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11:34
Lets say you have 40 different entities in your domain model. Do you find it better to put all entities under say Namespace\Entity and all repositories for this entity in a separate namespace Namespace\Repository or to have a namespace per entity and put anything related to that entity in there?
So you'd have Namespace\Entity\Customer and inside that namespace you have the entity, repository and anything else related to the entity
3
Q: Complex merge function with PHP

Basheer AhmedI've been struggling around whole day by creating merge function for multidimensional array. The scenario is little different to elaborate in words instead I would try to explain it with practical example. $actual_array = [ 'assets' => [1, 2, 3], 'liabilities' => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], ...

@littlepootis Oooh, OK. I haven't actually heard him say it in-game. That's too bad actually, as it's awesome :D
11:50
Hello :D
Not sure if this is the place to ask, but is anyone able to help me with this? stackoverflow.com/questions/36783355/…
What have you tried so far?
@BradleyHodges Are you using MD5 for passwords?
Oh, everything! I've spent the last few days trying to get this working... I must have been through at least 50 pages/websites
Yes
11:53
@BradleyHodges Don't.
Plz don't judge.. It's temporary ahaha
!!docs password_hash
[ password_hash ] Creates a password hash
See that ^ :)
Oh, thankyou :)
11:55
What are some good ways of doing authorization for queries? I can have say a CustomerRepository interface which a SecuredCustomerRepository implements or something and do the checks in there but it just seems messy to me
@MadaraUchiha have you watched Kill la Kill?
@Saitama I have not, and it's on my list, after I'm done with Berserk
I see :D +1
I was thinking of using something like a query bus. I want to get a customer so do $queryBus->query(new CustomerQuery($id)) and inside the bus an event listener can do authorization. It could get out of hand quickly though with lots of different ways to query for customers
Hmm actually there might be a way to tame it. Have a CustomerQuery object which is just for get one customer and another which deals with getting a collection of customers. You would set the criteria on the query object, send it through the bus, an authorization event listener could examine the criteria and determine if the authenticated user can perform such a query with the given criteria. Is this an awful idea though?
I definitely prefer to have my authorization around my application model layer instead of say in the framework you are using whether it's Symfony or whatever. I don't like doing authorization of my domain layer via URL patterns mostly.
12:44
@tibanez What most people do is effectively a firewall/permissions layer around the operations......I don't believe that is actually good, just what works.
What I'm going to do the next time I have to write something like that is have semantically meaningful role/permission objects for the operations:
interface UserRepo {
    public function getUser($userID, UserRepoRead $permission);

    public function updateUser($userID, UserRepoUpdate $permission);
}
And then in Auryn it's trivial to create delegate functions that create the Permissions object from say the user's session/oauth token etc.
@tibanez naming things is hard:
I'm currently putting all repositories separately like:

