Email addresses that contain both unicode and commas will not be
correctly encoded by mime_encode_header if the comma precedes the
unicode. In this scenario we have to quote the encoded address.
Refs #10763
Having a separate method gives a nicer home to the inline comments. I've
had to disable coding standards checks as the constants provided by PHP
do not follow the UPPER_CASE conventions.
If the SMTP connection is disconnected (read() returns false) we should
exit early and not wait for the read timeout. This has the added benefit
of making the mocks much simpler.
Refs #10221
In eaa2bbbcae I changed the behavior to
now use the TitleCased name as I didn't understand the intended behavior
or how apache was working in the reporter's specific case.
Refs #9229
When using TemplateEmail::deliver it always create new instance of CakeEmail, I assume it should create my extended "TemplateEmail" class insted.
PHP >5.3 compatible
The client_ip header can easily be forged. In 'safe' modes we should
only trust the remote_addr which comes from the sapi. Remove support for
http_clientaddress as I can't seem to find where this ever came from in
PHP on the http specs.
This fixes a regression introduced in that change that we didn't
previously have tests for. The issue fixed in #8359 was related to
PHP7.0, whereas PHP5 didn't have an issue. Now both versions will work
the same.
exemple
i have to get the referrer url from any page if exists
```
class AppController extends Controller {
......
public function beforeRender() {
parent::beforeRender();
$this->params['referer'] = $this->referer(null, true);
}
..........
}
```
Replace the complex and somewhat unfixable regexp based parser for
a parser that handles each line individually. Normalize multi-line
headers to replace multiple spaces with a single one. Section 4.2 of the
HTTP1.1 standard states
> Any LWS that occurs between field-content MAY be replaced with
> a single SP before interpreting the field value or forwarding the
> message downstream.
This makes me somewhat confident that we can safely normalize
multi-line HTTP header values.
Refs #8330
Not all webservers set CONTENT_TYPE. The built-in PHP webserver for
example sets HTTP_CONTENT_TYPE instead. Add a public method to the
request object to smooth over this difference.
Refs #6051, #8267