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<?php
/**
 * WP_Application_Passwords class
 *
 * @package WordPress
 * @since   5.6.0
 */

/**
 * Class for displaying, modifying, and sanitizing application passwords.
 *
 * @package WordPress
 */
#[AllowDynamicProperties]
class WP_Application_Passwords {

	/**
	 * The application passwords user meta key.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @var string
	 */
	const USERMETA_KEY_APPLICATION_PASSWORDS = '_application_passwords';

	/**
	 * The option name used to store whether application passwords are in use.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @var string
	 */
	const OPTION_KEY_IN_USE = 'using_application_passwords';

	/**
	 * The generated application password length.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @var int
	 */
	const PW_LENGTH = 24;

	/**
	 * Checks if application passwords are being used by the site.
	 *
	 * This returns true if at least one application password has ever been created.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @return bool
	 */
	public static function is_in_use() {
		$network_id = get_main_network_id();
		return (bool) get_network_option( $network_id, self::OPTION_KEY_IN_USE );
	}

	/**
	 * Creates a new application password.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 * @since 5.7.0 Returns WP_Error if application name already exists.
	 * @since 6.8.0 The hashed password value now uses wp_fast_hash() instead of phpass.
	 *
	 * @param int   $user_id  User ID.
	 * @param array $args     {
	 *     Arguments used to create the application password.
	 *
	 *     @type string $name   The name of the application password.
	 *     @type string $app_id A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
	 * }
	 * @return array|WP_Error {
	 *     Application password details, or a WP_Error instance if an error occurs.
	 *
	 *     @type string $0 The generated application password in plain text.
	 *     @type array  $1 {
	 *         The details about the created password.
	 *
	 *         @type string $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
	 *         @type string $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
	 *         @type string $name      The name of the application password.
	 *         @type string $password  A one-way hash of the password.
	 *         @type int    $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
	 *         @type null   $last_used Null.
	 *         @type null   $last_ip   Null.
	 *     }
	 * }
	 */
	public static function create_new_application_password( $user_id, $args = array() ) {
		if ( ! empty( $args['name'] ) ) {
			$args['name'] = sanitize_text_field( $args['name'] );
		}

		if ( empty( $args['name'] ) ) {
			return new WP_Error( 'application_password_empty_name', __( 'An application name is required to create an application password.' ), array( 'status' => 400 ) );
		}

		$new_password    = wp_generate_password( static::PW_LENGTH, false );
		$hashed_password = self::hash_password( $new_password );

		$new_item = array(
			'uuid'      => wp_generate_uuid4(),
			'app_id'    => empty( $args['app_id'] ) ? '' : $args['app_id'],
			'name'      => $args['name'],
			'password'  => $hashed_password,
			'created'   => time(),
			'last_used' => null,
			'last_ip'   => null,
		);

		$passwords   = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );
		$passwords[] = $new_item;
		$saved       = static::set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, $passwords );

		if ( ! $saved ) {
			return new WP_Error( 'db_error', __( 'Could not save application password.' ) );
		}

		$network_id = get_main_network_id();
		if ( ! get_network_option( $network_id, self::OPTION_KEY_IN_USE ) ) {
			update_network_option( $network_id, self::OPTION_KEY_IN_USE, true );
		}

		/**
		 * Fires when an application password is created.
		 *
		 * @since 5.6.0
		 * @since 6.8.0 The hashed password value now uses wp_fast_hash() instead of phpass.
		 *
		 * @param int    $user_id      The user ID.
		 * @param array  $new_item     {
		 *     The details about the created password.
		 *
		 *     @type string $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
		 *     @type string $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
		 *     @type string $name      The name of the application password.
		 *     @type string $password  A one-way hash of the password.
		 *     @type int    $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
		 *     @type null   $last_used Null.
		 *     @type null   $last_ip   Null.
		 * }
		 * @param string $new_password The generated application password in plain text.
		 * @param array  $args         {
		 *     Arguments used to create the application password.
		 *
		 *     @type string $name   The name of the application password.
		 *     @type string $app_id A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
		 * }
		 */
		do_action( 'wp_create_application_password', $user_id, $new_item, $new_password, $args );

