0

I´m using a simple custom plugin that parses and saves external XML data as a serialized array in a custom field. This works fine, however, when I update the post, instead of the array I only see a message saying: "bool(false)". I guess it has to with serialize / unserialize but didn't find any clues.

I needed to serialize when I update post meta using update_post_meta($post_id, 'tb_data', serialize($new_value_array)); By omitting serialize like update_post_meta($post_id, 'tb_data', $new_value_array); doesn't store any data in custom field. Furthermore, I have to use maybe_unserialize(get_post_meta($post->ID, 'tb_data', true)); to print the results.

There are 2 custom fields, (1) tb_item_group_id and (2) tb_data. Value of tb_data will be added using the below function,

Function I am using to update post meta is as below.

function parse_file_func($title) {
    // get_tickets_array();exit;
    $language = explode('-', get_bloginfo('language'));
    $language = $language[0];
    $file = file_get_contents('https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/12344450/feed.xml');
    if (!$file) {
        exit;
    }
    $domObj = new xmlToArrayParser($file);
    $domArr = $domObj->array;
    if (($domObj->parse_error)) {
        echo $domObj->get_xml_error();
    } else {
        $first = $domArr['rss']['channel']['item'];
        foreach ($first as $item) {
            if ($item['languageCode'] == $language) {
                $args = array(
                    'meta_key' => 'tb_item_group_id',
                    'meta_value' => $item['g:item_group_id'],
                    'post_type' => 'tickets',
                );
                $post = get_posts($args);
                if (empty($post)) {
                    continue;
                } else {
                    $args = array(
                        'meta_key' => 'tb_item_group_id',
                        'meta_value' => $item['g:item_group_id'],
                        'post_type' => 'tickets',
                    );
                    $post = get_posts($args);
                    $post_id = $post[0]->ID;
                    $meta_values = get_post_meta($post_id, 'tb_data');
                    if (empty($meta_values)) {
                        $new_value_array = array();
                        unset($item['cdata']);
                        $new_value_array['tb_' . $item['g:item_group_id'] . '_' . $item['ticketID']] = $item;
                    }
                    else {
                        $meta_arrays = unserialize($meta_values[0]);
                        $new_value_array = $meta_arrays;
                        foreach ($meta_arrays as $meta_ticketbar => $tb_content) {
                            if ($meta_ticketbar == 'tb_' . $item['g:item_group_id'] . '_' . $item['ticketID']) {
                                unset($item['cdata']);
                                $new_value_array[$meta_ticketbar] = $item;
                            } else {
                                $new_value_array = $meta_arrays;
                                unset($item['cdata']);
                                $new_value_array['tb_' . $item['g:item_group_id'] . '_' . $item['ticketID']] = $item;
                            }
                        }
                    }
                    update_post_meta($post_id, 'tb_data', serialize($new_value_array));
                    // update_post_meta($post_id, 'tb_data', base64_encode($new_value_array));
                }
            } else {
                continue;
            }
        }
    }
}

and displaying on front-end using get_post_meta

<?php
    // $tb_meta = get_post_meta($post->ID, 'tb_data', true);
    $tb_meta = get_post_meta($post->ID, 'tb_data', true);
    $tb_meta_unserialized = maybe_unserialize( $tb_meta );
?>
<pre><?php
    // print_r ($tb_meta_unserialized);
    var_dump($tb_meta_unserialized);
?></pre>

2 Answers 2

0

I have managed to fix it at my own.

I have used following code to update post meta

update_post_meta($post_id, 'tb_data', base64_encode(serialize($new_value_array)));

...and following code to get post meta

$tb_meta = get_post_meta($post->ID, 'tb_data', true);
$tb_meta_unserialized = unserialize(base64_decode($tb_meta));

I hope this will help someone.

0

For me it was a simple stupid thing: When calling the post id you should not used an "echoed" return:

Within the loop inside get_post_meta() you have to use get_the_ID() instead of the_ID().

Calling get_post_meta(the_ID(), $key, true) will return boolean(false) because the ID is not a valid (can we say that?) post id.

Hope it helps someone not to waste 30 minutes on this like me.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.