View file File name : wp-async-task.php Content :<?php /** * Plugin Name: WP Asynchronous Tasks * Version: 1.0 * Description: Creates an abstract class to execute asynchronous tasks * Author: 10up, Eric Mann, Luke Gedeon, John P. Bloch * License: MIT */ if ( ! class_exists( 'WP_Async_Task' ) ) { abstract class WP_Async_Task { /** * Constant identifier for a task that should be available to logged-in users * * See constructor documentation for more details. */ const LOGGED_IN = 1; /** * Constant identifier for a task that should be available to logged-out users * * See constructor documentation for more details. */ const LOGGED_OUT = 2; /** * Constant identifier for a task that should be available to all users regardless of auth status * * See constructor documentation for more details. */ const BOTH = 3; /** * This is the argument count for the main action set in the constructor. It * is set to an arbitrarily high value of twenty, but can be overridden if * necessary * * @var int */ protected $argument_count = 20; /** * Priority to fire intermediate action. * * @var int */ protected $priority = 10; /** * @var string */ protected $action; /** * @var array */ protected $_body_data; /** * Constructor to wire up the necessary actions * * Which hooks the asynchronous postback happens on can be set by the * $auth_level parameter. There are essentially three options: logged in users * only, logged out users only, or both. Set this when you instantiate an * object by using one of the three class constants to do so: * - LOGGED_IN * - LOGGED_OUT * - BOTH * $auth_level defaults to BOTH * * @throws Exception If the class' $action value hasn't been set * * @param int $auth_level The authentication level to use (see above) */ public function __construct( $auth_level = self::BOTH ) { if ( empty( $this->action ) ) { throw new Exception( 'Action not defined for class ' . __CLASS__ ); } add_action( $this->action, array( $this, 'launch' ), (int) $this->priority, (int) $this->argument_count ); if ( $auth_level & self::LOGGED_IN ) { add_action( "admin_post_wp_async_$this->action", array( $this, 'handle_postback' ) ); } if ( $auth_level & self::LOGGED_OUT ) { add_action( "admin_post_nopriv_wp_async_$this->action", array( $this, 'handle_postback' ) ); } } /** * Add the shutdown action for launching the real postback if we don't * get an exception thrown by prepare_data(). * * @uses func_get_args() To grab any arguments passed by the action */ public function launch() { $data = func_get_args(); try { $data = $this->prepare_data( $data ); } catch ( Exception $e ) { return; } $data['action'] = "wp_async_$this->action"; $data['_nonce'] = $this->create_async_nonce(); $this->_body_data = $data; if ( ! has_action( 'shutdown', array( $this, 'launch_on_shutdown' ) ) ) { add_action( 'shutdown', array( $this, 'launch_on_shutdown' ) ); } } /** * Launch the request on the WordPress shutdown hook * * On VIP we got into data races due to the postback sometimes completing * faster than the data could propogate to the database server cluster. * This made WordPress get empty data sets from the database without * failing. On their advice, we're moving the actual firing of the async * postback to the shutdown hook. Supposedly that will ensure that the * data at least has time to get into the object cache. * * @uses $_COOKIE To send a cookie header for async postback * @uses apply_filters() * @uses admin_url() * @uses wp_remote_post() */ public function launch_on_shutdown() { if ( ! empty( $this->_body_data ) ) { $cookies = array(); foreach ( $_COOKIE as $name => $value ) { $cookies[] = "$name=" . urlencode( is_array( $value ) ? serialize( $value ) : $value ); } $request_args = array( 'timeout' => 0.01, 'blocking' => false, 'sslverify' => apply_filters( 'https_local_ssl_verify', true ), 'body' => $this->_body_data, 'headers' => array( 'cookie' => implode( '; ', $cookies ), ), ); $url = admin_url( 'admin-post.php' ); wp_remote_post( $url, $request_args ); } } /** * Verify the postback is valid, then fire any scheduled events. * * @uses $_POST['_nonce'] * @uses is_user_logged_in() * @uses add_filter() * @uses wp_die() */ public function handle_postback() { if ( isset( $_POST['_nonce'] ) && $this->verify_async_nonce( $_POST['_nonce'] ) ) { if ( ! is_user_logged_in() ) { $this->action = "nopriv_$this->action"; } $this->run_action(); } add_filter( 'wp_die_handler', function() { die(); } ); wp_die(); } /** * Create a random, one time use token. * * Based entirely on wp_create_nonce() but does not tie the nonce to the * current logged-in user. * * @uses wp_nonce_tick() * @uses wp_hash() * * @return string The one-time use token */ protected function create_async_nonce() { $action = $this->get_nonce_action(); $i = wp_nonce_tick(); return substr( wp_hash( $i . $action . get_class( $this ), 'nonce' ), - 12, 10 ); } /** * Verify that the correct nonce was used within the time limit. * * @uses wp_nonce_tick() * @uses wp_hash() * * @param string $nonce Nonce to be verified * * @return bool Whether the nonce check passed or failed */ protected function verify_async_nonce( $nonce ) { $action = $this->get_nonce_action(); $i = wp_nonce_tick(); // Nonce generated 0-12 hours ago if ( substr( wp_hash( $i . $action . get_class( $this ), 'nonce' ), - 12, 10 ) == $nonce ) { return 1; } // Nonce generated 12-24 hours ago if ( substr( wp_hash( ( $i - 1 ) . $action . get_class( $this ), 'nonce' ), - 12, 10 ) == $nonce ) { return 2; } // Invalid nonce return false; } /** * Get a nonce action based on the $action property of the class * * @return string The nonce action for the current instance */ protected function get_nonce_action() { $action = $this->action; if ( substr( $action, 0, 7 ) === 'nopriv_' ) { $action = substr( $action, 7 ); } $action = "wp_async_$action"; return $action; } /** * Prepare any data to be passed to the asynchronous postback * * The array this function receives will be a numerically keyed array from * func_get_args(). It is expected that you will return an associative array * so that the $_POST values used in the asynchronous call will make sense. * * The array you send back may or may not have anything to do with the data * passed into this method. It all depends on the implementation details and * what data is needed in the asynchronous postback. * * Do not set values for 'action' or '_nonce', as those will get overwritten * later in launch(). * * @throws Exception If the postback should not occur for any reason * * @param array $data The raw data received by the launch method * * @return array The prepared data */ abstract protected function prepare_data( $data ); /** * Run the do_action function for the asynchronous postback. * * This method needs to fetch and sanitize any and all data from the $_POST * superglobal and provide them to the do_action call. * * The action should be constructed as "wp_async_task_$this->action" */ abstract protected function run_action(); } }