1 | Welcome to the Zend Framework 1.11 Release! |
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2 | |
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3 | RELEASE INFORMATION |
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4 | --------------- |
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5 | Zend Framework 1.11.12 Release (r24992). |
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6 | Released on June 22, 2012. |
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7 | |
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8 | SECURITY NOTICE FOR 1.11.12 |
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9 | --------------------------- |
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10 | |
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11 | This release includes patches to each of the Request and Response |
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12 | objects within Zend_XmlRpc. These objects were found to be vulnerable to |
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13 | XML eXternal Entity Injection attacks due to insecure usage of the |
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14 | SimpleXMLElement class (SimpleXML PHP extension). External entities |
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15 | could be specified by adding a specific DOCTYPE element to XML-RPC |
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16 | requests; exploiting this vulnerability could coerce opening arbitrary |
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17 | files and/or TCP connections. |
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18 | |
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19 | The patch in 1.11.12 ensures libxml_disable_entity_loader() is called |
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20 | before any SimpleXML calls are executed, thus removing the |
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21 | vulnerability. |
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22 | |
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23 | Thanks goes to Johannes Greil and Kestutis Gudinavicius of SEC-Consult |
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24 | for reporting the vulnerability and working with us to provide a working |
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25 | solution. |
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26 | |
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27 | SECURITY NOTICE FOR 1.11.6 |
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28 | -------------------------- |
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29 | |
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30 | This release includes a patch that helps prevent SQL injection attacks |
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31 | in applications using the MySQL PDO driver of PHP while using non-ASCII |
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32 | compatible encodings. Developers using ASCII-compatible encodings like |
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33 | UTF8 or latin1 are not affected by this PHP issue, which is described |
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34 | in more detail here: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=47802 |
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35 | |
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36 | The PHP Group included a feature in PHP 5.3.6+ that allows any |
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37 | character set information to be passed as part of the DSN in PDO to |
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38 | allow both the database as well as the c-level driver to be aware of |
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39 | which charset is in use which is of special importance when PDO's |
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40 | quoting mechanisms are utilized, which Zend Framework also relies on. |
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41 | |
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42 | Our patch ensures that any charset information provided to the Zend_Db |
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43 | PDO MySQL adapter will be sent to PDO both as part of the DSN as well |
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44 | as in a SET NAMES query. This ensures that any developer using ZF on |
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45 | PHP 5.3.6+ while using non-ASCII compatible encodings is safe from SQL |
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46 | injection while using the PDO's quoting mechanisms or emulated prepared |
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47 | statements. |
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48 | |
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49 | If you are using non-ASCII compatible encodings, like GBK, we strongly |
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50 | urge you to consider upgrading to at least PHP 5.3.6 and use |
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51 | Zend Framework version 1.11.6 or 1.10.9 |
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52 | |
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53 | NEW FEATURES |
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54 | ------------ |
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55 | |
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56 | Mobile Support: |
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57 | |
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58 | Zend Framework 1.11 marks the first release with explicit support |
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59 | for mobile devices, via the new component Zend_Http_UserAgent. This |
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60 | component was developed by Raphael Carles, CTO of Interakting. |
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61 | |
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62 | Zend_Http_UserAgent performs two responsibilities: |
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63 | |
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64 | * User-Agent detection |
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65 | * Device capabilities detection, based on User-Agent |
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66 | |
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67 | The component includes a "features" adapter mechanism that allows |
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68 | developers to tie into different backends for the purpose of |
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69 | discovering device capabilities. Currently, ships with adapters for |
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70 | the WURFL (Wireless Universal Resource File) API, TeraWURFL, and |
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71 | DeviceAtlas. |
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72 | |
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73 | * Note: Luca Passani, author and lead of the WURFL project, has |
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74 | provided an exemption to Zend Framework to provide a non-GPL |
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75 | adapter accessing the WURFL PHP API. |
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76 | |
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77 | Additional hooks into the component are provided via a |
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78 | Zend_Application resource plugin, and a Zend_View helper, allowing |
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79 | developers the ability to return output customized for the detected |
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80 | device (e.g., alternate layouts, alternate images, Flash versus |
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81 | HTML5 support, etc.). |
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82 | |
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83 | Zend_Cloud: SimpleCloud API: |
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84 | |
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85 | During ZendCon 2009, Zend announced a prototype of the SimpleCloud |
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86 | API. This API was to provide hooks into cloud-based document |
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87 | storage, queue services, and file storage. |
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88 | |
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89 | Zend Framework 1.11.0 markes the first official, stable release of |
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90 | Zend_Cloud, Zend Framework's PHP version of the SimpleCloud API. |
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91 | Current support includes: |
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92 | |
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93 | * Document Services: |
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94 | - Amazon SimpleDB |
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95 | - Windows Azure's Table Storage |
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96 | * Queue Services: |
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97 | - Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS) |
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98 | - Windows Azure's Queue Service |
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99 | - All adapters supported by Zend_Queue: |