		return array( $new_password, $new_item );
	}

	/**
	 * Gets a user's application passwords.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param int $user_id User ID.
	 * @return array {
	 *     The list of application passwords.
	 *
	 *     @type array ...$0 {
	 *         @type string      $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
	 *         @type string      $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
	 *         @type string      $name      The name of the application password.
	 *         @type string      $password  A one-way hash of the password.
	 *         @type int         $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
	 *         @type int|null    $last_used The Unix timestamp of the GMT date the application password was last used.
	 *         @type string|null $last_ip   The IP address the application password was last used by.
	 *     }
	 * }
	 */
	public static function get_user_application_passwords( $user_id ) {
		$passwords = get_user_meta( $user_id, static::USERMETA_KEY_APPLICATION_PASSWORDS, true );

		if ( ! is_array( $passwords ) ) {
			return array();
		}

		$save = false;

		foreach ( $passwords as $i => $password ) {
			if ( ! isset( $password['uuid'] ) ) {
				$passwords[ $i ]['uuid'] = wp_generate_uuid4();
				$save                    = true;
			}
		}

		if ( $save ) {
			static::set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, $passwords );
		}

		return $passwords;
	}

	/**
	 * Gets a user's application password with the given UUID.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param int    $user_id User ID.
	 * @param string $uuid    The password's UUID.
	 * @return array|null {
	 *     The application password if found, null otherwise.
	 *
	 *     @type string      $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
	 *     @type string      $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
	 *     @type string      $name      The name of the application password.
	 *     @type string      $password  A one-way hash of the password.
	 *     @type int         $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
	 *     @type int|null    $last_used The Unix timestamp of the GMT date the application password was last used.
	 *     @type string|null $last_ip   The IP address the application password was last used by.
	 * }
	 */
	public static function get_user_application_password( $user_id, $uuid ) {
		$passwords = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );

		foreach ( $passwords as $password ) {
			if ( $password['uuid'] === $uuid ) {
				return $password;
			}
		}

		return null;
	}

	/**
	 * Checks if an application password with the given name exists for this user.
	 *
	 * @since 5.7.0
	 *
	 * @param int    $user_id User ID.
	 * @param string $name    Application name.
	 * @return bool Whether the provided application name exists.
	 */
	public static function application_name_exists_for_user( $user_id, $name ) {
		$passwords = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );

		foreach ( $passwords as $password ) {
			if ( strtolower( $password['name'] ) === strtolower( $name ) ) {
				return true;
			}
		}

		return false;
	}

	/**
	 * Updates an application password.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 * @since 6.8.0 The actual password should now be hashed using wp_fast_hash().
	 *
	 * @param int    $user_id User ID.
	 * @param string $uuid    The password's UUID.
	 * @param array  $update  {
	 *     Information about the application password to update.
	 *
	 *     @type string      $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
	 *     @type string      $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
	 *     @type string      $name      The name of the application password.
	 *     @type string      $password  A one-way hash of the password.
	 *     @type int         $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
	 *     @type int|null    $last_used The Unix timestamp of the GMT date the application password was last used.
	 *     @type string|null $last_ip   The IP address the application password was last used by.
	 * }
	 * @return true|WP_Error True if successful, otherwise a WP_Error instance is returned on error.
	 */
	public static function update_application_password( $user_id, $uuid, $update = array() ) {
		$passwords = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );

		foreach ( $passwords as &$item ) {
			if ( $item['uuid'] !== $uuid ) {
				continue;
			}

			if ( ! empty( $update['name'] ) ) {
				$update['name'] = sanitize_text_field( $update['name'] );
			}

			$save = false;

			if ( ! empty( $update['name'] ) && $item['name'] !== $update['name'] ) {
				$item['name'] = $update['name'];
				$save         = true;
			}

			if ( $save ) {
				$saved = static::set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, $passwords );

				if ( ! $saved ) {
					return new WP_Error( 'db_error', __( 'Could not save application password.' ) );
				}
			}

			/**
			 * Fires when an application password is updated.
			 *
			 * @since 5.6.0
			 * @since 6.8.0 The password is now hashed using wp_fast_hash() instead of phpass.
			 *              Existing passwords may still be hashed using phpass.
			 *
			 * @param int   $user_id The user ID.
			 * @param array $item    {
			 *     The updated application password details.
			 *
			 *     @type string      $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
			 *     @type string      $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
			 *     @type string      $name      The name of the application password.
			 *     @type string      $password  A one-way hash of the password.
			 *     @type int         $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
			 *     @type int|null    $last_used The Unix timestamp of the GMT date the application password was last used.
			 *     @type string|null $last_ip   The IP address the application password was last used by.
			 * }
			 * @param array $update  The information to update.
			 */
			do_action( 'wp_update_application_password', $user_id, $item, $update );

			return true;
		}

		return new WP_Error( 'application_password_not_found', __( 'Could not find an application password with that id.' ) );
	}

