This avoids having to do it at all the places we want cached responses.
We can't inject the ITimeFactor without breaking public API.
However we can perfectly overwrite the service (resulting in the same
testable effect).
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>
This makes the new `@BruteForceProtection` annotation more clever and moves the relevant code into it's own middleware.
Basically you can now set `@BruteForceProtection(action=$key)` as annotation and that will make the controller bruteforce protected. However, the difference to before is that you need to call `$responmse->throttle()` to increase the counter. Before the counter was increased every time which leads to all kind of unexpected problems.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Reschke <lukas@statuscode.ch>
* Move a-b to PSR-4
* Move c-d to PSR-4
* Move e+g to PSR-4
* Move h-l to PSR-4
* Move m-r to PSR-4
* Move s-u to PSR-4
* Move files/ to PSR-4
* Move remaining tests to PSR-4
* Remove Test\ from old autoloader