* Rewrite to Proxy class:
- introduced new Friendica\Network\Proxy class for in exchange of proxy_*()
functions
- moved also all PROXY_* constants there as Proxy::*
- removed now no longer needed mod/proxy.php loading as composer's auto-load
will do this for us
- renamed those proxy_*() functions to better names:
+ proxy_init() -> Proxy::init() (public)
+ proxy_url() -> Proxy::proxifyUrl() (public)
+ proxy_parse_html() -> Proxy::proxifyHtml() (public)
+ proxy_is_local_image() -> Proxy::isLocalImage() (private)
+ proxy_parse_query() -> Proxy::parseQuery() (private)
+ proxy_img_cb() -> Proxy::replaceUrl() (private)
* Ops, need to set $a here ...
* CR request:
- moved Proxy class to Friendica\Module
- extended BaseModule
* Ops, no need for own instance of $a when self::getApp() is around.
* Proxy-rewrite:
- proxy_url() and proxy_parse_html() are both non-module functions (now
methods)
- so they must be splitted into a seperate class
- also the SIZE_* and DEFAULT_TIME constants are both not relevant to module
* No instances from utility classes
* Fixed error:
- proxify*() is now located in `Friendica\Util\ProxyUtils`
* Moved back to original place, ops? How did they move here? Well, it was not
intended by me.
* Removed duplicate (left-over from split) constants and static array. Thank to
MrPetovan finding it.
* Renamed ProxyUtils -> Proxy and aliased it back to ProxyUtils.
- added curly braces around conditional code blocks
- added space between if/foreach/... and brace
- rewrote a code block so if dbm::is_result() fails it will abort, else the id
is fetched from INSERT statement
- made some SQL keywords upper-cased and added back-ticks to columns/table names
Signed-off-by: Roland Haeder <roland@mxchange.org>
- added curly braces around conditional code blocks
- added space between if/foreach/... and brace
- rewrote a code block so if dbm::is_result() fails it will abort, else the id
is fetched from INSERT statement
- made some SQL keywords upper-cased and added back-ticks to columns/table names
Signed-off-by: Roland Haeder <roland@mxchange.org>
- count() returns very different results and never a boolean (not even false on
error condition).
- therefore you should NOT use it in boolean expressions. This still *can* be
done in PHP because of its lazyness. But it is discouraged if it comes to
more clean code.
Signed-off-by: Roland Häder <roland@mxchange.org>
Only define functions if they have not been defined before, e.g. in themes. This makes it possible to override parts of a module and still use the other functions.