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<?php
/**
 * Option API
 *
 * @package WordPress
 * @subpackage Option
 */

/**
 * Retrieves an option value based on an option name.
 *
 * If the option does not exist, and a default value is not provided,
 * boolean false is returned. This could be used to check whether you need
 * to initialize an option during installation of a plugin, however that
 * can be done better by using add_option() which will not overwrite
 * existing options.
 *
 * Not initializing an option and using boolean `false` as a return value
 * is a bad practice as it triggers an additional database query.
 *
 * The type of the returned value can be different from the type that was passed
 * when saving or updating the option. If the option value was serialized,
 * then it will be unserialized when it is returned. In this case the type will
 * be the same. For example, storing a non-scalar value like an array will
 * return the same array.
 *
 * In most cases non-string scalar and null values will be converted and returned
 * as string equivalents.
 *
 * Exceptions:
 *
 * 1. When the option has not been saved in the database, the `$default_value` value
 *    is returned if provided. If not, boolean `false` is returned.
 * 2. When one of the Options API filters is used: {@see 'pre_option_$option'},
 *    {@see 'default_option_$option'}, or {@see 'option_$option'}, the returned
 *    value may not match the expected type.
 * 3. When the option has just been saved in the database, and get_option()
 *    is used right after, non-string scalar and null values are not converted to
 *    string equivalents and the original type is returned.
 *
 * Examples:
 *
 * When adding options like this: `add_option( 'my_option_name', 'value' )`
 * and then retrieving them with `get_option( 'my_option_name' )`, the returned
 * values will be:
 *
 *   - `false` returns `string(0) ""`
 *   - `true`  returns `string(1) "1"`
 *   - `0`     returns `string(1) "0"`
 *   - `1`     returns `string(1) "1"`
 *   - `'0'`   returns `string(1) "0"`
 *   - `'1'`   returns `string(1) "1"`
 *   - `null`  returns `string(0) ""`
 *
 * When adding options with non-scalar values like
 * `add_option( 'my_array', array( false, 'str', null ) )`, the returned value
 * will be identical to the original as it is serialized before saving
 * it in the database:
 *
 *     array(3) {
 *         [0] => bool(false)
 *         [1] => string(3) "str"
 *         [2] => NULL
 *     }
 *
 * @since 1.5.0
 *
 * @global wpdb $wpdb WordPress database abstraction object.
 *
 * @param string $option        Name of the option to retrieve. Expected to not be SQL-escaped.
 * @param mixed  $default_value Optional. Default value to return if the option does not exist.
 * @return mixed Value of the option. A value of any type may be returned, including
 *               scalar (string, boolean, float, integer), null, array, object.
 *               Scalar and null values will be returned as strings as long as they originate
 *               from a database stored option value. If there is no option in the database,
 *               boolean `false` is returned.
 */
function get_option( $option, $default_value = false ) {
	global $wpdb;

	if ( is_scalar( $option ) ) {
		$option = trim( $option );
	}

	if ( empty( $option ) ) {
		return false;
	}

	/*
	 * Until a proper _deprecated_option() function can be introduced,
	 * redirect requests to deprecated keys to the new, correct ones.
	 */
	$deprecated_keys = array(
		'blacklist_keys'    => 'disallowed_keys',
		'comment_whitelist' => 'comment_previously_approved',
	);

	if ( isset( $deprecated_keys[ $option ] ) && ! wp_installing() ) {
		_deprecated_argument(
			__FUNCTION__,
			'5.5.0',
			sprintf(
				/* translators: 1: Deprecated option key, 2: New option key. */
				__( 'The "%1$s" option key has been renamed to "%2$s".' ),
				$option,
				$deprecated_keys[ $option ]
			)
		);
		return get_option( $deprecated_keys[ $option ], $default_value );
	}

	/**
	 * Filters the value of an existing option before it is retrieved.
	 *
	 * The dynamic portion of the hook name, `$option`, refers to the option name.
	 *
	 * Returning a value other than false from the filter will short-circuit retrieval
	 * and return that value instead.
	 *
	 * @since 1.5.0
	 * @since 4.4.0 The `$option` parameter was added.
	 * @since 4.9.0 The `$default_value` parameter was added.
	 *
	 * @param mixed  $pre_option    The value to return instead of the option value. This differs from
	 *                              `$default_value`, which is used as the fallback value in the event
	 *                              the option doesn't exist elsewhere in get_option().
	 *                              Default false (to skip past the short-circuit).
	 * @param string $option        Option name.
	 * @param mixed  $default_value The fallback value to return if the option does not exist.
	 *                              Default false.
	 */
	$pre = apply_filters( "pre_option_{$option}", false, $option, $default_value );

	/**
	 * Filters the value of all existing options before it is retrieved.
	 *
	 * Returning a truthy value from the filter will effectively short-circuit retrieval
	 * and return the passed value instead.
	 *
	 * @since 6.1.0
	 *
	 * @param mixed  $pre_option    The value to return instead of the option value. This differs from
	 *                              `$default_value`, which is used as the fallback value in the event
	 *                              the option doesn't exist elsewhere in get_option().
	 *                              Default false (to skip past the short-circuit).
	 * @param string $option        Name of the option.
	 * @param mixed  $default_value The fallback value to return if the option does not exist.
	 *                              Default false.
	 */
	$pre = apply_filters( 'pre_option', $pre, $option, $default_value );

	if ( false !== $pre ) {
		return $pre;
	}

	if ( defined( 'WP_SETUP_CONFIG' ) ) {
		return false;
	}

	// Distinguish between `false` as a default, and not passing one.
	$passed_default = func_num_args() > 1;

	if ( ! wp_installing() ) {
		$alloptions = wp_load_alloptions();

		if ( isset( $alloptions[ $option ] ) ) {
			$value = $alloptions[ $option ];
		} else {
			$value = wp_cache_get( $option, 'options' );

			if ( false === $value ) {
				// Prevent non-existent options from triggering multiple queries.
				$notoptions = wp_cache_get( 'notoptions', 'options' );

				// Prevent non-existent `notoptions` key from triggering multiple key lookups.
				if ( ! is_array( $notoptions ) ) {
					$notoptions = array();
					wp_cache_set( 'notoptions', $notoptions, 'options' );
				} elseif ( isset( $notoptions[ $option ] ) ) {
					/**
					 * Filters the default value for an option.
					 *
					 * The dynamic portion of the hook name, `$option`, refers to the option name.
					 *
					 * @since 3.4.0
					 * @since 4.4.0 The `$option` parameter was added.
					 * @since 4.7.0 The `$passed_default` parameter was added to distinguish between a `false` value and the default parameter value.
					 *
					 * @param mixed  $default_value  The default value to return if the option does not exist
					 *                               in the database.
					 * @param string $option         Option name.
					 * @param bool   $passed_default Was `get_option()` passed a default value?
					 */
					return apply_filters( "default_option_{$option}", $default_value, $option, $passed_default );
				}

				$row = $wpdb->get_row( $wpdb->prepare( "SELECT option_value FROM $wpdb->options WHERE option_name = %s LIMIT 1", $option ) );

				// Has to be get_row() instead of get_var() because of funkiness with 0, false, null values.
				if ( is_object( $row ) ) {
					$value = $row->option_value;
					wp_cache_add( $option, $value, 'options' );
				} else { // Option does not exist, so we must cache its non-existence.
					$notoptions[ $option ] = true;
					wp_cache_set( 'notoptions', $notoptions, 'options' );

					/** This filter is documented in wp-includes/option.php */
					return apply_filters( "default_option_{$option}", $default_value, $option, $passed_default );
				}