diffie-Hellman weaknesses
@rdlowrey also I just need to figure out a way to tell my IE users that they really have to upgrade, and that it's not OUR fault, you know? Because we get called and complained at
because their IE isn't loading out websites
our*
user895378
@Machavity If you use ephemeral keys and elliptic curve dh this is a non-issue.
user895378
16:26
Blanket statements like, "don't worry about PCI, just get an A on this test over here" are harmful.
user895378
PCI compliance is about your liability as a programmer and your company's liability if something goes wrong.
We do worry AND struggle with PCI
user895378
If you get an A on an online security test that won't help you one bit when your company gets sued for not complying with PCI after a data breach.
Actually no
we just struggle because of IE
@rdlowrey btw we don't save credit card information on our server
so
There's not as much risk as you think
we just have to watch for keeping the packets secure
-A INPUT -i eth0 -p icmp -m icmp --icmp-type 8 -j DROP
Best security eva!
16:29
@CiaranMcNulty That's a consequence of being unable to mock resources. I thought marking a test as small, medium, or large was more about execution time.
@Sherif why dropping pings?
@bwoebi Drop all teh things!
user895378
the ashley madison data leak is so popcorn worthy
I couldn't find a "Drop it like it's hot" iptables rule :/
@rdlowrey oh wow, a hookup site that was hacked. How horrifying.
@Trowski I'm not sure what @SebastianBergmann's definitions of small, medium and large are. They don't appear to just be time based
user895378
16:33
@Sherif The awesomeness is going to come when we find out which public figures were registered ... the politician blowback should be fantastic.
user895378
But for regular folks as well ... how horrifying must it be for every single person registered on that site knowing that it may soon be possible to do a simple name search on their database.
@bwoebi I know. This list is a start. Eventually it will list classes such as SplFileInfo etc. as well as function name prefixes etc. But thanks for the input!
heh, this is my shocked face 0.0
@Sherif It's not just a 'hookup site', it's a filth-ridden sex festival. Might as well be the JavaScript room.
7
Shots fired
user895378
16:35
Except it's specifically for cheating ... So the social stigma of being associated with that will be off the charts. So popcorn-worthy.
@Jimbo Ouch, did you just compare the JavaScript room with sub-scum?
@Jimbo Don't insult that website by comparing it to Room 17
(need to be a partridge fan to get the reference)
On the spare gfx card now. Fingers crossed for no crashes. Unfortunately this is me for now.
16:36
@SebastianBergmann though I'm not particularly convinced why that's necessary… (I mean blacklisting I/O)
Isn't Ashley Madison an affair orientated website?
@Fabor What you're... danack?
I think Danack would have made a great Gimli.
If so, must be a lot of panicking spouses atm.
@SebastianBergmann I mean maybe something like parsing the PHP manual?
@Jimbo heh
16:38
@Trowski The idea goes back to a discussion I had years ago at GTAC. Google uses the terminology small, medium, large. It's explained to some degree in books.google.de/books/about/… IIRC. In a nutshell, a small test is a pure unit test that finishes in miliseconds, tests one unit of code in isolation from all collaborators, and does not leave the context of the JVM, for instance. Not I/O, etc. is allowed.
@CiaranMcNulty Rasmus' arginfo.php was ... already code providing an array. I'm lazy :)
@SebastianBergmann I know PhpStorm for instance has a bunch of stubs of functions with nice docblocks etc. Might be extractable from there
@CiaranMcNulty Yea, they just parse php-doc
It's pretty trivial to write a script that will quickly translate the XML to JSON.
Pull requests welcome, as always. Or maybe I'll hack on this some more on trains and planes over the next two weeks.
@SebastianBergmann It'd be great to have a marker for I/O in .phpt so that we can exclude the slow tests…
(I mean php-src tests now)
@bwoebi Makes a lot of sense, yes.
user895378
16:42
@Fabor AFAIK
user895378
@Fabor tons!
user895378
@bwoebi this would be amazing.
@SebastianBergmann Do you have something to run the @small tests first, etc?
@rdlowrey but nobody wants to walk a 12000 tests or so and mark them all individually…
@CiaranMcNulty Not yet.
Time to cook some dinner and unwind.
16:48
@SebastianBergmann I suppose that makes sense. Icicle has many tests that perform I/O, but finish very quickly because it's using, for example, a socket pair to check if the result was as expected. So enforcing that would mean marking those tests as medium.
@Trowski I think having a difference between @medium and @large is good enough
Yeah, I agree.
@bwoebi I'm using a socket pair essentially as a mock, but my use case is uncommon.
