Wordpress/wp-admin/includes/ajax-actions.php

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<?php
/**
* WordPress Core Ajax Handlers.
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage Administration
*/
/*
* No-privilege Ajax handlers.
*/
function wp_ajax_nopriv_autosave() {
$id = isset( $_POST['post_ID'] ) ? (int) $_POST['post_ID'] : 0;
if ( ! $id )
wp_die( -1 );
$message = sprintf( __('<strong>ALERT: You are logged out!</strong> Could not save draft. <a href="%s" target="_blank">Please log in again.</a>'), wp_login_url() );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'autosave',
'id' => $id,
'data' => $message
) );
$x->send();
}
/*
* GET-based Ajax handlers.
*/
function wp_ajax_fetch_list() {
global $wp_list_table;
$list_class = $_GET['list_args']['class'];
check_ajax_referer( "fetch-list-$list_class", '_ajax_fetch_list_nonce' );
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table( $list_class, array( 'screen' => $_GET['list_args']['screen']['id'] ) );
if ( ! $wp_list_table )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! $wp_list_table->ajax_user_can() )
wp_die( -1 );
$wp_list_table->ajax_response();
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_ajax_tag_search() {
global $wpdb;
if ( isset( $_GET['tax'] ) ) {
$taxonomy = sanitize_key( $_GET['tax'] );
$tax = get_taxonomy( $taxonomy );
if ( ! $tax )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! current_user_can( $tax->cap->assign_terms ) )
wp_die( -1 );
} else {
wp_die( 0 );
}
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$s = wp_unslash( $_GET['q'] );
$comma = _x( ',', 'tag delimiter' );
if ( ',' !== $comma )
$s = str_replace( $comma, ',', $s );
if ( false !== strpos( $s, ',' ) ) {
$s = explode( ',', $s );
$s = $s[count( $s ) - 1];
}
$s = trim( $s );
if ( strlen( $s ) < 2 )
wp_die(); // require 2 chars for matching
$results = $wpdb->get_col( $wpdb->prepare( "SELECT t.name FROM $wpdb->term_taxonomy AS tt INNER JOIN $wpdb->terms AS t ON tt.term_id = t.term_id WHERE tt.taxonomy = %s AND t.name LIKE (%s)", $taxonomy, '%' . like_escape( $s ) . '%' ) );
echo join( $results, "\n" );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_wp_compression_test() {
if ( !current_user_can( 'manage_options' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( ini_get('zlib.output_compression') || 'ob_gzhandler' == ini_get('output_handler') ) {
update_site_option('can_compress_scripts', 0);
wp_die( 0 );
}
if ( isset($_GET['test']) ) {
header( 'Expires: Wed, 11 Jan 1984 05:00:00 GMT' );
header( 'Last-Modified: ' . gmdate( 'D, d M Y H:i:s' ) . ' GMT' );
header( 'Cache-Control: no-cache, must-revalidate, max-age=0' );
header( 'Pragma: no-cache' );
header('Content-Type: application/x-javascript; charset=UTF-8');
$force_gzip = ( defined('ENFORCE_GZIP') && ENFORCE_GZIP );
$test_str = '"wpCompressionTest Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetuer mollis sapien urna ut a. Eu nonummy condimentum fringilla tempor pretium platea vel nibh netus Maecenas. Hac molestie amet justo quis pellentesque est ultrices interdum nibh Morbi. Cras mattis pretium Phasellus ante ipsum ipsum ut sociis Suspendisse Lorem. Ante et non molestie. Porta urna Vestibulum egestas id congue nibh eu risus gravida sit. Ac augue auctor Ut et non a elit massa id sodales. Elit eu Nulla at nibh adipiscing mattis lacus mauris at tempus. Netus nibh quis suscipit nec feugiat eget sed lorem et urna. Pellentesque lacus at ut massa consectetuer ligula ut auctor semper Pellentesque. Ut metus massa nibh quam Curabitur molestie nec mauris congue. Volutpat molestie elit justo facilisis neque ac risus Ut nascetur tristique. Vitae sit lorem tellus et quis Phasellus lacus tincidunt nunc Fusce. Pharetra wisi Suspendisse mus sagittis libero lacinia Integer consequat ac Phasellus. Et urna ac cursus tortor aliquam Aliquam amet tellus volutpat Vestibulum. Justo interdum condimentum In augue congue tellus sollicitudin Quisque quis nibh."';
if ( 1 == $_GET['test'] ) {
echo $test_str;
wp_die();
} elseif ( 2 == $_GET['test'] ) {
if ( !isset($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING']) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( false !== stripos( $_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING'], 'deflate') && function_exists('gzdeflate') && ! $force_gzip ) {
header('Content-Encoding: deflate');
$out = gzdeflate( $test_str, 1 );
} elseif ( false !== stripos( $_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING'], 'gzip') && function_exists('gzencode') ) {
header('Content-Encoding: gzip');
$out = gzencode( $test_str, 1 );
} else {
wp_die( -1 );
}
echo $out;
wp_die();
} elseif ( 'no' == $_GET['test'] ) {
update_site_option('can_compress_scripts', 0);
} elseif ( 'yes' == $_GET['test'] ) {
update_site_option('can_compress_scripts', 1);
}
}
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_imgedit_preview() {
$post_id = intval($_GET['postid']);
if ( empty($post_id) || !current_user_can('edit_post', $post_id) )
wp_die( -1 );
check_ajax_referer( "image_editor-$post_id" );
include_once( ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/image-edit.php' );
if ( ! stream_preview_image($post_id) )
wp_die( -1 );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_oembed_cache() {
global $wp_embed;
$return = ( $wp_embed->cache_oembed( $_GET['post'] ) ) ? '1' : '0';
wp_die( $return );
}
function wp_ajax_autocomplete_user() {
if ( ! is_multisite() || ! current_user_can( 'promote_users' ) || wp_is_large_network( 'users' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( ! is_super_admin() && ! apply_filters( 'autocomplete_users_for_site_admins', false ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$return = array();
// Check the type of request
if ( isset( $_REQUEST['autocomplete_type'] ) )
$type = $_REQUEST['autocomplete_type'];
else
$type = 'add';
// Exclude current users of this blog
if ( isset( $_REQUEST['site_id'] ) )
$id = absint( $_REQUEST['site_id'] );
else
$id = get_current_blog_id();
$include_blog_users = ( $type == 'search' ? get_users( array( 'blog_id' => $id, 'fields' => 'ID' ) ) : array() );
$exclude_blog_users = ( $type == 'add' ? get_users( array( 'blog_id' => $id, 'fields' => 'ID' ) ) : array() );
$users = get_users( array(
'blog_id' => false,
'search' => '*' . $_REQUEST['term'] . '*',
'include' => $include_blog_users,
'exclude' => $exclude_blog_users,
'search_columns' => array( 'user_login', 'user_nicename', 'user_email' ),
) );
foreach ( $users as $user ) {
$return[] = array(
/* translators: 1: user_login, 2: user_email */
'label' => sprintf( __( '%1$s (%2$s)' ), $user->user_login, $user->user_email ),
'value' => $user->user_login,
);
}
wp_die( json_encode( $return ) );
}
function wp_ajax_dashboard_widgets() {
require_once ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/dashboard.php';
switch ( $_GET['widget'] ) {
case 'dashboard_incoming_links' :
wp_dashboard_incoming_links();
break;
case 'dashboard_primary' :
wp_dashboard_primary();
break;
case 'dashboard_secondary' :
wp_dashboard_secondary();
break;
case 'dashboard_plugins' :
wp_dashboard_plugins();
break;
}
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_logged_in() {
wp_die( 1 );
}
/*
* Ajax helper.
*/
/**
* Sends back current comment total and new page links if they need to be updated.
*
* Contrary to normal success AJAX response ("1"), die with time() on success.
*
* @since 2.7
*
* @param int $comment_id
* @return die
*/
function _wp_ajax_delete_comment_response( $comment_id, $delta = -1 ) {
$total = (int) @$_POST['_total'];
$per_page = (int) @$_POST['_per_page'];
$page = (int) @$_POST['_page'];
$url = esc_url_raw( @$_POST['_url'] );
// JS didn't send us everything we need to know. Just die with success message
if ( !$total || !$per_page || !$page || !$url )
wp_die( time() );
$total += $delta;
if ( $total < 0 )
$total = 0;
// Only do the expensive stuff on a page-break, and about 1 other time per page
if ( 0 == $total % $per_page || 1 == mt_rand( 1, $per_page ) ) {
$post_id = 0;
$status = 'total_comments'; // What type of comment count are we looking for?
$parsed = parse_url( $url );
if ( isset( $parsed['query'] ) ) {
parse_str( $parsed['query'], $query_vars );
if ( !empty( $query_vars['comment_status'] ) )
$status = $query_vars['comment_status'];
if ( !empty( $query_vars['p'] ) )
$post_id = (int) $query_vars['p'];
}
$comment_count = wp_count_comments($post_id);
if ( isset( $comment_count->$status ) ) // We're looking for a known type of comment count
$total = $comment_count->$status;
// else use the decremented value from above
}
$time = time(); // The time since the last comment count
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'comment',
'id' => $comment_id, // here for completeness - not used
'supplemental' => array(
'total_items_i18n' => sprintf( _n( '1 item', '%s items', $total ), number_format_i18n( $total ) ),
'total_pages' => ceil( $total / $per_page ),
'total_pages_i18n' => number_format_i18n( ceil( $total / $per_page ) ),
'total' => $total,
'time' => $time
)
) );
$x->send();
}
/*
* POST-based Ajax handlers.
