RedInode::__construct |
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$attach | ) |
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Since I don't believe this is documented elsewhere - ATTACH_FLAG_OS means that the file contents are stored in the OS rather than in the DB - as is the case for attachments. Exactly how they are stored (what path and filename) are still TBD. We will probably not be using the original filename but instead the attachment 'hash' as this will prevent folks from uploading PHP code onto misconfigured servers and executing it. It's easy to misconfigure servers because we can provide a rule for Apache, but folks using nginx will then be susceptible. Then there are those who don't understand these kinds of exploits and don't have any idea allowing uploaded PHP files to be executed by the server could be a problem. We also don't have any idea what executable types are served on their system - like .py, .pyc, .pl, .sh .cgi, .exe, .bat, .net, whatever.
RedInode::getLastModified |
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RedInode::setName |
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$newName | ) |
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The documentation for this class was generated from the following file: