| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230 | <?php/** * Error Protection API: WP_Fatal_Error_Handler class * * @package WordPress * @since   5.2.0 *//** * Core class used as the default shutdown handler for fatal errors. * * A drop-in 'fatal-error-handler.php' can be used to override the instance of this class and use a custom * implementation for the fatal error handler that WordPress registers. The custom class should extend this class and * can override its methods individually as necessary. The file must return the instance of the class that should be * registered. * * @since 5.2.0 */class WP_Fatal_Error_Handler {	/**	 * Runs the shutdown handler.	 *	 * This method is registered via `register_shutdown_function()`.	 *	 * @since 5.2.0	 */	public function handle() {		if ( defined( 'WP_SANDBOX_SCRAPING' ) && WP_SANDBOX_SCRAPING ) {			return;		}		try {			// Bail if no error found.			$error = $this->detect_error();			if ( ! $error ) {				return;			}			if ( ! isset( $GLOBALS['wp_locale'] ) && function_exists( 'load_default_textdomain' ) ) {				load_default_textdomain();			}			$handled = false;			if ( ! is_multisite() && wp_recovery_mode()->is_initialized() ) {				$handled = wp_recovery_mode()->handle_error( $error );			}			// Display the PHP error template if headers not sent.			if ( is_admin() || ! headers_sent() ) {				$this->display_error_template( $error, $handled );			}		} catch ( Exception $e ) {			// Catch exceptions and remain silent.		}	}	/**	 * Detects the error causing the crash if it should be handled.	 *	 * @since 5.2.0	 *	 * @return array|null Error that was triggered, or null if no error received or if the error should not be handled.	 */	protected function detect_error() {		$error = error_get_last();		// No error, just skip the error handling code.		if ( null === $error ) {			return null;		}		// Bail if this error should not be handled.		if ( ! $this->should_handle_error( $error ) ) {			return null;		}		return $error;	}	/**	 * Determines whether we are dealing with an error that WordPress should handle	 * in order to protect the admin backend against WSODs.	 *	 * @since 5.2.0	 *	 * @param array $error Error information retrieved from error_get_last().	 * @return bool Whether WordPress should handle this error.	 */	protected function should_handle_error( $error ) {		$error_types_to_handle = array(			E_ERROR,			E_PARSE,			E_USER_ERROR,			E_COMPILE_ERROR,			E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR,		);		if ( isset( $error['type'] ) && in_array( $error['type'], $error_types_to_handle, true ) ) {			return true;		}		/**		 * Filters whether a given thrown error should be handled by the fatal error handler.		 *		 * This filter is only fired if the error is not already configured to be handled by WordPress core. As such,		 * it exclusively allows adding further rules for which errors should be handled, but not removing existing		 * ones.		 *		 * @since 5.2.0		 *		 * @param bool  $should_handle_error Whether the error should be handled by the fatal error handler.		 * @param array $error               Error information retrieved from error_get_last().		 */		return (bool) apply_filters( 'wp_should_handle_php_error', false, $error );	}	/**	 * Displays the PHP error template and sends the HTTP status code, typically 500.	 *	 * A drop-in 'php-error.php' can be used as a custom template. This drop-in should control the HTTP status code and	 * print the HTML markup indicating that a PHP error occurred. Note that this drop-in may potentially be executed	 * very early in the WordPress bootstrap process, so any core functions used that are not part of	 * `wp-includes/load.php` should be checked for before being called.	 *	 * If no such drop-in is available, this will call {@see WP_Fatal_Error_Handler::display_default_error_template()}.	 *	 * @since 5.2.0	 * @since 5.3.0 The `$handled` parameter was added.	 *	 * @param array         $error   Error information retrieved from `error_get_last()`.	 * @param true|WP_Error $handled Whether Recovery Mode handled the fatal error.	 */	protected function display_error_template( $error, $handled ) {		if ( defined( 'WP_CONTENT_DIR' ) ) {			// Load custom PHP error template, if present.			$php_error_pluggable = WP_CONTENT_DIR . '/php-error.php';			if ( is_readable( $php_error_pluggable ) ) {				require_once $php_error_pluggable;				return;			}		}		// Otherwise, display the default error template.		$this->display_default_error_template( $error, $handled );	}	/**	 * Displays the default PHP error template.	 *	 * This method is called conditionally if no 'php-error.php' drop-in is available.	 *	 * It calls {@see wp_die()} with a message indicating that the site is experiencing technical difficulties and a	 * login link to the admin backend. The {@see 'wp_php_error_message'} and {@see 'wp_php_error_args'} filters can	 * be used to modify these parameters.	 *	 * @since 5.2.0	 * @since 5.3.0 The `$handled` parameter was added.	 *	 * @param array         $error   Error information retrieved from `error_get_last()`.	 * @param true|WP_Error $handled Whether Recovery Mode handled the fatal error.	 */	protected function display_default_error_template( $error, $handled ) {		if ( ! function_exists( '__' ) ) {			wp_load_translations_early();		}		if ( ! function_exists( 'wp_die' ) ) {			require_once ABSPATH . WPINC . '/functions.php';		}		if ( ! class_exists( 'WP_Error' ) ) {			require_once ABSPATH . WPINC . '/class-wp-error.php';		}		if ( true === $handled && wp_is_recovery_mode() ) {			$message = __( 'There has been a critical error on your website, putting it in recovery mode. Please check the Themes and Plugins screens for more details. If you just installed or updated a theme or plugin, check the relevant page for that first.' );		} elseif ( is_protected_endpoint() ) {			$message = __( 'There has been a critical error on your website. Please check your site admin email inbox for instructions.' );		} else {			$message = __( 'There has been a critical error on your website.' );		}		$message = sprintf(			'<p>%s</p><p><a href="%s">%s</a></p>',			$message,			/* translators: Documentation explaining debugging in WordPress. */			esc_url( __( 'https://wordpress.org/support/article/debugging-in-wordpress/' ) ),			__( 'Learn more about debugging in WordPress.' )		);		$args = array(			'response' => 500,			'exit'     => false,		);		/**		 * Filters the message that the default PHP error template displays.		 *		 * @since 5.2.0		 *		 * @param string $message HTML error message to display.		 * @param array  $error   Error information retrieved from `error_get_last()`.		 */		$message = apply_filters( 'wp_php_error_message', $message, $error );		/**		 * Filters the arguments passed to {@see wp_die()} for the default PHP error template.		 *		 * @since 5.2.0		 *		 * @param array $args Associative array of arguments passed to `wp_die()`. By default these contain a		 *                    'response' key, and optionally 'link_url' and 'link_text' keys.		 * @param array $error Error information retrieved from `error_get_last()`.		 */		$args = apply_filters( 'wp_php_error_args', $args, $error );		$wp_error = new WP_Error(			'internal_server_error',			$message,			array(				'error' => $error,			)		);		wp_die( $wp_error, '', $args );	}}
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