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100 | * Zend Platform JobQueue |
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101 | * Memcacheq |
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102 | * Relational Database |
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103 | * ActiveMQ |
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104 | * Storage Services: |
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105 | - Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) |
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106 | - Windows Azure's Blog Storage |
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107 | - Nirvanix |
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108 | - Local filesystem |
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109 | |
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110 | When using any of the SimpleCloud APIs, your code will be portable |
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111 | across the various adapters provided, allowing you to pick and |
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112 | choose your services, as well as try different services until you |
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113 | find one that suits your application or business needs. |
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114 | Additionally, if you find you need to code adapter-specific |
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115 | features, you can drop down to the specific adapter in order to do |
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116 | so. |
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117 | |
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118 | More adapters will be arriving in the coming months, giving you even |
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119 | more options! |
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120 | |
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121 | We thank Wil Sinclair and Stas Malyshev for their assistance in the |
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122 | initial releases of Zend_Cloud. |
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123 | |
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124 | Security: |
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125 | |
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126 | Several classes in Zend Framework were patched to eliminate the |
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127 | potential for leaking timing information from the direct comparison |
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128 | of sensitive data such as plaintext passwords or cryptographic |
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129 | signatures to user input. These leaks arise from the normal process |
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130 | of comparing any two strings in PHP. The nature of the leaks is that |
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131 | strings are often compared byte by byte, with a negative result |
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132 | being returned early as soon as any set of non-matching bytes is |
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133 | detected. The more bytes that are equal (starting from the first |
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134 | byte) between both sides of the comparison, the longer it takes for |
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135 | a final result to be returned. Based on the time it takes to return |
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136 | a negative or positive result, it is possible that an attacker |
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137 | could, over many samples of requests, craft a string that compares |
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138 | positively to another secret string value known only to a target |
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139 | server simply by guessing the string one byte at a time and |
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140 | measuring each guess' execution time. This server secret could be a |
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141 | plaintext password or the correct cryptographic signature of a |
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142 | request the attacker wants to execute, such as is used in several |
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143 | open protocols including OpenID and OAuth. This could obviously |
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144 | enable an attacker to gain sufficient information to perform a |
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145 | secondary attack such as masquerading as an authenticated user. |
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146 | |
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147 | This form of attack is known as a Remote Timing Attack. Timing |
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148 | Attacks have been problematic in the past but to date have been very |
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149 | difficult to perform remotely over the internet due to the |
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150 | interference of network jitter which limits their effectiveness in |
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151 | resolving very small timing differences. While the internet still |
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152 | poses a challenge to performing successful Timing Attacks against a |
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153 | remote server, the increasing use of frameworks on local networks |
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154 | and in cloud computing, where network jitter may be significantly |
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155 | reduced, raises the distinct possibility that remote Timing Attacks |
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156 | will become feasible against ever smaller timing information leaks, |
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157 | such as those leaked when comparing any two strings. As a |
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158 | precaution, the applied changes implement a fixed time comparison |
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159 | for several classes which would be attractive targets in any |
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160 | potential remote Timing Attack. A fixed time comparison function |
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161 | does not leak any timing information useful to an attacker thus |
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162 | proactively preventing any future vulnerability to these forms of |
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163 | attack. |
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164 | |
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165 | We thank Padraic Brady for his efforts in identifying and patching |
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166 | these vulnerabilities. |
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167 | |
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168 | SimpleDB Support: |
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169 | |
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170 | Zend Framework has provided support for Amazon's Simple Storage |
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171 | Service (S3), Simple Queue Service (SQS), and Elastic Cloud Compute |
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172 | (EC2) platforms for several releases. Zend Framework 1.11.0 adds |
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173 | support for SimpleDB, Amazon's non-relational document storage |
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174 | database offering. Support is available for all SimpleDB operations |
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175 | via Zend_Service_Amazon_SimpleDb. |
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176 | |
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177 | Zend Framework's SimpleDB adapter was originally written by Wil |
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178 | Sinclair. |
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179 | |
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180 | eBay Findings API Support: |
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181 | |
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182 | eBay has an extensive REST API, allowing developers to build |
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183 | applications interacting with their extensive data. Zend Framework |
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184 | 1.11.0 includes Zend_Service_Ebay_Findings, which provides complete |
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185 | support for the eBay Findings API. This API allows developers to |
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186 | query eBay for details on active auctions, using categories or |
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187 | keywords. |
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188 | |
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189 | Zend_Service_Ebay was contributed by Renan de Lima and Ramon |
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190 | Henrique Ornelas. |