*/
function _wp_ajax_add_hierarchical_term() {
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_data = wp_unslash( $_POST );
$action = $post_data['action'];
$taxonomy = get_taxonomy(substr($action, 4));
check_ajax_referer( $action, '_ajax_nonce-add-' . $taxonomy->name );
if ( !current_user_can( $taxonomy->cap->edit_terms ) )
wp_die( -1 );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$names = explode(',', $post_data['new'.$taxonomy->name]);
$parent = isset($post_data['new'.$taxonomy->name.'_parent']) ? (int) $post_data['new'.$taxonomy->name.'_parent'] : 0;
if ( 0 > $parent )
$parent = 0;
if ( $taxonomy->name == 'category' )
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_category = isset( $post_data['post_category'] ) ? (array) $post_data['post_category'] : array();
else
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_category = ( isset( $post_data['tax_input'] ) && isset( $post_data['tax_input'][$taxonomy->name] ) ) ? (array) $post_data['tax_input'][$taxonomy->name] : array();
$checked_categories = array_map( 'absint', (array) $post_category );
$popular_ids = wp_popular_terms_checklist($taxonomy->name, 0, 10, false);
foreach ( $names as $cat_name ) {
$cat_name = trim($cat_name);
$category_nicename = sanitize_title($cat_name);
if ( '' === $category_nicename )
continue;
if ( !$cat_id = term_exists( $cat_name, $taxonomy->name, $parent ) )
$cat_id = wp_insert_term( $cat_name, $taxonomy->name, array( 'parent' => $parent ) );
if ( is_wp_error( $cat_id ) )
continue;
else if ( is_array( $cat_id ) )
$cat_id = $cat_id['term_id'];
$checked_categories[] = $cat_id;
if ( $parent ) // Do these all at once in a second
continue;
ob_start();
wp_terms_checklist( 0, array( 'taxonomy' => $taxonomy->name, 'descendants_and_self' => $cat_id, 'selected_cats' => $checked_categories, 'popular_cats' => $popular_ids ));
$data = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$add = array(
'what' => $taxonomy->name,
'id' => $cat_id,
'data' => str_replace( array("\n", "\t"), '', $data),
'position' => -1
);
}
if ( $parent ) { // Foncy - replace the parent and all its children
$parent = get_term( $parent, $taxonomy->name );
$term_id = $parent->term_id;
while ( $parent->parent ) { // get the top parent
$parent = get_term( $parent->parent, $taxonomy->name );
if ( is_wp_error( $parent ) )
break;
$term_id = $parent->term_id;
}
ob_start();
wp_terms_checklist( 0, array('taxonomy' => $taxonomy->name, 'descendants_and_self' => $term_id, 'selected_cats' => $checked_categories, 'popular_cats' => $popular_ids));
$data = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$add = array(
'what' => $taxonomy->name,
'id' => $term_id,
'data' => str_replace( array("\n", "\t"), '', $data),
'position' => -1
);
}
ob_start();
wp_dropdown_categories( array(
'taxonomy' => $taxonomy->name, 'hide_empty' => 0, 'name' => 'new'.$taxonomy->name.'_parent', 'orderby' => 'name',
'hierarchical' => 1, 'show_option_none' => '&mdash; '.$taxonomy->labels->parent_item.' &mdash;'
) );
$sup = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$add['supplemental'] = array( 'newcat_parent' => $sup );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( $add );
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_delete_comment() {
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
if ( !$comment = get_comment( $id ) )
wp_die( time() );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_comment', $comment->comment_ID ) )
wp_die( -1 );
check_ajax_referer( "delete-comment_$id" );
$status = wp_get_comment_status( $comment->comment_ID );
$delta = -1;
if ( isset($_POST['trash']) && 1 == $_POST['trash'] ) {
if ( 'trash' == $status )
wp_die( time() );
$r = wp_trash_comment( $comment->comment_ID );
} elseif ( isset($_POST['untrash']) && 1 == $_POST['untrash'] ) {
if ( 'trash' != $status )
wp_die( time() );
$r = wp_untrash_comment( $comment->comment_ID );
if ( ! isset( $_POST['comment_status'] ) || $_POST['comment_status'] != 'trash' ) // undo trash, not in trash
$delta = 1;
} elseif ( isset($_POST['spam']) && 1 == $_POST['spam'] ) {
if ( 'spam' == $status )
wp_die( time() );
$r = wp_spam_comment( $comment->comment_ID );
} elseif ( isset($_POST['unspam']) && 1 == $_POST['unspam'] ) {
if ( 'spam' != $status )
wp_die( time() );
$r = wp_unspam_comment( $comment->comment_ID );
if ( ! isset( $_POST['comment_status'] ) || $_POST['comment_status'] != 'spam' ) // undo spam, not in spam
$delta = 1;
} elseif ( isset($_POST['delete']) && 1 == $_POST['delete'] ) {
$r = wp_delete_comment( $comment->comment_ID );
} else {
wp_die( -1 );
}
if ( $r ) // Decide if we need to send back '1' or a more complicated response including page links and comment counts
_wp_ajax_delete_comment_response( $comment->comment_ID, $delta );
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_delete_tag() {
$tag_id = (int) $_POST['tag_ID'];
check_ajax_referer( "delete-tag_$tag_id" );
$taxonomy = !empty($_POST['taxonomy']) ? $_POST['taxonomy'] : 'post_tag';
$tax = get_taxonomy($taxonomy);
if ( !current_user_can( $tax->cap->delete_terms ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$tag = get_term( $tag_id, $taxonomy );
if ( !$tag || is_wp_error( $tag ) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( wp_delete_term($tag_id, $taxonomy))
wp_die( 1 );
else
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_delete_link() {
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
check_ajax_referer( "delete-bookmark_$id" );
if ( !current_user_can( 'manage_links' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$link = get_bookmark( $id );
if ( !$link || is_wp_error( $link ) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( wp_delete_link( $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
else
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_delete_meta() {
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
check_ajax_referer( "delete-meta_$id" );
if ( !$meta = get_metadata_by_mid( 'post', $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( is_protected_meta( $meta->meta_key, 'post' ) || ! current_user_can( 'delete_post_meta', $meta->post_id, $meta->meta_key ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( delete_meta( $meta->meta_id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_delete_post( $action ) {
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'delete-post';
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
check_ajax_referer( "{$action}_$id" );
if ( !current_user_can( 'delete_post', $id ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( !get_post( $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( wp_delete_post( $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
else
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_trash_post( $action ) {
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'trash-post';
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
check_ajax_referer( "{$action}_$id" );
if ( !current_user_can( 'delete_post', $id ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( !get_post( $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( 'trash-post' == $action )
$done = wp_trash_post( $id );
else
$done = wp_untrash_post( $id );
if ( $done )
wp_die( 1 );
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_untrash_post( $action ) {
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'untrash-post';
wp_ajax_trash_post( $action );
}
function wp_ajax_delete_page( $action ) {
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'delete-page';
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
check_ajax_referer( "{$action}_$id" );
if ( !current_user_can( 'delete_page', $id ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( ! get_post( $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( wp_delete_post( $id ) )
wp_die( 1 );
else
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_dim_comment() {
$id = isset( $_POST['id'] ) ? (int) $_POST['id'] : 0;
if ( !$comment = get_comment( $id ) ) {
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'comment',
'id' => new WP_Error('invalid_comment', sprintf(__('Comment %d does not exist'), $id))
) );
$x->send();
}
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_comment', $comment->comment_ID ) && ! current_user_can( 'moderate_comments' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$current = wp_get_comment_status( $comment->comment_ID );
if ( $_POST['new'] == $current )
wp_die( time() );
check_ajax_referer( "approve-comment_$id" );
if ( in_array( $current, array( 'unapproved', 'spam' ) ) )
$result = wp_set_comment_status( $comment->comment_ID, 'approve', true );
else
$result = wp_set_comment_status( $comment->comment_ID, 'hold', true );
if ( is_wp_error($result) ) {
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'comment',
'id' => $result
) );
$x->send();
}
// Decide if we need to send back '1' or a more complicated response including page links and comment counts
_wp_ajax_delete_comment_response( $comment->comment_ID );
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_add_link_category( $action ) {
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'add-link-category';
check_ajax_referer( $action );
