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authoryehudah <yehudah@b8457f37-d9ea-0310-8a92-e5e31aec5664>2019-11-25 07:50:30 +0000
committeryehudah <yehudah@b8457f37-d9ea-0310-8a92-e5e31aec5664>2019-11-25 07:50:30 +0000
commit907ce8c044159ca8da6ccce3ec5362ac61e7c142 (patch)
tree4e4b83a3aa041a1826e4ac876b001195fce3f7c2 /Postman/Postman-Email-Log/PostmanEmailLogView.php
parenta41b9219a66f4018dc581f561fbe3fedd24e73f2 (diff)
downloadPost-SMTP-907ce8c044159ca8da6ccce3ec5362ac61e7c142.zip
deleted by mistake
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-<?php
-if ( ! defined( 'ABSPATH' ) ) {
- exit; // Exit if accessed directly
-}
-require_once dirname(__DIR__) . '/PostmanLogFields.php';
-
-/**
- * See http://wpengineer.com/2426/wp_list_table-a-step-by-step-guide/
- */
-if ( ! class_exists( 'WP_List_Table' ) ) {
- require_once( ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/includes/class-wp-list-table.php' );
-}
-class PostmanEmailLogView extends WP_List_Table {
- private $logger;
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * REQUIRED.
- * Set up a constructor that references the parent constructor. We
- * use the parent reference to set some default configs.
- * *************************************************************************
- */
- function __construct() {
- $this->logger = new PostmanLogger( get_class( $this ) );
-
- // Set parent defaults
- parent::__construct( array(
- 'singular' => 'email_log_entry', // singular name of the listed records
- 'plural' => 'email_log_entries', // plural name of the listed records
- 'ajax' => false,
- ) ); // does this table support ajax?
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * Recommended.
- * This method is called when the parent class can't find a method
- * specifically build for a given column. Generally, it's recommended to include
- * one method for each column you want to render, keeping your package class
- * neat and organized. For example, if the class needs to process a column
- * named 'title', it would first see if a method named $this->column_title()
- * exists - if it does, that method will be used. If it doesn't, this one will
- * be used. Generally, you should try to use custom column methods as much as
- * possible.
- *
- * Since we have defined a column_title() method later on, this method doesn't
- * need to concern itself with any column with a name of 'title'. Instead, it
- * needs to handle everything else.
- *
- * For more detailed insight into how columns are handled, take a look at
- * WP_List_Table::single_row_columns()
- *
- * @param array $item
- * A singular item (one full row's worth of data)
- * @param array $column_name
- * The name/slug of the column to be processed
- * @return string Text or HTML to be placed inside the column <td>
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function column_default( $item, $column_name ) {
- switch ( $column_name ) {
- case 'sent_to' :
- case 'date' :
- case 'status' :
- return $item [ $column_name ];
- default :
- return print_r( $item, true ); // Show the whole array for troubleshooting purposes
- }
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * Recommended.
- * This is a custom column method and is responsible for what
- * is rendered in any column with a name/slug of 'title'. Every time the class
- * needs to render a column, it first looks for a method named
- * column_{$column_title} - if it exists, that method is run. If it doesn't
- * exist, column_default() is called instead.
- *
- * This example also illustrates how to implement rollover actions. Actions
- * should be an associative array formatted as 'slug'=>'link html' - and you
- * will need to generate the URLs yourself. You could even ensure the links
- *
- * @see WP_List_Table::::single_row_columns()
- * @param array $item
- * A singular item (one full row's worth of data)
- * @return string Text to be placed inside the column <td> (movie title only)
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function column_title( $item ) {
-
- // Build row actions
- $iframeUri = 'admin-post.php?page=postman_email_log&action=%s&email=%s&TB_iframe=true&width=700&height=550';
- $deleteUrl = wp_nonce_url( admin_url( sprintf( 'admin-post.php?page=postman_email_log&action=%s&email=%s', 'delete', $item ['ID'] ) ), 'delete_email_log_item_' . $item ['ID'] );
- $viewUrl = admin_url( sprintf( $iframeUri, 'view', $item ['ID'] ) );
- $transcriptUrl = admin_url( sprintf( $iframeUri, 'transcript', $item ['ID'] ) );
- $resendUrl = admin_url( sprintf( $iframeUri, 'resend', $item ['ID'] ) );