Project\Repo\UserRepo - the interface for the user Repo
Project\Repo\SQL\UserSQLRepo - the SQL implementation
Project\Repo\Stub\UserStubRepo - a stub repo for testing
But I only have one domain in the project.
If I had multiple domains, I'd probably do:
Project\Domain1\Entities
Project\Domain1\Repo
> js: ['10','10','10','10','10'].map(parseInt) [10, NaN, 2, 3, 4]
@Danack I'm unsure what I think about the extra layer on top being so cemented in the design and the API
Anybody can recommend a library for tokenizing /parsing a php file?
That doesn't include linebreaks / whitespace does it?
Oh I see it does actually include linenrs
Anyway / anything existing I can use to also find whitespace etc?
@Danack sigh, yes, that's what happens when you fail to read the docs
Also, I showed this behavior here a couple weeks ago and also explained why it happens
@MadaraUchiha Whats your view on DAL authorization?
13:23
@PeeHaa you can probably get them with its lexer, or use php.net/tokenizer... or what are you trying to do?
@PaulCrovella Think php codesniffer like functionality
I take it you don't want to use cs though
I might use it if there is now standalone package for what I want to have
13:41
hey how can i execute a php script every 10 minutes??i want to make a web scrapper .which scrap and save a data of a specific site.currently i have to visit that php page to save .but how can i make it happens automattically without visiting it
use a cronjob
cronjob?
Yes
@PeeHaa can i use it in a web server?
Google it
13:44
ok ok thn i'm already reading
@MadaraUchiha I assume it actually happens regardless of whether the programmer has read the docs or not?
Ekn
Ekn
14:07
mornin
Wes
Wes
'ternoon
15:11
@JoeWatkins I'm somewhat here.
Ekn
Ekn
hmm.. this is my case without net
too much silence
Is it possible in PHP to dynamical extend a class or implement an interface at runtime? Say an object depends on some interface, at runtime is it possible to create an object which implements this interface and inject it in?
Wes
Wes
This site can’t be reached
miriadna.com’s server DNS address could not be found.
Try:
Reloading the page
Checking the connection
Checking the proxy, firewall, and DNS configuration
ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED
probably - haven't used it myself yet.
15:46
This looks like Java
It could be what I'm looking for though
Thanks
42 secs ago, by tibanez
This looks like Java
On of the reasons why I haven't used it.
I like them for stubs, haven't had another use for them yet.
I haven't even had a chance to install PHP7 yet
Wes
Wes
occasional decoration
Once I'm finished this job I will though. I'm looking forward to it
15:49
Is that like an occasional table?
Wes
Wes
lol
Ekn
Ekn
@Wes uh sorry o.o it was just a house in a forest
looks peaceful
Ekn
Ekn
feels peaceful too, not always though
I might look for similar places in Europe for the next year
It's been 3years here already
16:05
We do really need some better medium to discuss RFCs over. To avoid it being completely lot in the noise, I think this is important: news.php.net/php.internals/92696
it's php, nobody can be bothered to build a web application that reflects the specific needs of an organization
Does anyone know any alternatives to ImageMagick? Or a good tutorial to install a jp2000 delegate for ImageMagick?
@RizkyFakkel you would need to install a JP2000 library and then recompile ImageMagick for your system.
you could look at using an online image processing service if you don't want to manage this yourself.
> A privacy reminder from Google
lel
Ekn
Ekn
16:35
Darn I just saw a bright yellow butterfly
o/
16:55
@JoeWatkins could you add a license to your bundle repos? See github.com/github/linguist/issues/2968#issuecomment-213949141
17:06
Any newbies to PHP/webdev around? Or anyone have an example of a complete website (however small) written by a newbie in PHP? Specifically, it should not be using the front-end controller pattern or implementing REST or anything like that. Just plain old simple sites with a few php scripts sprinkled around for some form submission or something of that sorts.
@Danack parseInt is a function that takes 2 parameters
Array.prototype.map() accepts a callback with 3 parameters
Redundant parameters are ignored
So for each element, .map() will call parseInt() with element as the first argument, and index as the second
So it becomes [parseInt(10, 0), parseInt(10, 1), parseInt(10, 2), parseInt(10, 3)]
...it's a joke son.
@MadaraUchiha so you are telling me JS isn't broken? you are wrong
> A privacy reminder from Google: You have no privacy.
Have a nice day (we'll know if you don't).
11
@AwalGarg JS is broken, but if you're going to whine about it, at least use cases where it's actually broken, and not your misunderstanding of basic programming concepts ;)
kthxbye
As long as we agree on the JS being broken part... I am happy. gosh what a terribly fucked up language. sigh
17:14
@AwalGarg I don't know, I mean, JS: designed in 10 days by one person, most popular language ever, has been around for over 20 years and survived the test of time in one of the most hostile environments ever
Haskell: Designed by a bunch of very smart people over very long time, in practice, a purely theoretical language that no one actually uses in production.
ok, I get it. You can troll better than me.
2
c'mon no newbies here today? where they all go :(
cough, cough
I mean if you want to help me out with my problem @AwalGarg
17:27
21 mins ago, by Awal Garg
Any newbies to PHP/webdev around? Or anyone have an example of a complete website (however small) written by a newbie in PHP? Specifically, it should not be using the front-end controller pattern or implementing REST or anything like that. Just plain old simple sites with a few php scripts sprinkled around for some form submission or something of that sorts.
I just need this ^ @RizkyFakkel
@staabm done
@JoeWatkins How do I check (compactly) whether at most one of a few given bitflags is present in a bitmask?
17:40
@bwoebi Use the nice is-pow2 test
@NikiC ah true…
@NikiC yeah, I had added it myself back then I believe
I think there's some slightly simpler variant
18
A: Test if a bitboard have only one bit set to 1

