The template element in HTML 5 is special in the sense that it does not
add its contents into the DOM tree, but instead keeps them in a separate
shadow DOM document fragment. Interacting with the DOM tree cannot touch
the elements in the document fragment.
Closes GH-14906.
This constant is only available if it is defined by libxml2, but it is
never defined because the minimum version of libxml2 that we support had
removed XML_GLOBAL_NAMESPACE already.
These aren't actually readonly right now because `@readonly` means
nothing, and the setters are configured in php_dom.c. So no functional
changes here.
DOM spec marks these as readonly, but the problem is that this reduces
usefulness in XML contexts (like WSDL scheme handling). In context of a
browser, for which DOM was designed, this actually makes sense to have
as readonly because it is tied to the origin of the page etc. But PHP is
not a browser. This also wasn't readonly in "old DOM".
Strict error checking is always true for classes in "new DOM".
This means that we always throw an error when calling
`php_dom_throw_error`, and therefore the false return value is not
actually possible.
Also change the stub to reflect this.
Method to quote strings in XPath, similar to PDO::quote() / mysqli::real_escape_string.
Sample usage: $xp->query("//span[contains(text()," . $xp->quote($string) . ")]")
The algorithm is derived from Robert Rossney's research into XPath quoting published at https://stackoverflow.com/a/1352556/1067003
But using an improved implementation I wrote myself, originally for https://github.com/chrome-php/chrome/pull/575
This is a continuation of commit c2a58ab07d, in which several OOM error
handling was converted to throwing an INVALID_STATE_ERR DOMException.
Some places were missed and they still returned false without an
exception, or threw a PHP_ERR DOMException.
Convert all of these to INVALID_STATE_ERR DOMExceptions. This also
reduces confusion of users going through documentation [1].
Unfortunately, not all node creations are checked for a NULL pointer.
Some places therefore will not do anything if an OOM occurs (well,
except crash).
On the one hand it's nice to handle these OOM cases.
On the other hand, this adds some complexity and it's very unlikely to
happen in the real world. But then again, "unlikely" situations have
caused trouble before. Ideally all cases should be checked.
[1] https://github.com/php/doc-en/issues/1741
PHP 8.1 introduced a seemingly unintentional BC break in ca94d55a19 by
blocking the (un)serialization of DOM objects.
This was done because the serialization never really worked and just
resulted in an empty object, which upon unserialization just resulted in
an object that you can't use.
Users can however implement their own serialization methods, but the
commit made that impossible as the ACC flag gets passed down to the
child class. An approach was tried in #10307 with a new ACC flag to
selectively allow serialization with subclasses if they implement the
right methods. However, that was found to be too ad hoc.
Instead, let's abuse how the __sleep and __wakeup methods work to throw
the exception instead. If the child class implements the __serialize /
__unserialize method, then the throwing methods won't be called.
Similarly, if the child class implements __sleep and __wakeup, then
they're overridden and it doesn't matter that they throw.
For the user, this PR has the exact same behaviour for (sub)classes that
don't implement the serialization methods: an exception will be thrown.
For code that previously implemented subclasses with these methods, this
approach will make that code work again. This approach should be both BC
preserving and unbreak user's code.
Closes GH-12388.
For the test:
Co-authored-by: wazelin <contact@sergeimikhailov.com>
The entry points are duplicated: they add bloat and make it easier to forget
to change something. Make maintenance easier by using @implementation-alias.
Also, this has the nice side-effect of slightly reducing the amount of
code and binary size.
Closes GH-12158.
According to https://www.php.net/manual/en/class.domdocument:
When using json_encode() on a DOMDocument object the result will be
that of encoding an empty object.
But this was broken in 8.1. The output was `{"config": null}`.
That's because the config property is defined with a default value of
NULL, hence it was included. The other properties are not included
because they don't have a default property, and nothing is ever written
to their backing field. Hence, the JSON encoder excludes them.
Similarly, `(array) $doc` would yield the same `config` key in the
array.
Closes GH-11840.