-
- $meta_values = PostmanLogFields::get_instance()->get( $item ['ID'] );
-
- $actions = array(
- 'delete' => sprintf( '<a href="%s">%s</a>', $deleteUrl, _x( 'Delete', 'Delete an item from the email log', 'post-smtp' ) ),
- 'view' => sprintf( '<a href="%s" class="thickbox">%s</a>', $viewUrl, _x( 'View', 'View an item from the email log', 'post-smtp' ) ),
- );
-
- if ( ! empty( $meta_values ['session_transcript'] [0] ) ) {
- $actions ['transcript'] = sprintf( '<a href="%1$s" class="thickbox">%2$s</a>', $transcriptUrl, __( 'Session Transcript', 'post-smtp' ) );
- } else {
- $actions ['transcript'] = sprintf( '%2$s', $transcriptUrl, __( 'Session Transcript', 'post-smtp' ) );
- }
- if ( ! (empty( $meta_values ['original_to'] [0] ) && empty( $meta_values ['originalHeaders'] [0] )) ) {
- // $actions ['resend'] = sprintf ( '<a href="%s">%s</a>', $resendUrl, __ ( 'Resend', 'post-smtp' ) );
- $emails = $meta_values ['original_to'] [0];
- $to = is_array( $emails ) ? implode( ',', array_walk($emails, 'sanitize_email') ) : sanitize_email( $emails );
-
- $actions ['resend'] = sprintf( '<span id="%3$s"><a class="postman-open-resend" href="#">%2$s</a></span><div style="display:none;"><input type="hidden" name="security" value="%6$s"><input type="text" name="mail_to" class="regular-text ltr" data-id="%1$s" value="%4$s"><button class="postman-resend button button-primary">%2$s</button><i style="color: black;">%5$s</i></div>', $item ['ID'], __( 'Resend', 'post-smtp' ), 'resend-' . $item ['ID'], esc_attr( $to ), __( 'comma-separated for multiple emails', 'post-smtp' ), wp_create_nonce( 'resend' ) );
- } else {
- $actions ['resend'] = sprintf( '%2$s', $resendUrl, __( 'Resend', 'post-smtp' ) );
- }
-
- // Return the title contents
- return sprintf( '%1$s %3$s',
- /*$1%s*/ $item ['title'],
- /*$2%s*/ $item ['ID'],
- /*$3%s*/ $this->row_actions( $actions ) );
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * REQUIRED if displaying checkboxes or using bulk actions! The 'cb' column
- * is given special treatment when columns are processed.
- * It ALWAYS needs to
- * have it's own method.
- *
- * @see WP_List_Table::::single_row_columns()
- * @param array $item
- * A singular item (one full row's worth of data)
- * @return string Text to be placed inside the column <td> (movie title only)
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function column_cb( $item ) {
- return sprintf( '<input type="checkbox" name="%1$s[]" value="%2$s" />',
- /*$1%s*/ $this->_args ['singular'], // Let's simply repurpose the table's singular label ("movie")
- /* $2%s */
- $item ['ID'] ); // The value of the checkbox should be the record's id
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * REQUIRED! This method dictates the table's columns and titles.
- * This should
- * return an array where the key is the column slug (and class) and the value
- * is the column's title text. If you need a checkbox for bulk actions, refer
- * to the $columns array below.
- *
- * The 'cb' column is treated differently than the rest. If including a checkbox
- * column in your table you must create a column_cb() method. If you don't need
- * bulk actions or checkboxes, simply leave the 'cb' entry out of your array.
- *
- * @see WP_List_Table::::single_row_columns()
- * @return array An associative array containing column information: 'slugs'=>'Visible Titles'
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function get_columns() {
- $columns = array(
- 'cb' => '<input type="checkbox" />', // Render a checkbox instead of text
- 'title' => _x( 'Subject', 'What is the subject of this message?', 'post-smtp' ),
- 'sent_to' => __( 'Sent To', 'post-smtp' ),
- 'status' => __( 'Status', 'post-smtp' ),
- 'date' => _x( 'Delivery Time', 'When was this email sent?', 'post-smtp' ),
- );
- return $columns;
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * Optional.
- * If you want one or more columns to be sortable (ASC/DESC toggle),
- * you will need to register it here. This should return an array where the
- * key is the column that needs to be sortable, and the value is db column to
- * sort by. Often, the key and value will be the same, but this is not always
- * the case (as the value is a column name from the database, not the list table).
- *
- * This method merely defines which columns should be sortable and makes them
- * clickable - it does not handle the actual sorting. You still need to detect
- * the ORDERBY and ORDER querystring variables within prepare_items() and sort
- * your data accordingly (usually by modifying your query).