If you use MongoDB and like sleeping at night, don't read this line from the source code: https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-java-driver/blob/1d2e6faa80aeb5287a26d0348f18f4b51d566759/src/main/com/mongodb/ConnectionStatus.java#L213
6
@Trowski socket pair to where?
@bwoebi I create a socket pair using stream_socket_pair() as mocks for network sockets. So then I can control what is read or written as well as verify the expected data is read or written at any time.
16:58
@Trowski totally didn't know that function
So it appears I'm doing external I/O, but I'm really not.
@ScottArciszewski wat
@Trowski well, you're doing syscalls.
@ScottArciszewski HOLY F*CK
@bwoebi That's true, so it's not a true mock, but it's as close as I can get with code that depends on resources.
17:00
@DaveRandom return rand(0, 1) ? 'webscale' : 'ay caramba!';
3
@ScottArciszewski nice. !_ok && Math.random() <= 0.1 … much more readable^^
a weather widget for the terminal github.com/schachmat/wego
@bwoebi yes, it 's very nice :)
@NikiC sapi/phpdbg/create_test.php should make creating the tests easy.
… and now feel free to add yourself some :-D
what type of connection php uses to connect to mysql? tcp? udp? something else?
17:13
@Stol3x Connections to "localhost" always and only seek out a socket file, otherwise TCP to the specified host and port.
@Charles Thanks :)
questions over questions: If "->" is an operator in PHP, why isn't it listed on the Operator Precedence page? Because it's context senstivie and precendence varies? Is this something we need to update the docs for for PHP 7?
@bwoebi cool
@hakre because it has no specific precedence … it doesn't need one… because as you said, it's bound to either a parenthesis or a variable
so this won't change in PHP 7 then? Only the syntax changes, and what was a syntax error earlier might now work?
17:18
@hakre yes
thx
@Ocramius sprintf(rand(0, 1) ? '%s' : 'much %s, ay caramba!', 'webscale'); ^^
@hakre spanish doge?
and I didn't know you attend so many ruby meethings recently... .
@KevinMGranger doge, the dog? or doge the ... ?
@hakre doge is a meme that uses "much ___" a lot :)
ah, that white dog there, right? is his name doge?
17:26
@hakre stop misusing my debit card >.<
I found it on Wikipedia.
@Ocramius Ruby has been created on the foundation of blood diamonds (you can still see this in their logo).
(for PHP ivory was enough)
is it a bad idea to put
strings in constants in interfaces
that you can use as Enums?
@ziGi no
right?
because I went to an interview and they made a note that I do that
but for me it makes code more readable to have them grouped
well, still depends tho
constants are usually referred to state comparison - maybe you would like to call methods on the object instead?
17:40
Ahm
not really
I am talking about setup
may I give you a github link?
I just wrap them like that for readability
but people say it's too complicated
But I get your point
@ziGi Kinda feels like a misuse of interfaces
@CiaranMcNulty Any thoughts on merging my PR sometime soon for adding param and return types to Prophecy?
Yeah but I've read that makes things more readable
@JaakKütt also if used in more places
but that's just someone's opinion
the question is
what are the biggest problems this might cause
I come from Java background and I am used that things are in packages
maybe that's my problem
@ziGi Just a thought; "Oops" shouldn't appear in an exception message.
throw new Oops();
@DanLugg hah :D
17:53
@ziGi Confusion would be my guess :D Is anything implementing them interfaces?
I've seen it, it looks kind of nice to people that didn't do their setup properly
@JaakKütt confusion to the developers?
Seriously though; reserve exception messages for technical information related to the exception thrown. If you wish to display such information to the end-user, then translate it at rendering time.
Good morning
@ziGi who else is reading your source? :D
<h1>Oops</h1>
<p>Something went wrong.</p>
<?php if ($showTheException): ?>
	<pre><?= $exception->getTraceAsString() ?></pre>
<?php endif; ?>
^^ Or whatever.
17:55
@ircmaxell Morning (tho almost 9pm here^^)
@JaakKütt some lead developers. They asked me what are those half-classes
@DanLugg that's nice, can I steal it?
lol, sure?
haha :D
but I have Whoops already
so the HTML formatting doesn't work
Point being, don't put cutesy messages in exceptions. If you want to display pikachu dropping a cup of marmalade on a 500, then do that, but don't base64 encode the image into the exception message.
2
I seem to recall an extension that does that
17:58
Dan Lugg, oh but isn't that removing the fun of our job?
ext/pikachumalade.c
Or should we be just grumpy people that don't do it for fun
:D
let me ask Anthony
@ircmaxell @JoeWatkins do you have opinion on the topic of putting only constants in interfaces just to make code more readable and maybe create a single point of change?
