Options, Meta APIs: Soft-deprecate use of 'yes' and 'no' as $autoload parameter.

WordPress 6.6 option autoload enhancements included discouraging the use of 'yes' and 'no' to indicate whether to autoload an option when calling `add_option()` or `update_option()`. Instead, a boolean should be used.

This changeset brings the newer autoload related functions `wp_set_option_autoload_values()`, `wp_set_options_autoload()`, and `wp_set_option_autoload()` in line with those changes. Additionally, it soft-deprecates the values more formally, as they should no longer be used. No PHP warnings will be emitted though as this is not a hard deprecation. This change is purely about documentation.

Props flixos90, joemcgill, jrf, mukesh27.
Fixes #61929.
See #61103, #61939.

Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@58949


git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@58345 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
This commit is contained in:
Felix Arntz 2024-08-28 22:48:18 +00:00
parent d79898ec1b
commit 4d0a623d7a
2 changed files with 32 additions and 18 deletions

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@ -375,12 +375,13 @@ function get_options( $options ) {
* by the plugin which are generally autoloaded can be set to not autoload when the plugin is inactive.
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.7.0 The autoload values 'yes' and 'no' are deprecated.
*
* @global wpdb $wpdb WordPress database abstraction object.
*
* @param array $options Associative array of option names and their autoload values to set. The option names are
* expected to not be SQL-escaped. The autoload values accept 'yes'|true to enable or 'no'|false
* to disable.
* expected to not be SQL-escaped. The autoload values should be boolean values. For backward
* compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted, though using these values is deprecated.
* @return array Associative array of all provided $options as keys and boolean values for whether their autoload value
* was updated.
*/
@ -398,7 +399,12 @@ function wp_set_option_autoload_values( array $options ) {
$results = array();
foreach ( $options as $option => $autoload ) {
wp_protect_special_option( $option ); // Ensure only valid options can be passed.
if ( 'off' === $autoload || 'no' === $autoload || false === $autoload ) { // Sanitize autoload value and categorize accordingly.
/*
* Sanitize autoload value and categorize accordingly.
* The values 'yes', 'no', 'on', and 'off' are supported for backward compatibility.
*/
if ( 'off' === $autoload || 'no' === $autoload || false === $autoload ) {
$grouped_options['off'][] = $option;
} else {
$grouped_options['on'][] = $option;
@ -496,12 +502,14 @@ function wp_set_option_autoload_values( array $options ) {
* each option at once.
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.7.0 The autoload values 'yes' and 'no' are deprecated.
*
* @see wp_set_option_autoload_values()
*
* @param string[] $options List of option names. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param string|bool $autoload Autoload value to control whether to load the options when WordPress starts up.
* Accepts 'yes'|true to enable or 'no'|false to disable.
* @param string[] $options List of option names. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param bool $autoload Autoload value to control whether to load the options when WordPress starts up.
* For backward compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted, though using these values is
* deprecated.
* @return array Associative array of all provided $options as keys and boolean values for whether their autoload value
* was updated.
*/
@ -518,12 +526,14 @@ function wp_set_options_autoload( array $options, $autoload ) {
* multiple options at once.
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.7.0 The autoload values 'yes' and 'no' are deprecated.
*
* @see wp_set_option_autoload_values()
*
* @param string $option Name of the option. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param string|bool $autoload Autoload value to control whether to load the option when WordPress starts up.
* Accepts 'yes'|true to enable or 'no'|false to disable.
* @param string $option Name of the option. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param bool $autoload Autoload value to control whether to load the option when WordPress starts up.
* For backward compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted, though using these values is
* deprecated.
* @return bool True if the autoload value was modified, false otherwise.
*/
function wp_set_option_autoload( $option, $autoload ) {
@ -803,17 +813,19 @@ function wp_load_core_site_options( $network_id = null ) {
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @since 4.2.0 The `$autoload` parameter was added.
* @since 6.7.0 The autoload values 'yes' and 'no' are deprecated.
*
* @global wpdb $wpdb WordPress database abstraction object.
*
* @param string $option Name of the option to update. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param mixed $value Option value. Must be serializable if non-scalar. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param bool|null $autoload Optional. Whether to load the option when WordPress starts up.
* Accepts a boolean, or `null` to stick with the initial value or, if no initial value is set,
* to leave the decision up to default heuristics in WordPress.
* For existing options,
* `$autoload` can only be updated using `update_option()` if `$value` is also changed.
* For backward compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted.
* Accepts a boolean, or `null` to stick with the initial value or, if no initial value is
* set, to leave the decision up to default heuristics in WordPress.
* For existing options, `$autoload` can only be updated using `update_option()` if `$value`
* is also changed.
* For backward compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted, though using these values is
* deprecated.
* Autoloading too many options can lead to performance problems, especially if the
* options are not frequently used. For options which are accessed across several places
* in the frontend, it is recommended to autoload them, by using true.
@ -1026,6 +1038,7 @@ function update_option( $option, $value, $autoload = null ) {
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @since 6.6.0 The $autoload parameter's default value was changed to null.
* @since 6.7.0 The autoload values 'yes' and 'no' are deprecated.
*
* @global wpdb $wpdb WordPress database abstraction object.
*
@ -1034,11 +1047,12 @@ function update_option( $option, $value, $autoload = null ) {
* Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
* @param string $deprecated Optional. Description. Not used anymore.
* @param bool|null $autoload Optional. Whether to load the option when WordPress starts up.
* Accepts a boolean, or `null` to leave the decision up to default heuristics in WordPress.
* For backward compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted.
* Accepts a boolean, or `null` to leave the decision up to default heuristics in
* WordPress. For backward compatibility 'yes' and 'no' are also accepted, though using
* these values is deprecated.
* Autoloading too many options can lead to performance problems, especially if the
* options are not frequently used. For options which are accessed across several places
* in the frontend, it is recommended to autoload them, by using 'yes'|true.
* in the frontend, it is recommended to autoload them, by using true.
* For options which are accessed only on few specific URLs, it is recommended
* to not autoload them, by using false.
* Default is null, which means WordPress will determine the autoload value.

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@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
*
* @global string $wp_version
*/
$wp_version = '6.7-alpha-58948';
$wp_version = '6.7-alpha-58949';
/**
* Holds the WordPress DB revision, increments when changes are made to the WordPress DB schema.