if ( !current_user_can( 'manage_categories' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$names = explode( ',', wp_unslash( $_POST['newcat'] ) );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response();
foreach ( $names as $cat_name ) {
$cat_name = trim($cat_name);
$slug = sanitize_title($cat_name);
if ( '' === $slug )
continue;
if ( !$cat_id = term_exists( $cat_name, 'link_category' ) )
$cat_id = wp_insert_term( $cat_name, 'link_category' );
if ( is_wp_error( $cat_id ) )
continue;
else if ( is_array( $cat_id ) )
$cat_id = $cat_id['term_id'];
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$cat_name = esc_html( wp_unslash( $cat_name ) );
$x->add( array(
'what' => 'link-category',
'id' => $cat_id,
'data' => "<li id='link-category-$cat_id'><label for='in-link-category-$cat_id' class='selectit'><input value='" . esc_attr($cat_id) . "' type='checkbox' checked='checked' name='link_category[]' id='in-link-category-$cat_id'/> $cat_name</label></li>",
'position' => -1
) );
}
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_add_tag() {
global $wp_list_table;
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_data = wp_unslash( $_POST );
check_ajax_referer( 'add-tag', '_wpnonce_add-tag' );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_type = !empty($post_data['post_type']) ? $post_data['post_type'] : 'post';
$taxonomy = !empty($post_data['taxonomy']) ? $post_data['taxonomy'] : 'post_tag';
$tax = get_taxonomy($taxonomy);
if ( !current_user_can( $tax->cap->edit_terms ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response();
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$tag = wp_insert_term( $post_data['tag-name'], $taxonomy, $post_data );
if ( !$tag || is_wp_error($tag) || (!$tag = get_term( $tag['term_id'], $taxonomy )) ) {
$message = __('An error has occurred. Please reload the page and try again.');
if ( is_wp_error($tag) && $tag->get_error_message() )
$message = $tag->get_error_message();
$x->add( array(
'what' => 'taxonomy',
'data' => new WP_Error('error', $message )
) );
$x->send();
}
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table( 'WP_Terms_List_Table', array( 'screen' => $post_data['screen'] ) );
$level = 0;
if ( is_taxonomy_hierarchical($taxonomy) ) {
$level = count( get_ancestors( $tag->term_id, $taxonomy ) );
ob_start();
$wp_list_table->single_row( $tag, $level );
$noparents = ob_get_clean();
}
ob_start();
$wp_list_table->single_row( $tag );
$parents = ob_get_clean();
$x->add( array(
'what' => 'taxonomy',
'supplemental' => compact('parents', 'noparents')
) );
$x->add( array(
'what' => 'term',
'position' => $level,
'supplemental' => (array) $tag
) );
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_get_tagcloud() {
if ( isset( $_POST['tax'] ) ) {
$taxonomy = sanitize_key( $_POST['tax'] );
$tax = get_taxonomy( $taxonomy );
if ( ! $tax )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! current_user_can( $tax->cap->assign_terms ) )
wp_die( -1 );
} else {
wp_die( 0 );
}
$tags = get_terms( $taxonomy, array( 'number' => 45, 'orderby' => 'count', 'order' => 'DESC' ) );
if ( empty( $tags ) )
wp_die( isset( $tax->no_tagcloud ) ? $tax->no_tagcloud : __('No tags found!') );
if ( is_wp_error( $tags ) )
wp_die( $tags->get_error_message() );
foreach ( $tags as $key => $tag ) {
$tags[ $key ]->link = '#';
$tags[ $key ]->id = $tag->term_id;
}
// We need raw tag names here, so don't filter the output
$return = wp_generate_tag_cloud( $tags, array('filter' => 0) );
if ( empty($return) )
wp_die( 0 );
echo $return;
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_get_comments( $action ) {
global $wp_list_table, $post_id;
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'get-comments';
check_ajax_referer( $action );
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table( 'WP_Post_Comments_List_Table', array( 'screen' => 'edit-comments' ) );
if ( !current_user_can( 'edit_post', $post_id ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$wp_list_table->prepare_items();
if ( !$wp_list_table->has_items() )
wp_die( 1 );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response();
ob_start();
foreach ( $wp_list_table->items as $comment ) {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_comment', $comment->comment_ID ) )
continue;
get_comment( $comment );
$wp_list_table->single_row( $comment );
}
$comment_list_item = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$x->add( array(
'what' => 'comments',
'data' => $comment_list_item
) );
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_replyto_comment( $action ) {
global $wp_list_table, $wpdb;
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'replyto-comment';
check_ajax_referer( $action, '_ajax_nonce-replyto-comment' );
$comment_post_ID = (int) $_POST['comment_post_ID'];
if ( !current_user_can( 'edit_post', $comment_post_ID ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$status = $wpdb->get_var( $wpdb->prepare("SELECT post_status FROM $wpdb->posts WHERE ID = %d", $comment_post_ID) );
if ( empty($status) )
wp_die( 1 );
elseif ( in_array($status, array('draft', 'pending', 'trash') ) )
wp_die( __('ERROR: you are replying to a comment on a draft post.') );
$user = wp_get_current_user();
if ( $user->exists() ) {
$user_ID = $user->ID;
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$comment_author = $user->display_name;
$comment_author_email = $user->user_email;
$comment_author_url = $user->user_url;
$comment_content = trim( wp_unslash( $_POST['content'] ) );
if ( current_user_can( 'unfiltered_html' ) ) {
if ( wp_create_nonce( 'unfiltered-html-comment' ) != $_POST['_wp_unfiltered_html_comment'] ) {
kses_remove_filters(); // start with a clean slate
kses_init_filters(); // set up the filters
}
}
} else {
wp_die( __( 'Sorry, you must be logged in to reply to a comment.' ) );
}
if ( '' == $comment_content )
wp_die( __( 'ERROR: please type a comment.' ) );
$comment_parent = absint($_POST['comment_ID']);
$comment_auto_approved = false;
$commentdata = compact('comment_post_ID', 'comment_author', 'comment_author_email', 'comment_author_url', 'comment_content', 'comment_type', 'comment_parent', 'user_ID');
// automatically approve parent comment
if ( !empty($_POST['approve_parent']) ) {
$parent = get_comment( $comment_parent );
if ( $parent && $parent->comment_approved === '0' && $parent->comment_post_ID == $comment_post_ID ) {
if ( wp_set_comment_status( $parent->comment_ID, 'approve' ) )
$comment_auto_approved = true;
}
}
$comment_id = wp_new_comment( $commentdata );
$comment = get_comment($comment_id);
if ( ! $comment ) wp_die( 1 );
$position = ( isset($_POST['position']) && (int) $_POST['position'] ) ? (int) $_POST['position'] : '-1';
ob_start();
if ( 'dashboard' == $_REQUEST['mode'] ) {
require_once( ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/dashboard.php' );
_wp_dashboard_recent_comments_row( $comment );
} else {
if ( 'single' == $_REQUEST['mode'] ) {
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table('WP_Post_Comments_List_Table', array( 'screen' => 'edit-comments' ) );
} else {
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table('WP_Comments_List_Table', array( 'screen' => 'edit-comments' ) );
}
$wp_list_table->single_row( $comment );
}
$comment_list_item = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$response = array(
'what' => 'comment',
'id' => $comment->comment_ID,
'data' => $comment_list_item,
'position' => $position
);
if ( $comment_auto_approved )
$response['supplemental'] = array( 'parent_approved' => $parent->comment_ID );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response();
$x->add( $response );
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_edit_comment() {
global $wp_list_table;
check_ajax_referer( 'replyto-comment', '_ajax_nonce-replyto-comment' );
$comment_id = (int) $_POST['comment_ID'];
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_comment', $comment_id ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( '' == $_POST['content'] )
wp_die( __( 'ERROR: please type a comment.' ) );
$_POST['comment_status'] = $_POST['status'];
edit_comment();
$position = ( isset($_POST['position']) && (int) $_POST['position']) ? (int) $_POST['position'] : '-1';
$comments_status = isset($_POST['comments_listing']) ? $_POST['comments_listing'] : '';
$checkbox = ( isset($_POST['checkbox']) && true == $_POST['checkbox'] ) ? 1 : 0;
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table( $checkbox ? 'WP_Comments_List_Table' : 'WP_Post_Comments_List_Table', array( 'screen' => 'edit-comments' ) );
$comment = get_comment( $comment_id );
ob_start();
$wp_list_table->single_row( $comment );
$comment_list_item = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response();
$x->add( array(
'what' => 'edit_comment',
'id' => $comment->comment_ID,
'data' => $comment_list_item,
'position' => $position
));
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_add_menu_item() {
check_ajax_referer( 'add-menu_item', 'menu-settings-column-nonce' );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_theme_options' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
require_once ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/nav-menu.php';
// For performance reasons, we omit some object properties from the checklist.
// The following is a hacky way to restore them when adding non-custom items.