Daniel FischerSure, it's easy: int only_one_bit_set_to_one (bboard b) { return b && !(b & (b-1)); } Say b has any bits set, the least significant is bit number k. Then b-1 has the same bits as b for indices above k, a 0-bit in place k and 1-bits in the less significant places, so the bitwise and removes...

(the invert and +1 is basically a subtraction)
17:46
some things never stick in my memory ... ispow2 is one of them ...
@NikiC I've actually not made the link between just one bit set and is-pow2 equivalence… thanks ^^ My brain seems to be operating slowly today
we missed levi earlier bob
@JoeWatkins did we? when?
he pinged me at 4 ish, said he was kinda around ...
but then didn't say anything else, I guess busy ...
oh
Perhaps he's available again when it's evening in his tz
17:52
yeah, maybe, I should be able to stick around for a bit later tonight ... if we don't catch him again today, shall I email him directly and ask him to move forward with the ppl stuff ?
yeah
RFC needs some updates too first
!!wotd
alfresco: out-of-doors; in the open air.
but these we can edit in too, Joe?
Meh, knew that
17:53
yeah, but the patch is in good enough shape I think ...
Levi is good at the rfc and ppl stuff, I don't want to step on his toes ... also, he'll do a better job than me ...
Is this correct?
I hate it to accidentally pass zend_string as format value
It should be noted that their author is identical
instead of the ZSTR_VAL
woops, who done that ?
17:56
Yeah, I did ^^
:)
@Danack attributes have names
like John?
<attribute> ::= "<<" <name> [ "(" <value> { "," <value> } ")" ]
                { "," <name> [ "(" <value> { "," <value> } ")" ] } ">>".
<name>      ::= STRING.
<value>     ::= <php-constant> | <php-expression>.
no like <<require()>> or <<invariant()>>
so why do we need @, is what I'm asking ?
also, dbc doesn't need the engine any more, that's one of the biggest benefits ... maybe only real benefit ...
that's kinda the point, I think ...
I'm writing an email to be clearer......basically in 2 years when we want <<dbc(...)>> to be the official way of doing design by contract in PHP, people who have already used that word will complain about their code breaking.
@JoeWatkins okay, pushed a last update for now
18:02
i.e. there's no reservations of what the annotation means, which means adding to it will clash with some user code.
well, dbc has a pretty well defined set of words that it uses, smart people using attributes for other purposes will avoid using those for other purposes, if they want to use dbc ...
the fact is there is no reason for internals to adopt an official way if this lands ...
I can't imagine that conversation happening ... the whole idea is that we can do this stuff without needing language support for it ... attributes gives us enough to implement it without anything more from the engine ...
@JoeWatkins But if they want to do their own DBC now, they will almost certainly use those words....and if it ever gets added to core, the likelihood of clashing is incredibly high.
but I don't think it will .. not ever ...
You don't think it would need to be done internally for speed?
I'll be doing it myself, and I'll be doing it with an extension, but don't require anything more than attributes to do that ...
@bwoebi cool, will pull in a while and have a play ... also we should ping sjon at some point, after announce I think though ... he's probably getting a bit sick of me :D
18:08
@JoeWatkins hehehehe
@JoeWatkins (you know it's a separate branch, right?)
I do yeah
yeah.....and if you ever want to move that extension to core, everyone who has done something similar, but slightly different using their own implementation, will whine at you when you propose to break their code. aka there's no reservation of keywords for PHPs usage.
btw. @JoeWatkins callable & array, callable & string and callable & SomeClass are possible (but not e.g. array & string)
