AuthManager is coming, which will make it easier to add alternative
methods of authentication. But in order to do that, we need to finally
get around to ripping the password-related bits out of the User class.
The password expiration handling isn't used anywhere in core or
extensions in Gerrit beyond testing for expired passwords on login and
resetting the expiry date on password change. Those bits have been
inlined and the functions removed; AuthManager will allow each
"authentication provider" to handle its own password expiration.
The methods for fetching passwords, including the fact that mPassword
and other fields are public, has also been removed. This is already
broken in combination with basically any extension that messes with
authentication, and the major use outside of that was in creating
system users like MassMessage's "MediaWiki message delivery" user.
Password setting methods are silently deprecated, since most of the
replacements won't be available until AuthManager. But uses in unit
testing can be replaced with TestUser::setPasswordForUser() immediately.
User::randomPassword() and User::getPasswordFactory() don't really
belong in User either. For the former a new PasswordFactory method has
been created, while the latter should just be replaced by the two lines
to create a PasswordFactory via its constructor.
Bug: T47716
Change-Id: I2c736ad72d946fa9b859e6cd335fa58aececc0d5
* Also added query continuation support to findHooks.php.
* Also fixed query continuation support in importSiteScripts.php
(broken by 2b3f4d821c).
Change-Id: I7ef62d370f5e2f598ac4c5857ac0dbf3ee4c8fa2
Follows-up I1343872de7, Ia533aedf63 and I2df2f80b81.
Also updated usage in text in documentation and the
installer LocalSettingsGenerator.
Most of them were handled by this regex:
- find: (require|include|require_once|include_once)\s*\(\s*(.+?)\s*\)\s*;$
- replace: $1 $2;
Change-Id: I6b38aad9a5149c9c43ce18bd8edbab14b8ce43fa
Squiz.WhiteSpace.LanguageConstructSpacing:
Language constructs must be followed by a single space;
expected "require_once expression" but found
"require_once(expression)"
It is a keyword (e.g. like `new`, `return` and `print`). As
such the parentheses don't make sense.
Per our code conventions, we use a space after keywords like
these. We appeared to have an unwritten exception for `require`
that doesn't make sense. About 60% of require/include usage
was missing the space and/or had superfluous parentheses.
It is as silly as print("foo") or return("foo"), it works
because keywords have no significance for whitespace between
it and the expression that follows, and since experessions can
be wrapped in parentheses for clarity (e.g. when doing string
concatenation or mathematical operations) the parenthesis
before and after basiclaly just ignored.
Change-Id: I2df2f80b8123714bea7e0771bf94b51ad5bb4b87