

Most of the Core news is covered in detail in the PHP Roundup series from the PHP Foundation, so we’ll only mention them briefly. Make sure your Composer is up-to-date by running composer self-update.Ī major update of the popular open-source CMS was released. An attacker controlling a Git or Mercurial repository explicitly listed by URL in composer.json could use specially crafted branch names to execute commands on the machine running the composer update. There was also a vulnerability discovered recently – CVE-2022-24828: Composer Command Injection. This release brings small improvements for users and a modernized internal codebase. Check out a short What’s New video or read the blog post for the full story. It comes with improvements for Blade, WordPress, ArrayShape annotations, and many more.

Here’s the first edition: PHP Roundup #1. A separate newsletter with insights about core developments will be published regularly.The thephp.foundation website is up and running.

Six sponsored developers are actively working on maintaining the core.The same shift was made for Drupal 10 and Laravel 10.Īlso, the recently released Ubuntu 22.04 LTS comes with PHP 8.1 preinstalled. The Symfony team has raised its minimum required PHP version to 8.1 in the upcoming Symfony 6.1 release. If you are still using PHP 7.3 or PHP 5.x versions, consider updating as soon as possible. For non-Windows users, they are just regular bug-fix updates.For PHP 7.3, updates are no longer released, even for security problems. These are security releases for Windows users, due to updates of built-in dependencies. As always, it includes curated news, articles, tools, and videos. In this edition, we’ll catch up on the most interesting things that have happened in the PHP world over the last couple of months. With Brent joining the PhpStorm team we want to experiment with some new things, so stay tuned! It has been a while since the PHP Annotated Monthly was online, so hopefully we are back on track.