@Danack the chances of me proposing to merge another thing into core are literally nil, I can't speak for anyone else who might be thinking of doing the same thing ...
s/you/someone more gullible/
18:14
would you vote that in ?
I wouldn't, what is there to gain from adopting an official solution ?
I fucking hate annotations.
Including DBC ones.
@JoeWatkins another? You mean other than phpdbg?
I still would like the RFC to be as good as possible, including not blocking future uses.
it only serves to cripple the development process of said solution ...
@bwoebi yeah
@JoeWatkins yeah, bad idea to merge too new things in
after two years of dev and another one of stabilizations, yeah
but not after like 3 months, lol
18:16
or 5 days ..
@Danack asking us to prepare for every possible eventual use case now doesn't make any sense ...
Am I asking you to prepare for every possible use case? Or am I asking to prepare for the obvious ones?
well taking your idea to it's logical conclusion will have us preparing for things that most people aren't interested in ... that you are not interested in ...
I'll add an example that I would want to the email...memoization - that would be nice to have built-in....
@bwoebi urgh
fast forward a few years ... it's not just dbc, anything that is written to rely on annotations almost by definition doesn't belong in the core, talking about merging it, over every other possible solution isn't a sensible conversation to have ...
@NikiC why urgh ? (that makes sense to me)
18:22
@JoeWatkins it sorta makes sense, but it's also horrible
@NikiC I think you're missing the very subtle benefit that we don't need to involve core in future decisions about these things any more ... core hasn't been able to make decisions about this stuff for 10 or 15 years or whatever ...
fwiw, I hate heavily annotated code ... but I recognize the value of dbc, having used it before elsewhere ... and as always, there's no suggestion that because I wrote something, it's a good idea to use it ... it's just an interesting thing to me :)
@NikiC yeah, bit jarring to read ... but if you're going to have intersections, they ought to be able to do that kind of thing ... if they are going to include scalars ...
@JoeWatkins sure, it's interesting
@JoeWatkins wrong ping?
yes, sorry
@JoeWatkins nah, in general they don't include scalars, just as strings may be callable…
@JoeWatkins but interesting things aren't necessarily things we need
18:28
I meant scalars are included in the multiple types thing ... in peoples heads (mine included) unions and intersections are only useful if you have both ...
kinda strange if string is allowed in unions, but in legitimate cases (like that one) not allowed in intersections ... they should be generally disallowed .. edge cases are edgy ...
@bwoebi they sure aren't ... but I probably got another 20 or so years left at least, and need to keep myself occupied with something :D
I wouldn't recommend everyone uses dbc ...
but I'll be pushing for teams I work with to use it .... and I'll get my own way ...
code we deploy, is used to run more than 150 websites, there are hundreds of programmers working on said code ... writing tests, running them in full, this is done by a whole team of people, individuals are involved too, but it takes an entire team of people to do QA, and they are one of the hardest working teams ...
in this environment, with such a wide range of skill sets, it starts to make sense to have dbc, even if it does make code a bit ugly ... the code in production, if written to include the kinds of assertions dbc allows you to make, would be crippled ...
@JoeWatkins instead of that dbc thing, one can just do a few \assert()'s describing it too in top of function body?
or what exactly is the issue?
in some cases, yeah, but there are two problems, invariants, and perf (of assert in dev mode) ...
also, this isn't tidier
public function method() {
	assert(...);

