Retrieves the closest matching site object by its domain and path.
This will not necessarily return an exact match for a domain and path. Instead, it breaks the domain and path into pieces that are then used to match the closest possibility from a query.
The intent of this method is to match a site object during bootstrap for a requested site address
function get_site_by_path( $domain, $path, $segments = null ) {
$path_segments = array_filter( explode( '/', trim( $path, '/' ) ) );
/**
* Filters the number of path segments to consider when searching for a site.
*
* @since 3.9.0
*
* @param int|null $segments The number of path segments to consider. WordPress by default looks at
* one path segment following the network path. The function default of
* null only makes sense when you know the requested path should match a site.
* @param string $domain The requested domain.
* @param string $path The requested path, in full.
*/
$segments = apply_filters( 'site_by_path_segments_count', $segments, $domain, $path );
if ( null !== $segments && count( $path_segments ) > $segments ) {
$path_segments = array_slice( $path_segments, 0, $segments );
}
$paths = array();
while ( count( $path_segments ) ) {
$paths[] = '/' . implode( '/', $path_segments ) . '/';
array_pop( $path_segments );
}
$paths[] = '/';
/**
* Determines a site by its domain and path.
*
* This allows one to short-circuit the default logic, perhaps by
* replacing it with a routine that is more optimal for your setup.
*
* Return null to avoid the short-circuit. Return false if no site
* can be found at the requested domain and path. Otherwise, return
* a site object.
*
* @since 3.9.0
*
* @param null|false|WP_Site $site Site value to return by path. Default null
* to continue retrieving the site.
* @param string $domain The requested domain.
* @param string $path The requested path, in full.
* @param int|null $segments The suggested number of paths to consult.
* Default null, meaning the entire path was to be consulted.
* @param string[] $paths The paths to search for, based on $path and $segments.
*/
$pre = apply_filters( 'pre_get_site_by_path', null, $domain, $path, $segments, $paths );
if ( null !== $pre ) {
if ( false !== $pre && ! $pre instanceof WP_Site ) {
$pre = new WP_Site( $pre );
}
return $pre;
}
/*
* @todo
* Caching, etc. Consider alternative optimization routes,
* perhaps as an opt-in for plugins, rather than using the pre_* filter.
* For example: The segments filter can expand or ignore paths.
* If persistent caching is enabled, we could query the DB for a path <> '/'
* then cache whether we can just always ignore paths.
*/
/*
* Either www or non-www is supported, not both. If a www domain is requested,
* query for both to provide the proper redirect.
*/
$domains = array( $domain );
if ( str_starts_with( $domain, 'www.' ) ) {
$domains[] = substr( $domain, 4 );
}
$args = array(
'number' => 1,
'update_site_meta_cache' => false,
);
if ( count( $domains ) > 1 ) {
$args['domain__in'] = $domains;
$args['orderby']['domain_length'] = 'DESC';
} else {
$args['domain'] = array_shift( $domains );
}
if ( count( $paths ) > 1 ) {
$args['path__in'] = $paths;
$args['orderby']['path_length'] = 'DESC';
} else {
$args['path'] = array_shift( $paths );
}
$result = get_sites( $args );
$site = array_shift( $result );
if ( $site ) {
return $site;
}
return false;
}