	/**
	 * Records that an application password has been used.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param int    $user_id User ID.
	 * @param string $uuid    The password's UUID.
	 * @return true|WP_Error True if the usage was recorded, a WP_Error if an error occurs.
	 */
	public static function record_application_password_usage( $user_id, $uuid ) {
		$passwords = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );

		foreach ( $passwords as &$password ) {
			if ( $password['uuid'] !== $uuid ) {
				continue;
			}

			// Only record activity once a day.
			if ( $password['last_used'] + DAY_IN_SECONDS > time() ) {
				return true;
			}

			$password['last_used'] = time();
			$password['last_ip']   = $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'];

			$saved = static::set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, $passwords );

			if ( ! $saved ) {
				return new WP_Error( 'db_error', __( 'Could not save application password.' ) );
			}

			return true;
		}

		// Specified application password not found!
		return new WP_Error( 'application_password_not_found', __( 'Could not find an application password with that id.' ) );
	}

	/**
	 * Deletes an application password.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param int    $user_id User ID.
	 * @param string $uuid    The password's UUID.
	 * @return true|WP_Error Whether the password was successfully found and deleted, a WP_Error otherwise.
	 */
	public static function delete_application_password( $user_id, $uuid ) {
		$passwords = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );

		foreach ( $passwords as $key => $item ) {
			if ( $item['uuid'] === $uuid ) {
				unset( $passwords[ $key ] );
				$saved = static::set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, $passwords );

				if ( ! $saved ) {
					return new WP_Error( 'db_error', __( 'Could not delete application password.' ) );
				}

				/**
				 * Fires when an application password is deleted.
				 *
				 * @since 5.6.0
				 *
				 * @param int   $user_id The user ID.
				 * @param array $item    The data about the application password.
				 */
				do_action( 'wp_delete_application_password', $user_id, $item );

				return true;
			}
		}

		return new WP_Error( 'application_password_not_found', __( 'Could not find an application password with that id.' ) );
	}

	/**
	 * Deletes all application passwords for the given user.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param int $user_id User ID.
	 * @return int|WP_Error The number of passwords that were deleted or a WP_Error on failure.
	 */
	public static function delete_all_application_passwords( $user_id ) {
		$passwords = static::get_user_application_passwords( $user_id );

		if ( $passwords ) {
			$saved = static::set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, array() );

			if ( ! $saved ) {
				return new WP_Error( 'db_error', __( 'Could not delete application passwords.' ) );
			}

			foreach ( $passwords as $item ) {
				/** This action is documented in wp-includes/class-wp-application-passwords.php */
				do_action( 'wp_delete_application_password', $user_id, $item );
			}

			return count( $passwords );
		}

		return 0;
	}

	/**
	 * Sets a user's application passwords.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param int   $user_id   User ID.
	 * @param array $passwords {
	 *     The list of application passwords.
	 *
	 *     @type array ...$0 {
	 *         @type string      $uuid      The unique identifier for the application password.
	 *         @type string      $app_id    A UUID provided by the application to uniquely identify it.
	 *         @type string      $name      The name of the application password.
	 *         @type string      $password  A one-way hash of the password.
	 *         @type int         $created   Unix timestamp of when the password was created.
	 *         @type int|null    $last_used The Unix timestamp of the GMT date the application password was last used.
	 *         @type string|null $last_ip   The IP address the application password was last used by.
	 *     }
	 * }
	 * @return int|bool User meta ID if the key didn't exist (ie. this is the first time that an application password
	 *                  has been saved for the user), true on successful update, false on failure or if the value passed
	 *                  is the same as the one that is already in the database.
	 */
	protected static function set_user_application_passwords( $user_id, $passwords ) {
		return update_user_meta( $user_id, static::USERMETA_KEY_APPLICATION_PASSWORDS, $passwords );
	}