	/* ... */

	assert(...);
}
@JoeWatkins well, if it takes more than doubly as long with a few asserts, there must be something going seriously bad
@JoeWatkins tidier than what?
having the same things in annotations, in one place ... remembering that there may be many many line of code between the two assert(), there may also be a few of them in both places ...
assert() is still not what it's supposed to be either, the cost of calling it in tens of thousands of tests is still unacceptable .. the perf of tests doesn't matter, we don't talk about that ... but in the real world, if it takes QA longer to be able to deploy hotfixes because the tests are so slow, that hurts business, it does actually matter ...
Wes
Wes
18:43
@bwoebi the thing is that preconditions and postconditions checks can be attached to interfaces as well, so you can't have them in the body
I would hate it if every component on composer deployed dbc .. I'd super hate it ... but legitimate use cases exist ...
i create a cron job to execute a php script every hour.but it doesn't work

is this correct?
Wes
Wes
interface MyArray{ function get(int $offset{NonNegative}); }
i haven't followed the discussion tho
What version of PHP was the ::class constant introduced?
TIL: mysql is going to jump from 5.7 to version 8.0 … yet another software pulling a PHP…
18:46
@tibanez 5.5
all the cool kids are doing it ...
sorry this is the correct screenshot
@PaulCrovella Thanks. How did you find that? My searches on Google turned up nothing
Wes
Wes
some jumped to 10.0.3 to 2016.1
18:47
@tibanez wiki.php.net/rfc + find in page search
@PaulCrovella As yes thank you
@JoeWatkins small reminder: you wanted to do something about the or, or, or…
which branch shall I do that in ?
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins @bwoebi donald trump wants to write yet another dumb rfc, something uber simple this time,
interface ArrayAccessReadOnly{ function offsetExists(); function offsetGet(); }
interface ArrayAccess extends ArrayAccessReadOnly{ function offsetSet() function offsetUnset(); }
or something like that. useful for immutable data structures that want to implement only read methods. useful? not? likely to not pass?
your one I guess ?
18:52
@JoeWatkins yeah, I think should be safe to merge branches now?
In that case I'll just merge it and have a single branch for the whole feature
good to get go ahead from levi I think ? not even sure if he's seen your work yet
@LeviMorrison ping ...
Nah, probably not … @Levi @Leeeeviiiiiiii… :-D
@Wes I saw this the other day ...
why wouldn't you implement the interface and throw an exception ? that would be actually better wouldn't it ??
better than "method not found"
throw RTE("you fucked up because ...")
Wes
Wes
yeah it's mostly cosmetic
I'm saying I think it may be harmful
I can be wrong, I'd just rather work with code having implemented the interface that throws exceptions when I do things I shouldn't do, rather than lets the engine throw exceptions about missing api ...
@bwoebi I'll do the error messages when we have merged, I guess there's no major rush to get them done tonight ...and it will take minutes only ...
I'm trying this new thing, where my git history isn't shit ...
Wes
Wes
18:59
it would be an error in both cases, except that php is throwing it
@JoeWatkins okay, great
@Wes but it's non specific, why is the method missing ?
@LeviMorrison just the full link if you search it: github.com/php/php-src/compare/…
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins i'm not understanding. rather than doing offsetSet(){ throw new Error("collection is read only"); } php would throw an error when doing offset assignment or unset on a collection
19:02
but interfaces can't have default implementations
Wes
Wes
i have no idea how it should be implemented
I don't think I've ever used ArrayAccess in a type declaration, but even if I were going to (and only use a subset of the methods) I'd never remember ArrayAccessReadOnly exists
@PaulCrovella semantically, you don't want readonly, but Readable
@bwoebi source?
19:09
@NikiC private chat with Johannes
@bwoebi did he mention why?
yes, sek
> (6.0 gab es mal, so wie es PHP 6 gab, MySQL Cluser hat die Version 7, und wir wollen Cluster und Server wieder näher zusammen brngen)
then again I can't remember the last time I implemented ArrayAccess either, so I may not be the market for half of it
@bwoebi ha
this is awesome
Hello,


Would you be interested to buy “phpdebug.com” domain name?


