@JukEboX yes, it's been awhile since I've done it, I had to do a lot of googling. It requires a certificate and a configuration file that points to the certificate. The server I had to do it for was Windows/IIS and I can't remember if the same instructions apply to Linux
I would just start googling for "configuring ldaps php" or something along those lines
I should note, that was for ldaps specifically, cause a switch from ldap (unencrypted) to ldaps was done long before the switch from TLS 1.0 to 1.2
sorry what I meant is, what type of ldap server is it
AD, OpenLDAP, Apache DS, 389DS, etc
on a different note. "VAF" is a term used for electrical wiring that's double insulated. I'm sick of removing the outer layer of insulation by hand when wiring stuff, so I tried looking online for a tool to strip the insulation. The problem is, my browser keeps auto-correcting "vaf" to "van"... And thus "van stripper" is not at all what I was looking for.
@JukEboX do you have a question with the details posted on SO, or did you just ask here? I could be asking a bunch of questions you've already written about
@JukEboX I don't have the link anymore as it was on my computer at my last job. After work, I can try digging for it. It was a text-only webpage that had step-by-step instructions.
@Stephen i am working on 4 things as once as usual. I have been trying things all morning. I have tried LDAPS://XX.XX.XX with and without the port number but it always says "Can't Connect"
@StatikStasis just fyi, I received the push notification for this ping at the exact moment I put my phone in the cradle in the van, still swearing loudly after I had banged my head really hard on the door frame while getting in. Supreme trolling work, sir.
I encountered a method call that's like $this->somePropertyAccessor()[$arrayKey] which I understand how it works, but how common is code like that? Is it a code smell?
It just seems so bizarre to call a method like that just to access a member array
There's a static property which I feel like may be better off not being static, but I'm unsure
"There's a static property" - that sounds like a different issues from the slightly rare syntax.
The code you posted is 'fine', but I personally hate it. I prefer having each line do one thing, even if that means I need to create temporary variables, as I find it easier to read and/or debug.
@cmb That's only the changelog. I though you meant the information which I removed from mysqlnd and then I put back again
The PDO_MySQL changelog doesn't contain any information other than when it was added to PHP. Which, given that it was added all in PHP 5 is now irrelevant
@Dharman yes, I see that now. But that was more a general note: whenever you're removing some old changelog entries, make sure that still relevant info in the changelog entries is already somewhere else in the manual.
For instance, a changelog might note that a parameter now supports stream protocols and not only files, but the respective parameter may still be documented to only support files.
@IluTov @IluTov My intent was to just avoid implicit primitive equivalents entirely. There may be an argument for them, but my gut feeling is that most cases where you would want them, it's because you don't actually care and a pure-unit enum will suit you better anyway.
keep up the upstream in any case. I patched a shell lib library that was not updated for quite some time. but it was actually working at the end of the day. and upstream took care within 24hs. didn't expect that, nevertheless all fine.
Otherwise in PHP userland I also have a "DestructibleString" that for example can represent a path and if __destruct() is called removes the file / directory (recursively). also handy especially in testing.
Especially w/ directories you can't have PHP remove the "file" (those UNIX days are over) when runtime exits. (for /tmp)