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191 | |
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192 | New Configuration Formats: |
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193 | |
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194 | Zend_Config has been a quite popular component in Zend Framework, |
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195 | and has offerred adapters for PHP arrays, XML, and INI configuration |
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196 | files. Zend Framework 1.11.0 now offers two additional configuration |
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197 | formats: YAML and JSON. |
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198 | |
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199 | Zend_Config_Yaml provides a very rudimentary YAML-parser that should |
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200 | work with most configuration formats. However, it also allows you to |
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201 | specify an alternate YAML parser if desired, allowing you to lever |
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202 | tools such as PECL's ext/syck or Symfony's YAML component, sfYaml. |
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203 | |
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204 | Zend_Config_Json leverages the Zend_Json component, and by extension |
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205 | ext/json. |
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206 | |
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207 | Both adapters have support for PHP constants, as well as provide the |
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208 | ability to write configuration files based on configuration objects. |
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209 | |
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210 | Stas Malyshev created both adapters for Zend Framework; |
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211 | Zend_Config_Json also had assistance from Sudheer Satyanarayana. |
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212 | |
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213 | URL Shortening: |
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214 | |
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215 | Zend_Service_ShortUrl was added for this release. The component |
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216 | provides a simple interface for use with most URL shortening |
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217 | services, defining simply the methods "shorten" and "unshorten". |
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218 | Adapters for the services http://is.gd, http://jdem.cz, |
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219 | http://metamark.net, and http://tinyurl.com, are provided with this |
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220 | release. |
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221 | |
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222 | Zend_Service_ShortUrl was contributed by Martin Hujer. |
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223 | |
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224 | Additional View Helpers: |
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225 | |
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226 | Several new view helpers are now exposed: |
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227 | |
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228 | * Zend_View_Helper_UserAgent ties into the Zend_Http_UserAgent |
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229 | component, detailed above. It gives you access to the UserAgent |
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230 | instance, allowing you to query for the device and capabilities. |
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231 | * Zend_View_Helper_TinySrc is an additional portion of Zend |
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232 | Framework's mobile offering for version 1.11.0. The helper ties |
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233 | into the TinySrc API, allowing you to a) provide device-specific |
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234 | image sizes and formats for your site, and b) offload generation |
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235 | of those images to this third-party service. The helper creates |
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236 | img tags pointing to the service, and provides options for |
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237 | specifying adaptive sizing and formats. |
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238 | * Zend_View_Helper_Gravatar ties into the Gravatar API, allowing you |
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239 | to provide avatar images for registered users that utilize the |
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240 | Gravatar service. This helper was contributed by Marcin Morawski. |
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241 | |
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242 | A detailed list of all features and bug fixes in this release may be found at: |
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243 | |
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244 | http://framework.zend.com/changelog/ |
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245 | |
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246 | SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS |
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247 | ------------------- |
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248 | |
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249 | Zend Framework requires PHP 5.2.4 or later. Please see our reference |
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250 | guide for more detailed system requirements: |
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251 | |
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252 | http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/requirements.html |
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253 | |
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254 | INSTALLATION |
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255 | ------------ |
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256 | |
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257 | Please see INSTALL.txt. |
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258 | |
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259 | QUESTIONS AND FEEDBACK |
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260 | ---------------------- |
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261 | |
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262 | Online documentation can be found at http://framework.zend.com/manual. |
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263 | Questions that are not addressed in the manual should be directed to the |
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264 | appropriate mailing list: |
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265 | |
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266 | http://framework.zend.com/wiki/display/ZFDEV/Mailing+Lists |
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267 | |
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268 | If you find code in this release behaving in an unexpected manner or |
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269 | contrary to its documented behavior, please create an issue in the Zend |
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270 | Framework issue tracker at: |
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271 | |
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272 | http://framework.zend.com/issues |
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273 | |
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274 | If you would like to be notified of new releases, you can subscribe to |
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275 | the fw-announce mailing list by sending a blank message to |
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276 | fw-announce-subscribe@lists.zend.com. |
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277 | |
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278 | LICENSE |
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279 | ------- |
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280 | |
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281 | The files in this archive are released under the Zend Framework license. |
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282 | You can find a copy of this license in LICENSE.txt. |
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283 | |
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284 | ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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285 | ---------------- |
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286 | |
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287 | The Zend Framework team would like to thank all the contributors to the Zend |
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288 | Framework project, our corporate sponsor, and you, the Zend Framework user. |
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289 | Please visit us sometime soon at http://framework.zend.com. |
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