Thanks,
Danna Scott
Domain Names Broker
19:15
@JoeWatkins just ignore?
"Ask NuSphere"
LOL
yeah, probably ...
> dannascott.com: Your domain is available!
user924016
20:00
heh
20:19
What do you guys think of a DIC returning the real object wrapped with a __call method? The idea is say you ask for a CustomerRepository, the DIC returns the real object but wrapped so I can still call all the methods of the object but internally they are forwarded to some sort of caller which calls handlers before calling the method on the object and calls handlers after?
@tibanez i.e. everything the DIC returns is decorated? How will you ensure that it satisfies type hints?
Also it sounds slow
@tibanez I believe this one does that: php-di.org or with: github.com/Ocramius/ProxyManager tbh I don't recommend either...
@DaveRandom Not everything just say a repository. The type hinting doesn't bother me because I'd be using this decorated object at a high level. More specifically in a Symfony controller
I just need to wrap these damn calls so I can put some authorization into the calls to the persistence layer
Having your security be that hard to reason about doesn't sound like a great idea.
^ this
20:25
But I don't like having it done via URL matching or the like
I need it in a layer surrounding/just in my application domain model
...so put it in the domain model directly?
@DaveRandom It could be implemented a million ways though. I want it to look like you are simply calling the persistence layer but really internally it is first authorizing. I don't like decorating the repositories manually with some SecureCustomerRepository because I will end up with 80 classes
… or at least explicitly decorate the persistence layer …
20:29
@bwoebi Could you elaborate please
you can make it implement the same interface than the repository and have your auth layer wrap the repository then
but what you're proposing sounds way too magic
@bwoebi But then I end up with at least 80 classes having to make a decorated version of each repository
@tibanez you mean … you have 80 repository interfaces!?
No but I've 40 something entities and 20 something repositories but the possibility is there for the number of required repositories to grow and the number of entities to grow
@tibanez but well, depends a lot on how fine grained your checks need to be
if you eventually need to allow e.g. certain keys to be edited (in an id - key - value table for example), but others not, you need quite repository specific handling
I don't know your requirements, hence I can't tell what will suit you best.
20:35
@bwoebi In my head I was thinking this Caller would have a listener for authorization which gets called before the real method is called and in here I check the name of the object and the method, check what roles are required to call this
@tibanez I don't believe in giving authorizations for specific interface methods … You authorize actions, not method calls.
@bwoebi I was going down this road too I think. I was thinking of names to give to these read actions. Each action is mapped to a callable
Is that what you mean?
Or are you talking about action at the HTTP or controller level?
nah, the former
But then how to make a nice API out of this? You have some sort of ActionSomething something which you pass an action name into and it calls the callable mapped to this action name?
$actionSomething->perform('Entity.Customer.Find', [$id]);

Is this the sort of thing you are talking about?
@tibanez now you're going towards event dispatching
20:41
@bwoebi Yeah I just want a good solid solution for this authorization thing
This is a possible approach, but not one I like…
I have gone this road also and do not like it because I hate the API
What do you usually do for this scenario?
@tibanez Having the auth directly in domain logic
Could anyone help me out with a basic REST question?
But then are you not mixing concerns and your objects?
Now you've an object which has another dependency which it needs for doing authorization and the method gets longer since it must first do authorization before continuing
20:45
But if you don't want that, I'd really consider to create an Auth checker decorating the methods for each repository interface… That also gives you great searchability when trying to alter and track down permissions
@tibanez we anyway need to do some check somewhere to put the access denied handler
@bwoebi So much work then though recreating all the decorators.
It's a little bit of boilerplate (like 4 lines per method), but highly customizable in your needs with eventual exact details what subaction exactly was denied (editing field xyz for example)
(sure you can do that with exceptions, but I'm not fond of abusing exceptions for non-exceptional errors)
8 hours ago, by Danack
What I'm going to do the next time I have to write something like that is have semantically meaningful role/permission objects for the operations:
8 hours ago, by Danack
interface UserRepo {
    public function getUser($userID, UserRepoRead $permission);