	/**
	 * Sanitizes and then splits a password into smaller chunks.
	 *
	 * @since 5.6.0
	 *
	 * @param string $raw_password The raw application password.
	 * @return string The chunked password.
	 */
	public static function chunk_password(
		#[\SensitiveParameter]
		$raw_password
	) {
		$raw_password = preg_replace( '/[^a-z\d]/i', '', $raw_password );

		return trim( chunk_split( $raw_password, 4, ' ' ) );
	}

	/**
	 * Hashes a plaintext application password.
	 *
	 * @since 6.8.0
	 *
	 * @param string $password Plaintext password.
	 * @return string Hashed password.
	 */
	public static function hash_password(
		#[\SensitiveParameter]
		string $password
	): string {
		return wp_fast_hash( $password );
	}

	/**
	 * Checks a plaintext application password against a hashed password.
	 *
	 * @since 6.8.0
	 *
	 * @param string $password Plaintext password.
	 * @param string $hash     Hash of the password to check against.
	 * @return bool Whether the password matches the hashed password.
	 */
	public static function check_password(
		#[\SensitiveParameter]
		string $password,
		string $hash
	): bool {
		if ( ! str_starts_with( $hash, '$generic$' ) ) {
			/*
			 * If the hash doesn't start with `$generic$`, it is a hash created with `wp_hash_password()`.
			 * This is the case for application passwords created before 6.8.0.
			 */
			return wp_check_password( $password, $hash );
		}

		return wp_verify_fast_hash( $password, $hash );
	}
}
You will find many online cricket betting tips free on websites

Cricket Betting Tips and Prediction

Gone are the days where you have to predict cricket betting outcomes yourself. Nowadays, it’s all about betting tips and predictions given by experts. With the increasing popularity and complexity, the cricket betting world has drastically changed. You no longer have to approach the bookies directly to place your bets. You can simply place your bets online on betting websites.

IPL 2021 predictions from Raja Danish

Raja Danish

With the rise in betting websites, expert tipsters have also taken their business. They post cricket betting tips online so that you can place your bets as per live odds. In this post, we are going to discuss online tips and predictions.

Expert Cricket Betting Tips:

Expert Cricket Betting Tips

Many cricket betting experts provide betting tips online. Some tipsters provide free tips whereas some will charge you for it. However, you will find many online cricket betting tips free on websites—each betting website posts the latest tips for each match on their page. You can either rely on one tip or analyze different tips given by different experts. Here are few examples of previous year IPL Season’s expert cricket betting tips posted on online websites.

2019 IPL Betting Tips Online:

Here are the tips about the last two matches in the IPL. We are going to discuss about tips and predictions posted online for semifinals as well as the final match.

  1. Chennai Super Kings vs Delhi Capitals: It was the 2nd Qualifier match of 2019 IPL. 
  2. Prediction: Winner – CSK
  3. Actual winner: CSK

DC won 5 out of the last six matches, whereas CSK lost their last two matches. However, CSK has entered the finale nine times previously. Looking at this, there are high chances for CSK to win against DC.

  1. Mumbai Indians vs Chennai Super Kings: It was the final match of 2019 IPL.
  2. Prediction: Winner – CSK
  3. Actual Winner: MI

Mumbai won by one run.

Although MI won 3 matches against CSK this year, CSK has finale advantage. They have more experienced players.

Cricket Betting Tips Shaan:

Shaan is a team of tipsters that provide cricket betting tips tricks online. They provide free tips, news, scores, session tips, fancy tips, weather updates, pitch reports, toss predictions, etc. They also provide live cricket session tips. Most of the tricks provided by them are free. You can also check tips on their Facebook page. Here are some latest cricket betting tips and predictions given by Shaan team.

Cricket Betting Tips and Predictions by Shaan Team:

Cricket Betting Tips and Predictions by Shaan Team
  1. Karachi Kings vs Lahore Qalandars: It was PSL T20 match at Karachi.
  2. Pitch report: Fresh Pitch
  3. Prediction: Winner – Karachi Kings

KK have a home ground advantage against LQ. The first to bat will have no advantage.

  1. Peshawar vs Lahore: It was hosted on 10th March 2020. Here are the predictions.
  2. Pitch report: Fresh Pitch
  3. Prediction: Winner – Lahore

Although Peshawar is the favorite international team, Lahore is predicted to win the match.

Conclusion:

As you can see, reading free tips can be good for your judgment. You don’t have to listen to all the tipsters, and you only have to compare the tips and go with it.