- *
- * @return array An associative array containing all the columns that should be sortable: 'slugs'=>array('data_values',bool)
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function get_sortable_columns() {
- return array();
- $sortable_columns = array(
- 'title' => array(
- 'title',
- false,
- ), // true means it's already sorted
- 'status' => array(
- 'status',
- false,
- ),
- 'date' => array(
- 'date',
- false,
- ),
- );
- return $sortable_columns;
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * Optional.
- * If you need to include bulk actions in your list table, this is
- * the place to define them. Bulk actions are an associative array in the format
- * 'slug'=>'Visible Title'
- *
- * If this method returns an empty value, no bulk action will be rendered. If
- * you specify any bulk actions, the bulk actions box will be rendered with
- * the table automatically on display().
- *
- * Also note that list tables are not automatically wrapped in <form> elements,
- * so you will need to create those manually in order for bulk actions to function.
- *
- * @return array An associative array containing all the bulk actions: 'slugs'=>'Visible Titles'
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function get_bulk_actions() {
- $actions = array(
- 'bulk_delete' => _x( 'Delete', 'Delete an item from the email log', 'post-smtp' ),
- );
- return $actions;
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * Optional.
- * You can handle your bulk actions anywhere or anyhow you prefer.
- * For this example package, we will handle it in the class to keep things
- * clean and organized.
- *
- * @see $this->prepare_items() ************************************************************************
- */
- function process_bulk_action() {
- }
-
- /**
- * ************************************************************************
- * REQUIRED! This is where you prepare your data for display.
- * This method will
- * usually be used to query the database, sort and filter the data, and generally
- * get it ready to be displayed. At a minimum, we should set $this->items and
- * $this->set_pagination_args(), although the following properties and methods
- * are frequently interacted with here...
- *
- * @global WPDB $wpdb
- * @uses $this->_column_headers
- * @uses $this->items
- * @uses $this->get_columns()
- * @uses $this->get_sortable_columns()
- * @uses $this->get_pagenum()
- * @uses $this->set_pagination_args()
- * ************************************************************************
- */
- function prepare_items() {
- if ( ! empty( $_POST ) && ! wp_verify_nonce( $_REQUEST['post-smtp-log'], 'post-smtp' ) )
- die( 'Security check' );
-
- /**
- * First, lets decide how many records per page to show
- */
- $per_page = isset( $_POST['postman_page_records'] ) ? absint( $_POST['postman_page_records'] ) : 10;
-
- /**
- * REQUIRED.
- * Now we need to define our column headers. This includes a complete
- * array of columns to be displayed (slugs & titles), a list of columns
- * to keep hidden, and a list of columns that are sortable. Each of these
- * can be defined in another method (as we've done here) before being
- * used to build the value for our _column_headers property.
- */
- $columns = $this->get_columns();
- $hidden = array();
- $sortable = $this->get_sortable_columns();
-
- /**
- * REQUIRED.
- * Finally, we build an array to be used by the class for column
- * headers. The $this->_column_headers property takes an array which contains
- * 3 other arrays. One for all columns, one for hidden columns, and one
- * for sortable columns.
- */
- $this->_column_headers = array(
- $columns,
- $hidden,
- $sortable,
- );
-
- /**
- * Optional.
- * You can handle your bulk actions however you see fit. In this
- * case, we'll handle them within our package just to keep things clean.
- */
- $this->process_bulk_action();
-
- /**
- * Instead of querying a database, we're going to fetch the example data
- * property we created for use in this plugin.
- * This makes this example
- * package slightly different than one you might build on your own. In
- * this example, we'll be using array manipulation to sort and paginate
- * our data. In a real-world implementation, you will probably want to
- * use sort and pagination data to build a custom query instead, as you'll
- * be able to use your precisely-queried data immediately.