    public function updateUser($userID, UserRepoUpdate $permission);
}
8 hours ago, by Danack
And then in Auryn it's trivial to create delegate functions that create the Permissions object from say the user's session/oauth token etc.
You want the permissions directly in the repository interface? Uuuhm…
@tibanez but that's as said, just my opinion, … I'd ask others too for their solutions and evaluate what works best for you.
Yes. It means that you can't forget to create the permissions object.
20:52
Say you have a REST API. The user is adding a message to a chat system: POST /conversations/35/messages. You need to make sure the user is allowed create messages in this conversation. Where exactly should this check occur in your opinion?
@Danack but you still can forget to check it inside the concrete Repositories code
@Danack I don't like the authorization related data to be embedded in the DAL API. It is too explicit for me. Although yes it is very clear what's going on by looking at it
@bwoebi No.....so long as a ConversationRead is created, and passed to the repo, the repo is happy.
@tibanez you should check what was said here: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/11?m=30122770#30122770
@Danack right, but the repo still has to verify the actual permission … and you're just moving that point of failure.
@bwoebi Nope. The object is the permission.
"you're just moving that point of failure." - yes to the top level of the app where the injector lives. If it's not capable of creating the specific permission object that the repo needs....then the auth requirements are not met.
20:54
@Danack I don't understand?
oh
so, it's like just an empty object and you rely on the callability?
Did I get that right? @Danack
...I type slowly...
sorry
function createConversationRead(Session $session, ....) {
	// check that the user is logged in by reading who they are from
	// the session and then asking an ACL if they have permission to ConversationRead
	if ($acl->allowed(Resource::CONVERSATION_READ, $userID)) {
	    return new ConversationRead();
	}
	throw NotAllowedResource(Resource::CONVERSATION_READ);
}

$injector->delegate(ConversationRead::class, 'createConversationRead');
good, then I understood correctly
Yes - the responsibility object is empty, and it's just the 'create-ability' that determines access or not.
Bear in mind - I have not actually implemented this yet ever.....there may be downsides.
But it expands nicely to auth via token, IP address....whatever.....and it doesn't suffer from being fragile, or hard to understand, like most 'firewall' based systems have.
20:59
the disadvantage probably is that you have to register each handler one-by-one in a big definition file
and is not pretty nicely autoloadable
Yeah....but it's only one handler per permission type per environment. Which is not too bad.
@bwoebi "is not pretty nicely autoloadable" - hmm?
$injector->delegate(ConversationRead::class, 'createConversationRead');
There is no autoloading happening, until something asks for the resource.
@Danack no function autoloading yet
right but the handlers need to be available
And I've given up and have started using static methods....so actually would be:
$injector->delegate(ConversationRead::class, 'ConversationRead::create');
Or similar.
LGTM.
What could possibly go wrong.
21:03
I see not much
Looks like a good approach
So long as I forget to ask permission, I'm going to be using that on my project at work soonish.
the disadvantage probably is that you have to pass injector around into classes to dispatch the calls to the repositories
I just don't like a parameter being passed in and not being used at all
@bwoebi I think not, just put it in the constructor?
So the error happens before the controller code is even run.
@Danack right, if you ask permission for the whole controller action
and when you want a more fine grained control (aka some things in the form only available to admins)?
21:08
(but yes, one of the things that Tier does, is allow multiple tiers of execution, so that DIC information can be built up over the running of the request, so that later tiers can rely on information built by an earlier Tier).
@Danack May you please show some example?
how this would work?
I will try to do it tomorrow - will add it to the example app.
great :-)
As … just handler specific auth is relatively easy, but from the moment on where it gets more fine-grained :-/
Someday someone will hopefully invent a master authorization layer which plugs into any app and handles every situation. That would be nice
I'd like to see the internals of say Facebook and how they handle such crazy authorization requirements
With all those privacy settings and the like it must be very complex
I doubt it is just filled with if else if else. I'd love to see it
@Danack Looking at your example above what if there is not just one ConversationRead permission? As in the user is only allowed to read conversations which he was invited to join?
You would need the conversation ID at least to be able to perform this check so how would you get the injector to inject that in?
21:32
@DaveRandom if that's your concern, you'd avoid the DIC altogether
21:48
@tibanez I will try to add that as an example.

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