PATH:
home
/
letacommog
/
laindinois
/
wp-content
/
plugins
/
wordpress-seo-premium.13.4.1
/
config
/
php-scoper
<?php declare( strict_types=1 ); use Isolated\Symfony\Component\Finder\Finder; return array( /* * By default when running php-scoper add-prefix, it will prefix all relevant code found in the current working * directory. You can however define which files should be scoped by defining a collection of Finders in the * following configuration key. * * For more see: https://github.com/humbug/php-scoper#finders-and-paths */ 'finders' => [ Finder::create()->files()->in( 'vendor/psr/container' )->name( [ '*.php', 'LICENSE', 'composer.json' ] ), Finder::create()->files()->in( 'vendor/psr/http-message' )->name( [ '*.php', 'LICENSE', 'composer.json' ] ), Finder::create()->files()->in( 'vendor/psr/log' )->exclude( 'Test' )->name( [ '*.php', 'LICENSE', 'composer.json' ] ), ], /* * When scoping PHP files, there will be scenarios where some of the code being scoped indirectly references the * original namespace. These will include, for example, strings or string manipulations. PHP-Scoper has limited * support for prefixing such strings. To circumvent that, you can define patchers to manipulate the file to your * heart contents. * * For more see: https://github.com/humbug/php-scoper#patchers */ 'patchers' => [], );
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[-] dependency-injection.inc.php
[edit]
[-] ruckusing.inc.php
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[-] psr.inc.php
[edit]
[-] oauth2-client.inc.php
[edit]
[-] guzzlehttp.inc.php
[edit]
[-] idiorm.inc.php
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