Packages from matthewbaggett

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/clamp

    PHP clamp function to clamp a number between a minimum and a maximum.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/composer-lock-watcher

    Watch composer.lock for changes, run composer install when it sees them.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/docker-api-php-client

    The Engine API is an HTTP API served by Docker Engine. It is the API the Docker client uses to communicate with the Engine, so everything the Docker client can do can be done with the API. Most of the client's commands map directly to API endpoints (e.g. `docker ps` is `GET /containers/json`). The notable exception is running containers, which consists of several API calls. # Errors The API uses standard HTTP status codes to indicate the success or failure of the API call. The body of the response will be JSON in the following format: ``` { "message": "page not found" } ``` # Versioning The API is usually changed in each release, so API calls are versioned to ensure that clients don't break. To lock to a specific version of the API, you prefix the URL with its version, for example, call `/v1.30/info` to use the v1.30 version of the `/info` endpoint. If the API version specified in the URL is not supported by the daemon, a HTTP `400 Bad Request` error message is returned. If you omit the version-prefix, the current version of the API (v1.43) is used. For example, calling `/info` is the same as calling `/v1.43/info`. Using the API without a version-prefix is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Engine releases in the near future should support this version of the API, so your client will continue to work even if it is talking to a newer Engine. The API uses an open schema model, which means server may add extra properties to responses. Likewise, the server will ignore any extra query parameters and request body properties. When you write clients, you need to ignore additional properties in responses to ensure they do not break when talking to newer daemons. # Authentication Authentication for registries is handled client side. The client has to send authentication details to various endpoints that need to communicate with registries, such as `POST /images/(name)/push`. These are sent as `X-Registry-Auth` header as a [base64url encoded](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4648#section-5) (JSON) string with the following structure: ``` { "username": "string", "password": "string", "email": "string", "serveraddress": "string" } ``` The `serveraddress` is a domain/IP without a protocol. Throughout this structure, double quotes are required. If you have already got an identity token from the [`/auth` endpoint](#operation/SystemAuth), you can just pass this instead of credentials: ``` { "identitytoken": "9cbaf023786cd7..." } ```

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/drupal_active_record

    Active Record for Drupal

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/drupal_magic_forms

    Because Drupal Forms blow.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/inflection

    A library to allow for pluralisation and singularisation of words programmatically.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/mysql2pdo

    MySQL2PDO adaptor

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/twig-extension-gravatar

    Add support for transforming an email address into a gravatar image URL in a simple filter.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/twig-extension-inflect

    Trivially pluralise or singularise strings in twig.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/twig-extension-transform

    Add the ability to transform from one case style to another programatically.

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/uuid

    A nice little library to interact with UUIDs

  • PHP

    matthewbaggett/worker-pool

    Runs tasks in a parallel processing workerpool. Built atop qxsch/worker-pool with improvements.