$menu_items_data = array();
foreach ( (array) $_POST['menu-item'] as $menu_item_data ) {
if (
! empty( $menu_item_data['menu-item-type'] ) &&
'custom' != $menu_item_data['menu-item-type'] &&
! empty( $menu_item_data['menu-item-object-id'] )
) {
switch( $menu_item_data['menu-item-type'] ) {
case 'post_type' :
$_object = get_post( $menu_item_data['menu-item-object-id'] );
break;
case 'taxonomy' :
$_object = get_term( $menu_item_data['menu-item-object-id'], $menu_item_data['menu-item-object'] );
break;
}
$_menu_items = array_map( 'wp_setup_nav_menu_item', array( $_object ) );
$_menu_item = array_shift( $_menu_items );
// Restore the missing menu item properties
$menu_item_data['menu-item-description'] = $_menu_item->description;
}
$menu_items_data[] = $menu_item_data;
}
$item_ids = wp_save_nav_menu_items( 0, $menu_items_data );
if ( is_wp_error( $item_ids ) )
wp_die( 0 );
$menu_items = array();
foreach ( (array) $item_ids as $menu_item_id ) {
$menu_obj = get_post( $menu_item_id );
if ( ! empty( $menu_obj->ID ) ) {
$menu_obj = wp_setup_nav_menu_item( $menu_obj );
$menu_obj->label = $menu_obj->title; // don't show "(pending)" in ajax-added items
$menu_items[] = $menu_obj;
}
}
$walker_class_name = apply_filters( 'wp_edit_nav_menu_walker', 'Walker_Nav_Menu_Edit', $_POST['menu'] );
if ( ! class_exists( $walker_class_name ) )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! empty( $menu_items ) ) {
$args = array(
'after' => '',
'before' => '',
'link_after' => '',
'link_before' => '',
'walker' => new $walker_class_name,
);
echo walk_nav_menu_tree( $menu_items, 0, (object) $args );
}
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_add_meta() {
check_ajax_referer( 'add-meta', '_ajax_nonce-add-meta' );
$c = 0;
$pid = (int) $_POST['post_id'];
$post = get_post( $pid );
if ( isset($_POST['metakeyselect']) || isset($_POST['metakeyinput']) ) {
if ( !current_user_can( 'edit_post', $pid ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( isset($_POST['metakeyselect']) && '#NONE#' == $_POST['metakeyselect'] && empty($_POST['metakeyinput']) )
wp_die( 1 );
if ( $post->post_status == 'auto-draft' ) {
$save_POST = $_POST; // Backup $_POST
$_POST = array(); // Make it empty for edit_post()
$_POST['action'] = 'draft'; // Warning fix
$_POST['post_ID'] = $pid;
$_POST['post_type'] = $post->post_type;
$_POST['post_status'] = 'draft';
$now = current_time('timestamp', 1);
$_POST['post_title'] = sprintf('Draft created on %s at %s', date(get_option('date_format'), $now), date(get_option('time_format'), $now));
if ( $pid = edit_post() ) {
if ( is_wp_error( $pid ) ) {
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'meta',
'data' => $pid
) );
$x->send();
}
$_POST = $save_POST; // Now we can restore original $_POST again
if ( !$mid = add_meta( $pid ) )
wp_die( __( 'Please provide a custom field value.' ) );
} else {
wp_die( 0 );
}
} else if ( !$mid = add_meta( $pid ) ) {
wp_die( __( 'Please provide a custom field value.' ) );
}
$meta = get_metadata_by_mid( 'post', $mid );
$pid = (int) $meta->post_id;
$meta = get_object_vars( $meta );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'meta',
'id' => $mid,
'data' => _list_meta_row( $meta, $c ),
'position' => 1,
'supplemental' => array('postid' => $pid)
) );
} else { // Update?
$mid = (int) key( $_POST['meta'] );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$key = wp_unslash( $_POST['meta'][$mid]['key'] );
$value = wp_unslash( $_POST['meta'][$mid]['value'] );
if ( '' == trim($key) )
wp_die( __( 'Please provide a custom field name.' ) );
if ( '' == trim($value) )
wp_die( __( 'Please provide a custom field value.' ) );
if ( ! $meta = get_metadata_by_mid( 'post', $mid ) )
wp_die( 0 ); // if meta doesn't exist
if ( is_protected_meta( $meta->meta_key, 'post' ) || is_protected_meta( $key, 'post' ) ||
! current_user_can( 'edit_post_meta', $meta->post_id, $meta->meta_key ) ||
! current_user_can( 'edit_post_meta', $meta->post_id, $key ) )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( $meta->meta_value != $value || $meta->meta_key != $key ) {
if ( !$u = update_metadata_by_mid( 'post', $mid, $value, $key ) )
wp_die( 0 ); // We know meta exists; we also know it's unchanged (or DB error, in which case there are bigger problems).
}
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'meta',
'id' => $mid, 'old_id' => $mid,
'data' => _list_meta_row( array(
'meta_key' => $key,
'meta_value' => $value,
'meta_id' => $mid
), $c ),
'position' => 0,
'supplemental' => array('postid' => $meta->post_id)
) );
}
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_add_user( $action ) {
global $wp_list_table;
if ( empty( $action ) )
$action = 'add-user';
check_ajax_referer( $action );
if ( ! current_user_can('create_users') )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( ! $user_id = edit_user() ) {
wp_die( 0 );
} elseif ( is_wp_error( $user_id ) ) {
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'user',
'id' => $user_id
) );
$x->send();
}
$user_object = get_userdata( $user_id );
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table('WP_Users_List_Table');
$role = current( $user_object->roles );
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'user',
'id' => $user_id,
'data' => $wp_list_table->single_row( $user_object, '', $role ),
'supplemental' => array(
'show-link' => sprintf(__( 'User <a href="#%s">%s</a> added' ), "user-$user_id", $user_object->user_login),
'role' => $role,
)
) );
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_autosave() {
global $login_grace_period;
define( 'DOING_AUTOSAVE', true );
$nonce_age = check_ajax_referer( 'autosave', 'autosavenonce' );
$_POST['post_category'] = explode(",", $_POST['catslist']);
if ( $_POST['post_type'] == 'page' || empty($_POST['post_category']) )
unset($_POST['post_category']);
$do_autosave = (bool) $_POST['autosave'];
$do_lock = true;
$data = $alert = '';
/* translators: draft saved date format, see http://php.net/date */
$draft_saved_date_format = __('g:i:s a');
/* translators: %s: date and time */
$message = sprintf( __('Draft saved at %s.'), date_i18n( $draft_saved_date_format ) );
$supplemental = array();
if ( isset($login_grace_period) )
$alert .= sprintf( __('Your login has expired. Please open a new browser window and <a href="%s" target="_blank">log in again</a>. '), add_query_arg( 'interim-login', 1, wp_login_url() ) );
$id = $revision_id = 0;
$post_ID = (int) $_POST['post_ID'];
$_POST['ID'] = $post_ID;
$post = get_post($post_ID);
if ( 'auto-draft' == $post->post_status )
$_POST['post_status'] = 'draft';
if ( $last = wp_check_post_lock( $post->ID ) ) {
$do_autosave = $do_lock = false;
$last_user = get_userdata( $last );
$last_user_name = $last_user ? $last_user->display_name : __( 'Someone' );
$data = __( 'Autosave disabled.' );
$supplemental['disable_autosave'] = 'disable';
$alert .= sprintf( __( '%s is currently editing this article. If you update it, you will overwrite the changes.' ), esc_html( $last_user_name ) );
}
if ( 'page' == $post->post_type ) {
if ( !current_user_can('edit_page', $post_ID) )
wp_die( __( 'You are not allowed to edit this page.' ) );
} else {
if ( !current_user_can('edit_post', $post_ID) )
wp_die( __( 'You are not allowed to edit this post.' ) );
}
if ( $do_autosave ) {
// Drafts and auto-drafts are just overwritten by autosave
if ( 'auto-draft' == $post->post_status || 'draft' == $post->post_status ) {
$id = edit_post();
} else { // Non drafts are not overwritten. The autosave is stored in a special post revision.