65
A: Pros and Cons of Interface constants

ircmaxellWell, I think that it boils down to the difference between good and good enough. While in most cases you can avoid the use of constants by implementing other patterns (strategy or perhaps flyweight), there is something to be said for not needing a half dozen other classes to represent a concep...

18:01
@ircmaxell great, thank you
what he said ...
ok, thank you very much
this solves it
If it were me, I would create an abstract class for RequestVerbs and use a static array rather than constants.
can you elaborate please?
But then again I rarely ever find constants useful in PHP.
18:05
So you use strings?
You're taking on the overhead of a string anyway there.
I would just rather be able to separate what I need from a Request type and a Response type.
But then again that's why he's saying Good Enough
yep
it's just that people have different opinion
and some find it bad
and I have to explain to them why depending on the case it is not bad
since there is no universal truth, there is a relative best decision based on the use case
Don't try to fight that kind of battle. It's a losing battle. Instead, focus on why it's bad in that particular case.
true
but it is because I was applying for a position and the lead developer was unhappy about it
but I got the feedback through the HR
which was strange
because I had to explain to the HR
why in some cases there is no absolute truth
That's not strange. They're not usually allowed to give you feedback directly. But if you have to defend yourself after the interview is already over you're already too late :p
18:13
yeah but that means your fate depends on the Lead
that's kind of stupid
Your fate depends on your ability to know which battles not to fight ;)
haha :D
true
but I think it is fine
I told them if I was perfect I wouldn't have anywhere to grow
just dropped hot tea all down myself, not graceful, many swears came out ... and I've never got naked that quickly before ...
wow, so bad
@ziGi Very true, but you also have to be able to demonstrate that you're willing to learn in order for that argument to stand on its own hind legs.
18:16
Well I told them, so it is fine
thanks for the feedback
The only way to do that is to not bring a new argument to the table. Instead, hear the other person out and try to use their own logic against them. If they're wrong they will surely have nowhere to hide from their own logic. If they're right, you learned something!
The point is you don't come off as the guy that thinks he knows the answer, but the guy who's trying to get to the answer. It turns out to be surprisingly effective.
Nice, thanks for the life lesson
greetings
how are you guys
whatsup
18:42
I have some code that for the input ['foo', 'bar'] returns the string:
<link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'  media='screen'  href='/css/foo,bar?1.2.3' />
Is there a decent way of testing that in PHPUnit? i.e. validating a HTML fragment
user895378
function testLinkGenerate() {
    $input = ["foo", "bar"];
    $actual = linkGenerate($input);
    $expected = ...;
    $this->assertSame($expected, $actual);
}
user895378
?
Hello everybody I'm hoping you can help me. I'm trying to work on a WordPress site and I'm trying to get the categories from a post type. Now I have done that but I'm also trying to get the cat link also.
@bseekinsDEV Alright, fine. I've invested a tremendous amount of my time and resources to find the answer for you. This took up an entire 15 seconds of my day so I certainly hope it's helpful codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/get_category_link
Thank you @sher
18:49
That's not my name.
Yeah.....I don't like that so much as it's just hard-coding the result i.e. if the format changes (but leaves the html valid) then the test will break. I guess if it's going to be valid XML, then I could just check the attributes after parsing it with SimpleXml.
Sorry I meant to type the full name but I hit enter to fast.
I found that page already (yes took me 10 seconds also) haha but for some reason when I use the get_category_link() it doesn't work.
@Danack S'what I was about to suggest... though DOM because simple is poo.
@bseekinsDEV As in, it sits on the couch all day and refuses to go out and get a job?
user924016
lol
18:53
If I have something that takes a regex snippet (no delims or mods) what'd be a good name for a function that returns it in valid PCRE form? getCompiledExpression()?
getCompiledExpression('[0-9]'); // "(^[0-9]$)i"
No, more like I have the categories listing but I'm trying to figure out how to use the get_category_link()
Is it possible that you could figure out how to use it by reading its documentation?
Well I tried that and I couldn't figure it out. Maybe I'm just not understanding it .
I'm still new to PHP and WordPress
Which part don't you understand? Let's start there.
ok
So right now I've coded so the categories get pulled from the post and listed on the page
so here is the screenshot of the code. gyazo.com/fa47c29d49706955429243b7ab40bdf2
18:57
@DanLugg buildPCRE ?
as you can see I do a foreach and grab the category and it list on the page perfectly. Now some of the categories have links that go to pages. So I'm trying to figure out how to get the categories listed.
@Danack That'd work. I dummied the signature, it's a method returning a "compiled" property, hence get*, but getPcre'd work too
@bseekinsDEV OK, I've spent an additional 2 seconds of my life to get the answer codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/… I certainly hope it's helpful.
That was a great deal of effort for me.

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