Use a less complex approach for enforcing path slashes in `update_blog_details()`

Ensure leading and traling slashes are in place and don't touch anything in the middle. Validating with `array_filter()` would have missed a possible valid falsy path - `/my-path/0/`.

Props nacin.

Fixes #18117.

Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@31158


git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@31139 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
This commit is contained in:
Jeremy Felt 2015-01-12 04:21:22 +00:00
parent 343a6587cf
commit 8f35b191db
2 changed files with 2 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -298,8 +298,7 @@ function update_blog_details( $blog_id, $details = array() ) {
$fields = array( 'site_id', 'domain', 'path', 'registered', 'last_updated', 'public', 'archived', 'mature', 'spam', 'deleted', 'lang_id');
foreach ( array_intersect( array_keys( $details ), $fields ) as $field ) {
if ( 'path' === $field ) {
$details[ $field ] = array_filter( explode( '/', $details[ $field ] ) );
$details[ $field ] = trailingslashit( '/' . implode( '/', $details[ $field ] ) );
$details[ $field ] = trailingslashit( '/' . trim( $details[ $field ], '/' ) );
}
$update_details[ $field ] = $details[ $field ];

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
*
* @global string $wp_version
*/
$wp_version = '4.2-alpha-31157';
$wp_version = '4.2-alpha-31158';
/**
* Holds the WordPress DB revision, increments when changes are made to the WordPress DB schema.