$revision_id = wp_create_post_autosave( $post->ID );
if ( is_wp_error($revision_id) )
$id = $revision_id;
else
$id = $post->ID;
}
$data = $message;
} else {
if ( ! empty( $_POST['auto_draft'] ) )
$id = 0; // This tells us it didn't actually save
else
$id = $post->ID;
}
if ( $do_lock && empty( $_POST['auto_draft'] ) && $id && is_numeric( $id ) ) {
$lock_result = wp_set_post_lock( $id );
$supplemental['active-post-lock'] = implode( ':', $lock_result );
}
if ( $nonce_age == 2 ) {
$supplemental['replace-autosavenonce'] = wp_create_nonce('autosave');
$supplemental['replace-getpermalinknonce'] = wp_create_nonce('getpermalink');
$supplemental['replace-samplepermalinknonce'] = wp_create_nonce('samplepermalink');
$supplemental['replace-closedpostboxesnonce'] = wp_create_nonce('closedpostboxes');
$supplemental['replace-_ajax_linking_nonce'] = wp_create_nonce( 'internal-linking' );
if ( $id ) {
if ( $_POST['post_type'] == 'post' )
$supplemental['replace-_wpnonce'] = wp_create_nonce('update-post_' . $id);
elseif ( $_POST['post_type'] == 'page' )
$supplemental['replace-_wpnonce'] = wp_create_nonce('update-page_' . $id);
}
}
if ( ! empty($alert) )
$supplemental['alert'] = $alert;
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response( array(
'what' => 'autosave',
'id' => $id,
'data' => $id ? $data : '',
'supplemental' => $supplemental
) );
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_closed_postboxes() {
check_ajax_referer( 'closedpostboxes', 'closedpostboxesnonce' );
$closed = isset( $_POST['closed'] ) ? explode( ',', $_POST['closed']) : array();
$closed = array_filter($closed);
$hidden = isset( $_POST['hidden'] ) ? explode( ',', $_POST['hidden']) : array();
$hidden = array_filter($hidden);
$page = isset( $_POST['page'] ) ? $_POST['page'] : '';
if ( $page != sanitize_key( $page ) )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! $user = wp_get_current_user() )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( is_array($closed) )
update_user_option($user->ID, "closedpostboxes_$page", $closed, true);
if ( is_array($hidden) ) {
$hidden = array_diff( $hidden, array('submitdiv', 'linksubmitdiv', 'manage-menu', 'create-menu') ); // postboxes that are always shown
update_user_option($user->ID, "metaboxhidden_$page", $hidden, true);
}
wp_die( 1 );
}
function wp_ajax_hidden_columns() {
check_ajax_referer( 'screen-options-nonce', 'screenoptionnonce' );
$hidden = isset( $_POST['hidden'] ) ? $_POST['hidden'] : '';
$hidden = explode( ',', $_POST['hidden'] );
$page = isset( $_POST['page'] ) ? $_POST['page'] : '';
if ( $page != sanitize_key( $page ) )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! $user = wp_get_current_user() )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( is_array($hidden) )
update_user_option($user->ID, "manage{$page}columnshidden", $hidden, true);
wp_die( 1 );
}
function wp_ajax_update_welcome_panel() {
check_ajax_referer( 'welcome-panel-nonce', 'welcomepanelnonce' );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_theme_options' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
update_user_meta( get_current_user_id(), 'show_welcome_panel', empty( $_POST['visible'] ) ? 0 : 1 );
wp_die( 1 );
}
function wp_ajax_menu_get_metabox() {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_theme_options' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
require_once ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/nav-menu.php';
if ( isset( $_POST['item-type'] ) && 'post_type' == $_POST['item-type'] ) {
$type = 'posttype';
$callback = 'wp_nav_menu_item_post_type_meta_box';
$items = (array) get_post_types( array( 'show_in_nav_menus' => true ), 'object' );
} elseif ( isset( $_POST['item-type'] ) && 'taxonomy' == $_POST['item-type'] ) {
$type = 'taxonomy';
$callback = 'wp_nav_menu_item_taxonomy_meta_box';
$items = (array) get_taxonomies( array( 'show_ui' => true ), 'object' );
}
if ( ! empty( $_POST['item-object'] ) && isset( $items[$_POST['item-object']] ) ) {
$item = apply_filters( 'nav_menu_meta_box_object', $items[ $_POST['item-object'] ] );
ob_start();
call_user_func_array($callback, array(
null,
array(
'id' => 'add-' . $item->name,
'title' => $item->labels->name,
'callback' => $callback,
'args' => $item,
)
));
$markup = ob_get_clean();
echo json_encode(array(
'replace-id' => $type . '-' . $item->name,
'markup' => $markup,
));
}
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_wp_link_ajax() {
check_ajax_referer( 'internal-linking', '_ajax_linking_nonce' );
$args = array();
if ( isset( $_POST['search'] ) )
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$args['s'] = wp_unslash( $_POST['search'] );
$args['pagenum'] = ! empty( $_POST['page'] ) ? absint( $_POST['page'] ) : 1;
require(ABSPATH . WPINC . '/class-wp-editor.php');
$results = _WP_Editors::wp_link_query( $args );
if ( ! isset( $results ) )
wp_die( 0 );
echo json_encode( $results );
echo "\n";
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_menu_locations_save() {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_theme_options' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
check_ajax_referer( 'add-menu_item', 'menu-settings-column-nonce' );
if ( ! isset( $_POST['menu-locations'] ) )
wp_die( 0 );
set_theme_mod( 'nav_menu_locations', array_map( 'absint', $_POST['menu-locations'] ) );
wp_die( 1 );
}
function wp_ajax_meta_box_order() {
check_ajax_referer( 'meta-box-order' );
$order = isset( $_POST['order'] ) ? (array) $_POST['order'] : false;
$page_columns = isset( $_POST['page_columns'] ) ? $_POST['page_columns'] : 'auto';
if ( $page_columns != 'auto' )
$page_columns = (int) $page_columns;
$page = isset( $_POST['page'] ) ? $_POST['page'] : '';
if ( $page != sanitize_key( $page ) )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! $user = wp_get_current_user() )
wp_die( -1 );
if ( $order )
update_user_option($user->ID, "meta-box-order_$page", $order, true);
if ( $page_columns )
update_user_option($user->ID, "screen_layout_$page", $page_columns, true);
wp_die( 1 );
}
function wp_ajax_menu_quick_search() {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_theme_options' ) )
wp_die( -1 );
require_once ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/nav-menu.php';
_wp_ajax_menu_quick_search( $_POST );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_get_permalink() {
check_ajax_referer( 'getpermalink', 'getpermalinknonce' );
$post_id = isset($_POST['post_id'])? intval($_POST['post_id']) : 0;
wp_die( add_query_arg( array( 'preview' => 'true' ), get_permalink( $post_id ) ) );
}
function wp_ajax_sample_permalink() {
check_ajax_referer( 'samplepermalink', 'samplepermalinknonce' );
$post_id = isset($_POST['post_id'])? intval($_POST['post_id']) : 0;
$title = isset($_POST['new_title'])? $_POST['new_title'] : '';
$slug = isset($_POST['new_slug'])? $_POST['new_slug'] : null;
wp_die( get_sample_permalink_html( $post_id, $title, $slug ) );
}
function wp_ajax_inline_save() {
global $wp_list_table;
check_ajax_referer( 'inlineeditnonce', '_inline_edit' );
if ( ! isset($_POST['post_ID']) || ! ( $post_ID = (int) $_POST['post_ID'] ) )
wp_die();
if ( 'page' == $_POST['post_type'] ) {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_page', $post_ID ) )
wp_die( __( 'You are not allowed to edit this page.' ) );
} else {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $post_ID ) )
wp_die( __( 'You are not allowed to edit this post.' ) );
}
if ( $last = wp_check_post_lock( $post_ID ) ) {
$last_user = get_userdata( $last );
$last_user_name = $last_user ? $last_user->display_name : __( 'Someone' );
printf( $_POST['post_type'] == 'page' ? __( 'Saving is disabled: %s is currently editing this page.' ) : __( 'Saving is disabled: %s is currently editing this post.' ), esc_html( $last_user_name ) );
wp_die();
}
$data = &$_POST;
$post = get_post( $post_ID, ARRAY_A );
$data['content'] = $post['post_content'];
$data['excerpt'] = $post['post_excerpt'];
// rename
$data['user_ID'] = $GLOBALS['user_ID'];
if ( isset($data['post_parent']) )
$data['parent_id'] = $data['post_parent'];
// status
if ( isset($data['keep_private']) && 'private' == $data['keep_private'] )
$data['post_status'] = 'private';
else
$data['post_status'] = $data['_status'];
if ( empty($data['comment_status']) )
$data['comment_status'] = 'closed';
if ( empty($data['ping_status']) )
$data['ping_status'] = 'closed';
// update the post
edit_post();
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table( 'WP_Posts_List_Table', array( 'screen' => $_POST['screen'] ) );
$mode = $_POST['post_view'];
$level = 0;
$request_post = array( get_post( $_POST['post_ID'] ) );
$parent = $request_post[0]->post_parent;
while ( $parent > 0 ) {
$parent_post = get_post( $parent );
$parent = $parent_post->post_parent;
$level++;
}
$wp_list_table->display_rows( array( get_post( $_POST['post_ID'] ) ), $level );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_inline_save_tax() {
global $wp_list_table;
check_ajax_referer( 'taxinlineeditnonce', '_inline_edit' );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_data = wp_unslash( $_POST );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$taxonomy = sanitize_key( $post_data['taxonomy'] );
$tax = get_taxonomy( $taxonomy );
if ( ! $tax )
wp_die( 0 );
if ( ! current_user_can( $tax->cap->edit_terms ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$wp_list_table = _get_list_table( 'WP_Terms_List_Table', array( 'screen' => 'edit-' . $taxonomy ) );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