- */
- $data = array();
-
- $args = array(
- 'posts_per_page' => -1,
- 'orderby' => 'date',
- 'order' => 'DESC',
- 'post_type' => PostmanEmailLogPostType::POSTMAN_CUSTOM_POST_TYPE_SLUG,
- 'post_status' => 'private',
- 'suppress_filters' => true,
- );
-
- if ( isset( $_POST['from_date'] ) && ! empty( $_POST['from_date'] ) ) {
- $from_date = sanitize_text_field( $_POST['from_date'] );
-
- $args['date_query']['after'] = $from_date;
- $args['date_query']['column'] = 'post_date';
- $args['date_query']['inclusive'] = false;
- }
-
- if ( isset( $_POST['to_date'] ) && ! empty( $_POST['to_date'] ) ) {
- $to_date = sanitize_text_field( $_POST['to_date'] );
-
- $args['date_query']['before'] = $to_date;
- $args['date_query']['column'] = 'post_date';
- $args['date_query']['inclusive'] = true;
- }
-
- if ( ! empty( $_POST['search'] ) ) {
-
- if ( isset( $args['date_query'] ) ) {
- unset( $args['date_query'] ); }
-
- $args['s'] = sanitize_text_field( $_POST['search'] );
- }
-
- if ( isset( $_POST['postman_trash_all'] ) ) {
- $args['posts_per_page'] = -1;
- }
- $posts = new WP_query( $args );
-
- if ( isset( $_POST['postman_trash_all'] ) ) {
- foreach ( $posts->posts as $post ) {
- wp_delete_post( $post->ID, true );
- }
-
- $posts->posts = array();
- }
-
- $date_format = get_option( 'date_format' );
- $time_format = get_option( 'time_format' );
-
- foreach ( $posts->posts as $post ) {
- $date = $post->post_date;
- $humanTime = human_time_diff( strtotime( $post->post_date_gmt ) );
- // if this PHP system support humanTime, than use it
- if ( ! empty( $humanTime ) ) {
- /* Translators: where %s indicates the relative time from now */
- $date = sprintf( _x( '%s ago', 'A relative time as in "five days ago"', 'post-smtp' ), $humanTime );
- }
- $meta_values = PostmanLogFields::get_instance()->get( $post->ID );
- $sent_to = array_map( 'esc_html', explode( ',' , $meta_values ['to_header'] [0] ) );
- $flattenedPost = array(
- // the post title must be escaped as they are displayed in the HTML output
- 'sent_to' => implode( ', ', $sent_to ),
- 'title' => esc_html( $post->post_title ),
- // the post status must be escaped as they are displayed in the HTML output
- 'status' => ($post->post_excerpt != null ? esc_html( $post->post_excerpt ) : __( 'Sent', 'post-smtp' )),
- 'date' => date( "$date_format $time_format", strtotime( $post->post_date ) ),
- 'ID' => $post->ID,
- );
- array_push( $data, $flattenedPost );
- }
-
- /**
- * This checks for sorting input and sorts the data in our array accordingly.
- *
- * In a real-world situation involving a database, you would probably want
- * to handle sorting by passing the 'orderby' and 'order' values directly
- * to a custom query. The returned data will be pre-sorted, and this array
- * sorting technique would be unnecessary.
- */
- function usort_reorder( $a, $b ) {
- $orderby = ( ! empty( $_REQUEST ['orderby'] )) ? sanitize_text_field($_REQUEST ['orderby']) : 'title'; // If no sort, default to title
- $order = ( ! empty( $_REQUEST ['order'] )) ? sanitize_text_field($_REQUEST ['order']) : 'asc'; // If no order, default to asc
- $result = strcmp( $a [ $orderby ], $b [ $orderby ] ); // Determine sort order
- return ($order === 'asc') ? $result : - $result; // Send final sort direction to usort
- }
- // usort($data, 'usort_reorder');
- /**
- * *********************************************************************
- * ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- * vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
- *
- * In a real-world situation, this is where you would place your query.
- *
- * For information on making queries in WordPress, see this Codex entry:
- * http://codex.wordpress.org/Class_Reference/wpdb
- *
- * ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- * ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- * ********************************************************************
- */
-
- /**
- * REQUIRED for pagination.
- * Let's figure out what page the user is currently
- * looking at. We'll need this later, so you should always include it in
- * your own package classes.
- */
- $current_page = $this->get_pagenum();
-
- /**
- * REQUIRED for pagination.
- * Let's check how many items are in our data array.
- * In real-world use, this would be the total number of items in your database,
- * without filtering. We'll need this later, so you should always include it
- * in your own package classes.
- */
- $total_items = count( $data );
-
- /**
- * The WP_List_Table class does not handle pagination for us, so we need
- * to ensure that the data is trimmed to only the current page.
- * We can use
- * array_slice() to
- */
- $data = array_slice( $data, (($current_page - 1) * $per_page), $per_page );
-
- /**
- * REQUIRED.
- * Now we can add our *sorted* data to the items property, where
- * it can be used by the rest of the class.
- */
- $this->items = $data;
-
- /**
- * REQUIRED.
- * We also have to register our pagination options & calculations.
- */
- $this->set_pagination_args( array(
- 'total_items' => $total_items, // WE have to calculate the total number of items
- 'per_page' => $per_page, // WE have to determine how many items to show on a page
- 'total_pages' => ceil( $total_items / $per_page ),
- ) ); // WE have to calculate the total number of pages
- }
-}
-