This is a major release and contains breaking changes.
Most important changes to be aware of for this release:
* All code is now namespaced. Though there is a full backward compatibility layer available and the old class names are still supported, using them will generate a deprecation notice (which can be silenced by plugins if they'd need to support multiple WP versions). See the [https://requests.ryanmccue.info/docs/upgrading.html upgrade guide] for more details.
* A lot of classes have been marked `final`. This should generally not affect userland code as care has been taken to not apply the `final` keyword to classes which are known to be extended in userland code.
* Extensive input validation has been added to Requests. When Requests is used as documented though, this will be unnoticable.
* A new `WpOrg\Requests\Requests::has_capabilities()` method has been introduced which can be used to address #37708.
* A new `WpOrg\Requests\Response::decode_body()` method has been introduced which may be usable to simplify some of the WP native wrapper code.
* Remaining PHP 8.0 compatibility fixed (support for named parameters).
* PHP 8.1 compatibility.
Release notes: https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/releases/tag/v2.0.0
For a full list of changes in this update, see the Requests GitHub:
https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/compare/v1.8.1...v2.0.0
Follow-up to [50842], [51078].
Props jrf, schlessera, datagutten, wojsmol, dd32, dustinrue, soulseekah, costdev, szepeviktor.
Fixes#54504.
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Prior to about 2013, many class methods lacked even access modifiers which made the `@access` notations that much more useful. Now that we've gotten to a point where the codebase is more mature from a maintenance perspective and we can finally remove these notations. Notable exceptions to this change include standalone functions notated as private as well as some classes still considered to represent "private" APIs.
See #41452.
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Requests has its own cookie object in form of `Requests_Cookie`. Therefore we have to convert `WP_Http_Cookie` objects to `Requests_Cookie`.
This introduces `WP_Http_Cookie::get_attributes()` to retrieve cookie attributes of a `WP_Http_Cookie` object and `WP_Http::normalize_cookies()` to convert the cookie objects.
Fixes#37437.
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The array-compatibility object we started returning in r37428 unfortunately isn't enough like an array. In particular, `is_array()` checks fail, despite the object implementing ArrayAccess. Mea culpa.
This moves the WP_HTTP_Response object to a new http_response key in the array, and changes the value back to an actual array.
Fixes#37097.
See #33055.
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Also use 'back-compat' in some inline comments where backward compatibility is the subject and shorthand feels more natural.
Note: 'backwards compatibility/compatibile' can also be considered correct, though it's primary seen in regular use in British English.
Props ocean90.
Fixes#36835.
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