if ( ! isset($post_data['tax_ID']) || ! ( $id = (int) $post_data['tax_ID'] ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$tag = get_term( $id, $taxonomy );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_data['description'] = $tag->description;
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$updated = wp_update_term($id, $taxonomy, $post_data );
if ( $updated && !is_wp_error($updated) ) {
$tag = get_term( $updated['term_id'], $taxonomy );
if ( !$tag || is_wp_error( $tag ) ) {
if ( is_wp_error($tag) && $tag->get_error_message() )
wp_die( $tag->get_error_message() );
wp_die( __( 'Item not updated.' ) );
}
} else {
if ( is_wp_error($updated) && $updated->get_error_message() )
wp_die( $updated->get_error_message() );
wp_die( __( 'Item not updated.' ) );
}
$level = 0;
$parent = $tag->parent;
while ( $parent > 0 ) {
$parent_tag = get_term( $parent, $taxonomy );
$parent = $parent_tag->parent;
$level++;
}
echo $wp_list_table->single_row( $tag, $level );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_find_posts() {
global $wpdb;
check_ajax_referer( 'find-posts' );
$post_types = get_post_types( array( 'public' => true ), 'objects' );
unset( $post_types['attachment'] );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$s = wp_unslash( $_POST['ps'] );
$searchand = $search = '';
$args = array(
'post_type' => array_keys( $post_types ),
'post_status' => 'any',
'posts_per_page' => 50,
);
if ( '' !== $s )
$args['s'] = $s;
$posts = get_posts( $args );
if ( ! $posts )
wp_die( __('No items found.') );
$html = '<table class="widefat" cellspacing="0"><thead><tr><th class="found-radio"><br /></th><th>'.__('Title').'</th><th class="no-break">'.__('Type').'</th><th class="no-break">'.__('Date').'</th><th class="no-break">'.__('Status').'</th></tr></thead><tbody>';
foreach ( $posts as $post ) {
$title = trim( $post->post_title ) ? $post->post_title : __( '(no title)' );
switch ( $post->post_status ) {
case 'publish' :
case 'private' :
$stat = __('Published');
break;
case 'future' :
$stat = __('Scheduled');
break;
case 'pending' :
$stat = __('Pending Review');
break;
case 'draft' :
$stat = __('Draft');
break;
}
if ( '0000-00-00 00:00:00' == $post->post_date ) {
$time = '';
} else {
/* translators: date format in table columns, see http://php.net/date */
$time = mysql2date(__('Y/m/d'), $post->post_date);
}
$html .= '<tr class="found-posts"><td class="found-radio"><input type="radio" id="found-'.$post->ID.'" name="found_post_id" value="' . esc_attr($post->ID) . '"></td>';
$html .= '<td><label for="found-'.$post->ID.'">' . esc_html( $title ) . '</label></td><td class="no-break">' . esc_html( $post_types[$post->post_type]->labels->singular_name ) . '</td><td class="no-break">'.esc_html( $time ) . '</td><td class="no-break">' . esc_html( $stat ). ' </td></tr>' . "\n\n";
}
$html .= '</tbody></table>';
$x = new WP_Ajax_Response();
$x->add( array(
'data' => $html
));
$x->send();
}
function wp_ajax_widgets_order() {
check_ajax_referer( 'save-sidebar-widgets', 'savewidgets' );
if ( !current_user_can('edit_theme_options') )
wp_die( -1 );
unset( $_POST['savewidgets'], $_POST['action'] );
// save widgets order for all sidebars
if ( is_array($_POST['sidebars']) ) {
$sidebars = array();
foreach ( $_POST['sidebars'] as $key => $val ) {
$sb = array();
if ( !empty($val) ) {
$val = explode(',', $val);
foreach ( $val as $k => $v ) {
if ( strpos($v, 'widget-') === false )
continue;
$sb[$k] = substr($v, strpos($v, '_') + 1);
}
}
$sidebars[$key] = $sb;
}
wp_set_sidebars_widgets($sidebars);
wp_die( 1 );
}
wp_die( -1 );
}
function wp_ajax_save_widget() {
global $wp_registered_widgets, $wp_registered_widget_controls, $wp_registered_widget_updates;
check_ajax_referer( 'save-sidebar-widgets', 'savewidgets' );
if ( !current_user_can('edit_theme_options') || !isset($_POST['id_base']) )
wp_die( -1 );
unset( $_POST['savewidgets'], $_POST['action'] );
do_action('load-widgets.php');
do_action('widgets.php');
do_action('sidebar_admin_setup');
$id_base = $_POST['id_base'];
$widget_id = $_POST['widget-id'];
$sidebar_id = $_POST['sidebar'];
$multi_number = !empty($_POST['multi_number']) ? (int) $_POST['multi_number'] : 0;
$settings = isset($_POST['widget-' . $id_base]) && is_array($_POST['widget-' . $id_base]) ? $_POST['widget-' . $id_base] : false;
$error = '<p>' . __('An error has occurred. Please reload the page and try again.') . '</p>';
$sidebars = wp_get_sidebars_widgets();
$sidebar = isset($sidebars[$sidebar_id]) ? $sidebars[$sidebar_id] : array();
// delete
if ( isset($_POST['delete_widget']) && $_POST['delete_widget'] ) {
if ( !isset($wp_registered_widgets[$widget_id]) )
wp_die( $error );
$sidebar = array_diff( $sidebar, array($widget_id) );
$_POST = array('sidebar' => $sidebar_id, 'widget-' . $id_base => array(), 'the-widget-id' => $widget_id, 'delete_widget' => '1');
} elseif ( $settings && preg_match( '/__i__|%i%/', key($settings) ) ) {
if ( !$multi_number )
wp_die( $error );
$_POST['widget-' . $id_base] = array( $multi_number => array_shift($settings) );
$widget_id = $id_base . '-' . $multi_number;
$sidebar[] = $widget_id;
}
$_POST['widget-id'] = $sidebar;
foreach ( (array) $wp_registered_widget_updates as $name => $control ) {
if ( $name == $id_base ) {
if ( !is_callable( $control['callback'] ) )
continue;
ob_start();
call_user_func_array( $control['callback'], $control['params'] );
ob_end_clean();
break;
}
}
if ( isset($_POST['delete_widget']) && $_POST['delete_widget'] ) {
$sidebars[$sidebar_id] = $sidebar;
wp_set_sidebars_widgets($sidebars);
echo "deleted:$widget_id";
wp_die();
}
if ( !empty($_POST['add_new']) )
wp_die();
if ( $form = $wp_registered_widget_controls[$widget_id] )
call_user_func_array( $form['callback'], $form['params'] );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_upload_attachment() {
check_ajax_referer( 'media-form' );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'upload_files' ) )
wp_die();
if ( isset( $_REQUEST['post_id'] ) ) {
$post_id = $_REQUEST['post_id'];
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $post_id ) )
wp_die();
} else {
$post_id = null;
}
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$post_data = isset( $_REQUEST['post_data'] ) ? wp_unslash( $_REQUEST['post_data'] ) : array();
// If the context is custom header or background, make sure the uploaded file is an image.
if ( isset( $post_data['context'] ) && in_array( $post_data['context'], array( 'custom-header', 'custom-background' ) ) ) {
$wp_filetype = wp_check_filetype_and_ext( $_FILES['async-upload']['tmp_name'], $_FILES['async-upload']['name'], false );
if ( ! wp_match_mime_types( 'image', $wp_filetype['type'] ) ) {
echo json_encode( array(
'success' => false,
'data' => array(
'message' => __( 'The uploaded file is not a valid image. Please try again.' ),
'filename' => $_FILES['async-upload']['name'],
)
) );
wp_die();
}
}
$attachment_id = media_handle_upload( 'async-upload', $post_id, $post_data );
if ( is_wp_error( $attachment_id ) ) {
echo json_encode( array(
'success' => false,
'data' => array(
'message' => $attachment_id->get_error_message(),
'filename' => $_FILES['async-upload']['name'],
)
) );
wp_die();
}
if ( isset( $post_data['context'] ) && isset( $post_data['theme'] ) ) {
if ( 'custom-background' === $post_data['context'] )
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
wp_update_post_meta( $attachment_id, '_wp_attachment_is_custom_background', $post_data['theme'] );
if ( 'custom-header' === $post_data['context'] )
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
wp_update_post_meta( $attachment_id, '_wp_attachment_is_custom_header', $post_data['theme'] );
}
if ( ! $attachment = wp_prepare_attachment_for_js( $attachment_id ) )
wp_die();
echo json_encode( array(
'success' => true,
'data' => $attachment,
) );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_image_editor() {
$attachment_id = intval($_POST['postid']);
if ( empty($attachment_id) || !current_user_can('edit_post', $attachment_id) )
wp_die( -1 );
check_ajax_referer( "image_editor-$attachment_id" );
include_once( ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/image-edit.php' );
$msg = false;
switch ( $_POST['do'] ) {
case 'save' :
$msg = wp_save_image($attachment_id);
$msg = json_encode($msg);
wp_die( $msg );
break;
case 'scale' :
$msg = wp_save_image($attachment_id);
break;
case 'restore' :
$msg = wp_restore_image($attachment_id);
break;
}
wp_image_editor($attachment_id, $msg);
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_set_post_thumbnail() {
$json = ! empty( $_REQUEST['json'] ); // New-style request
$post_ID = intval( $_POST['post_id'] );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $post_ID ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$thumbnail_id = intval( $_POST['thumbnail_id'] );
if ( $json )
check_ajax_referer( "update-post_$post_ID" );
else
check_ajax_referer( "set_post_thumbnail-$post_ID" );
if ( $thumbnail_id == '-1' ) {
if ( delete_post_thumbnail( $post_ID ) ) {
$return = _wp_post_thumbnail_html( null, $post_ID );
$json ? wp_send_json_success( $return ) : wp_die( $return );
} else {
wp_die( 0 );
}
}
if ( set_post_thumbnail( $post_ID, $thumbnail_id ) ) {
$return = _wp_post_thumbnail_html( $thumbnail_id, $post_ID );
$json ? wp_send_json_success( $return ) : wp_die( $return );
}
wp_die( 0 );
}
function wp_ajax_date_format() {
wp_die( date_i18n( sanitize_option( 'date_format', $_POST['date'] ) ) );
}
function wp_ajax_time_format() {
wp_die( date_i18n( sanitize_option( 'time_format', $_POST['date'] ) ) );
}
function wp_ajax_wp_fullscreen_save_post() {
$post_id = isset( $_POST['post_ID'] ) ? (int) $_POST['post_ID'] : 0;
$post = $post_type = null;
if ( $post_id )
$post = get_post( $post_id );
if ( $post )
$post_type = $post->post_type;
elseif ( isset( $_POST['post_type'] ) && post_type_exists( $_POST['post_type'] ) )
$post_type = $_POST['post_type'];
check_ajax_referer('update-post_' . $post_id, '_wpnonce');
$post_id = edit_post();
if ( is_wp_error($post_id) ) {
if ( $post_id->get_error_message() )
$message = $post_id->get_error_message();
else
$message = __('Save failed');
echo json_encode( array( 'message' => $message, 'last_edited' => '' ) );
wp_die();
} else {
$message = __('Saved.');
}
if ( $post ) {
$last_date = mysql2date( get_option('date_format'), $post->post_modified );
$last_time = mysql2date( get_option('time_format'), $post->post_modified );
} else {
$last_date = date_i18n( get_option('date_format') );
$last_time = date_i18n( get_option('time_format') );
}
if ( $last_id = get_post_meta($post_id, '_edit_last', true) ) {
$last_user = get_userdata($last_id);
$last_edited = sprintf( __('Last edited by %1$s on %2$s at %3$s'), esc_html( $last_user->display_name ), $last_date, $last_time );
} else {
$last_edited = sprintf( __('Last edited on %1$s at %2$s'), $last_date, $last_time );
}
echo json_encode( array( 'message' => $message, 'last_edited' => $last_edited ) );
wp_die();
}
function wp_ajax_wp_remove_post_lock() {
if ( empty( $_POST['post_ID'] ) || empty( $_POST['active_post_lock'] ) )
wp_die( 0 );
$post_id = (int) $_POST['post_ID'];
if ( ! $post = get_post( $post_id ) )
wp_die( 0 );
check_ajax_referer( 'update-post_' . $post_id );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $post_id ) )
wp_die( -1 );
$active_lock = array_map( 'absint', explode( ':', $_POST['active_post_lock'] ) );
if ( $active_lock[1] != get_current_user_id() )
wp_die( 0 );
$new_lock = ( time() - apply_filters( 'wp_check_post_lock_window', AUTOSAVE_INTERVAL * 2 ) + 5 ) . ':' . $active_lock[1];
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
wp_update_post_meta( $post_id, '_edit_lock', $new_lock, implode( ':', $active_lock ) );
wp_die( 1 );
}
function wp_ajax_dismiss_wp_pointer() {
$pointer = $_POST['pointer'];
if ( $pointer != sanitize_key( $pointer ) )
wp_die( 0 );
// check_ajax_referer( 'dismiss-pointer_' . $pointer );
$dismissed = array_filter( explode( ',', (string) get_user_meta( get_current_user_id(), 'dismissed_wp_pointers', true ) ) );
if ( in_array( $pointer, $dismissed ) )
wp_die( 0 );
$dismissed[] = $pointer;
$dismissed = implode( ',', $dismissed );
update_user_meta( get_current_user_id(), 'dismissed_wp_pointers', $dismissed );
wp_die( 1 );
}
/**
* Get an attachment.
*
* @since 3.5.0
*/
function wp_ajax_get_attachment() {
if ( ! isset( $_REQUEST['id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! $id = absint( $_REQUEST['id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! $post = get_post( $id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( 'attachment' != $post->post_type )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! current_user_can( 'upload_files' ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! $attachment = wp_prepare_attachment_for_js( $id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
wp_send_json_success( $attachment );
}
/**
* Query for attachments.
*
* @since 3.5.0
*/
function wp_ajax_query_attachments() {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'upload_files' ) )
wp_send_json_error();
$query = isset( $_REQUEST['query'] ) ? (array) $_REQUEST['query'] : array();
Use the new media modal to insert galleries into TinyMCE and the text editor. '''Galleries''' * Gallery insertion from the new media modal (into TinyMCE, the text editor, etc). * Gallery previews in TinyMCE now use the `wp.mce.views` API. * Disables the TinyMCE `wpgallery` plugin. * Gallery previews consist of the first image of the gallery and the appearance of a stack. This will later be fleshed out to include more images/functionality (including editing the gallery, gallery properties, and showing the number of images in the gallery). * Multiple galleries can be added to a single post. * The gallery MCE view provides a bridge between the `wp.shortcode` and `Attachments` representation of a gallery, which allows the existing collection to persist when a gallery is initially created (preventing a request to the server for the query). '''Shortcodes''' * Renames `wp.shortcode.Match` to `wp.shortcode` to better expose the shortcode constructor. * The `wp.shortcode` constructor now accepts an object of options instead of a `wp.shortcode.regexp()` match. * A `wp.shortcode` instance can be created from a `wp.shortcode.regexp()` match by calling `wp.shortcode.fromMatch( match )`. * Adds `wp.shortcode.string()`, which takes a set of shortcode parameters and converts them into a string.* Renames `wp.shortcode.prototype.text()` to `wp.shortcode.prototype.string()`. * Adds an additional capture group to `wp.shortcode.regexp()` that records whether or not the shortcode has a closing tag. This allows us to improve the accuracy of the syntax used when transforming a shortcode object back into a string. '''Media Models''' * Prevents media `Query` models from observing the central `Attachments.all` object when query args without corresponding filters are set (otherwise, queries quickly amass false positives). * Adds `post__in`, `post__not_in`, and `post_parent` as acceptable JS attachment `Query` args. * `Attachments.more()` always returns a `$.promise` object. see #21390, #21809, #21812, #21815, #21817. git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@22120 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2012-10-05 06:23:59 +02:00
$query = array_intersect_key( $query, array_flip( array(
's', 'order', 'orderby', 'posts_per_page', 'paged', 'post_mime_type',
'post_parent', 'post__in', 'post__not_in',
) ) );
$query['post_type'] = 'attachment';
$query['post_status'] = 'inherit';
if ( current_user_can( get_post_type_object( 'attachment' )->cap->read_private_posts ) )
$query['post_status'] .= ',private';
$query = new WP_Query( $query );
$posts = array_map( 'wp_prepare_attachment_for_js', $query->posts );
$posts = array_filter( $posts );
wp_send_json_success( $posts );
}
/**
* Save attachment attributes.
*
* @since 3.5.0
*/
function wp_ajax_save_attachment() {
if ( ! isset( $_REQUEST['id'] ) || ! isset( $_REQUEST['changes'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! $id = absint( $_REQUEST['id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
check_ajax_referer( 'update-post_' . $id, 'nonce' );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$changes = wp_unslash( $_REQUEST['changes'] );
$post = get_post( $id, ARRAY_A );
if ( 'attachment' != $post['post_type'] )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( isset( $changes['title'] ) )
$post['post_title'] = $changes['title'];
if ( isset( $changes['caption'] ) )
$post['post_excerpt'] = $changes['caption'];
Restore the Description field to the media UI in 3.5. We tried in vain -- a noble but ultimately failed effort -- to reduce the number of fields for attachments from four (title, caption, alt, description) to one (caption for images, title otherwise). Alternative text needed to stay for accessibility reasons, of course. Eventually title returned due to heavy plugin reliance. Description is too used by too many plugins (often times incorrectly -- the caption is more likely the proper field), hence its less-than-triumphant return today. Version 3.5 has tried to streamline media in a number of ways. Removing fields may have been too much at once, as it forced not only a user interface change, but a paradigm change as well. Finally, on upload we populate the description field with IPTC/EXIF captions, rather than the caption field. See #22768, this should be fixed. For now, Description stays. This commit also restores 'Title' attribute editing to the main tab of the Edit Image dialog. The "Title" field no longer populates title attributes for <img> tags by design (for accessibility and other purposes, see #18984). So, here is a more obvious 'workaround' for the tooltip community. Finally, this: * Cleans up the post.php attachment editor, including by showing a prettier form of the mime type. * Enables plugins to specifically hide attachment_fields_to_edit from either post.php (where you can create meta boxes) or the modal (which you may not want to clutter), for compatibility reasons. * Hides the 'Describe this file...' placeholder when a field is read-only in the modal. props nacin, helenyhou. fixes #22759. git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23083 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2012-12-06 01:41:06 +01:00
if ( isset( $changes['description'] ) )
$post['post_content'] = $changes['description'];
if ( isset( $changes['alt'] ) ) {
$alt = get_post_meta( $id, '_wp_attachment_image_alt', true );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$new_alt = $changes['alt'];
if ( $alt != $new_alt ) {
$new_alt = wp_strip_all_tags( $new_alt, true );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
wp_update_post_meta( $id, '_wp_attachment_image_alt', $new_alt );
}
}
wp_update_post( $post );
wp_send_json_success();
}
/**
* Save backwards compatible attachment attributes.
*
* @since 3.5.0
*/
function wp_ajax_save_attachment_compat() {
if ( ! isset( $_REQUEST['id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! $id = absint( $_REQUEST['id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( empty( $_REQUEST['attachments'] ) || empty( $_REQUEST['attachments'][ $id ] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$attachment_data = wp_unslash( $_REQUEST['attachments'][ $id ] );
check_ajax_referer( 'update-post_' . $id, 'nonce' );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
$post = get_post( $id, ARRAY_A );
if ( 'attachment' != $post['post_type'] )
wp_send_json_error();
$post = apply_filters( 'attachment_fields_to_save', $post, $attachment_data );
if ( isset( $post['errors'] ) ) {
$errors = $post['errors']; // @todo return me and display me!
unset( $post['errors'] );
}
wp_update_post( $post );
foreach ( get_attachment_taxonomies( $post ) as $taxonomy ) {
if ( isset( $attachment_data[ $taxonomy ] ) )
wp_set_object_terms( $id, array_map( 'trim', preg_split( '/,+/', $attachment_data[ $taxonomy ] ) ), $taxonomy, false );
}
if ( ! $attachment = wp_prepare_attachment_for_js( $id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
wp_send_json_success( $attachment );
}
function wp_ajax_save_attachment_order() {
if ( ! isset( $_REQUEST['post_id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! $post_id = absint( $_REQUEST['post_id'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( empty( $_REQUEST['attachments'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
check_ajax_referer( 'update-post_' . $post_id, 'nonce' );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$attachments = wp_unslash( $_REQUEST['attachments'] );
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $post_id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
$post = get_post( $post_id, ARRAY_A );
foreach ( $attachments as $attachment_id => $menu_order ) {
if ( ! current_user_can( 'edit_post', $attachment_id ) )
continue;
if ( ! $attachment = get_post( $attachment_id ) )
continue;
if ( 'attachment' != $attachment->post_type )
continue;
wp_update_post( array( 'ID' => $attachment_id, 'menu_order' => $menu_order ) );
}
wp_send_json_success();
}
/**
* Generates the HTML to send an attachment to the editor.
* Backwards compatible with the media_send_to_editor filter and the chain
* of filters that follow.
*
* @since 3.5.0
*/
function wp_ajax_send_attachment_to_editor() {
check_ajax_referer( 'media-send-to-editor', 'nonce' );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$attachment = wp_unslash( $_POST['attachment'] );
$id = intval( $attachment['id'] );
if ( ! $post = get_post( $id ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( 'attachment' != $post->post_type )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( current_user_can( 'edit_post', $id ) ) {
// If this attachment is unattached, attach it. Primarily a back compat thing.
if ( 0 == $post->post_parent && $insert_into_post_id = intval( $_POST['post_id'] ) ) {
wp_update_post( array( 'ID' => $id, 'post_parent' => $insert_into_post_id ) );
}
}
$rel = $url = '';
$html = $title = isset( $attachment['post_title'] ) ? $attachment['post_title'] : '';
if ( ! empty( $attachment['url'] ) ) {
$url = $attachment['url'];
if ( strpos( $url, 'attachment_id') || get_attachment_link( $id ) == $url )
$rel = ' rel="attachment wp-att-' . $id . '"';
$html = '<a href="' . esc_url( $url ) . '"' . $rel . '>' . $html . '</a>';
}
remove_filter( 'media_send_to_editor', 'image_media_send_to_editor', 10, 3 );
if ( 'image' === substr( $post->post_mime_type, 0, 5 ) ) {
$align = isset( $attachment['align'] ) ? $attachment['align'] : 'none';
$size = isset( $attachment['image-size'] ) ? $attachment['image-size'] : 'medium';
$alt = isset( $attachment['image_alt'] ) ? $attachment['image_alt'] : '';
$caption = isset( $attachment['post_excerpt'] ) ? $attachment['post_excerpt'] : '';
$title = ''; // We no longer insert title tags into <img> tags, as they are redundant.
$html = get_image_send_to_editor( $id, $caption, $title, $align, $url, (bool) $rel, $size, $alt );
}
$html = apply_filters( 'media_send_to_editor', $html, $id, $attachment );
wp_send_json_success( $html );
}
/**
* Generates the HTML to send a non-image embed link to the editor.
*
* Backwards compatible with the following filters:
* - file_send_to_editor_url
* - audio_send_to_editor_url
* - video_send_to_editor_url
*
* @since 3.5.0
*/
function wp_ajax_send_link_to_editor() {
check_ajax_referer( 'media-send-to-editor', 'nonce' );
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
if ( ! $src = wp_unslash( $_POST['src'] ) )
wp_send_json_error();
if ( ! strpos( $src, '://' ) )
$src = 'http://' . $src;
if ( ! $src = esc_url_raw( $src ) )
wp_send_json_error();
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
if ( ! $title = trim( wp_unslash( $_POST['title'] ) ) )
$title = wp_basename( $src );
$html = '';
if ( $title )
$html = '<a href="' . esc_url( $src ) . '">' . $title . '</a>';
// Figure out what filter to run:
$type = 'file';
if ( ( $ext = preg_replace( '/^.+?\.([^.]+)$/', '$1', $src ) ) && ( $ext_type = wp_ext2type( $ext ) )
&& ( 'audio' == $ext_type || 'video' == $ext_type ) )
$type = $ext_type;
$html = apply_filters( $type . '_send_to_editor_url', $html, $src, $title );
wp_send_json_success( $html );
}
function wp_ajax_heartbeat() {
check_ajax_referer( 'heartbeat-nonce', '_nonce' );
$response = array();
// screenid is the same as $current_screen->id and the JS global 'pagenow'
if ( ! empty($_POST['screenid']) )
$screen_id = sanitize_key($_POST['screenid']);
else
$screen_id = 'site';
if ( ! empty($_POST['data']) ) {
Change all core API to expect unslashed rather than slashed arguments. The exceptions to this are update_post_meta() and add_post_meta() which are often used by plugins in POST handlers and will continue accepting slashed data for now. Introduce wp_upate_post_meta() and wp_add_post_meta() as unslashed alternatives to update_post_meta() and add_post_meta(). These functions could become methods in WP_Post so don't use them too heavily yet. Remove all escape() calls from wp_xmlrpc_server. Now that core expects unslashed data this is no longer needed. Remove addslashes(), addslashes_gpc(), add_magic_quotes() calls on data being prepared for handoff to core functions that until now expected slashed data. Adding slashes in no longer necessary. Introduce wp_unslash() and use to it remove slashes from GPCS data before using it in core API. Almost every instance of stripslashes() in core should now be wp_unslash(). In the future (a release or three) when GPCS is no longer slashed, wp_unslash() will stop stripping slashes and simply return what is passed. At this point wp_unslash() calls can be removed from core. Introduce wp_slash() for slashing GPCS data. This will also turn into a noop once GPCS is no longer slashed. wp_slash() should almost never be used. It is mainly of use in unit tests. Plugins should use wp_unslash() on data being passed to core API. Plugins should no longer slash data being passed to core. So when you get_post() and then wp_insert_post() the post data from get_post() no longer needs addslashes(). Most plugins were not bothering with this. They will magically start doing the right thing. Unfortunately, those few souls who did it properly will now have to avoid calling addslashes() for 3.6 and newer. Use wp_kses_post() and wp_kses_data(), which expect unslashed data, instead of wp_filter_post_kses() and wp_filter_kses(), which expect slashed data. Filters are no longer passed slashed data. Remove many no longer necessary calls to $wpdb->escape() and esc_sql(). In wp_get_referer() and wp_get_original_referer(), return unslashed data. Remove old stripslashes() calls from WP_Widget::update() handlers. These haven't been necessary since WP_Widget. Switch several queries over to prepare(). Expect something to break. Props alexkingorg see #21767 git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@23416 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2013-02-14 23:51:06 +01:00
$data = wp_unslash( (array) $_POST['data'] );
// todo: how much to sanitize and preset and what to leave to be accessed from $data or $_POST..?
$user = wp_get_current_user();
$data['user_id'] = $user->exists() ? $user->ID : 0;
// todo: separate filters: 'heartbeat_[action]' so we call different callbacks only when there is data for them,
// or all callbacks listen to one filter and run when there is something for them in $data?
$response = apply_filters( 'heartbeat_received', $response, $data, $screen_id );
}
$response = apply_filters( 'heartbeat_send', $response, $screen_id );
// Allow the transport to be replaced with long-polling easily
do_action( 'heartbeat_tick', $response, $screen_id );
// send the current time acording to the server
$response['servertime'] = time();
// Change the interval, format: array( speed, ticks )
if ( isset($response['heartbeat_interval']) )
$response['heartbeat_interval'] = (array) $response['heartbeat_interval'];
wp_send_json($response);
}