Well yes but if you would ask the same questions to seniors it would takes days :P For me at least to explain for example "Tell us about common security problems in web development that they are familiar with." and eventually it would end in me (if there is a technical guy on the other end of the table) talking about how much php sucks and what parts suck most :P
For our last PHP developer, we hired someone who had only written PHP one time and couldn't remember anything about it. Why did we hire him? Because he knew a lot about HTTP, had written numerous small but complete websites in Python, and knew about common vulnerabilities and knew the general strategies to fix them.
And he's been a great employee.
(Oh we were confident he could learn PHP too; he knew C++ and Python well, and had dabbled in Java, Rust and Go)
Yeah sounds about right. The last person I hired two jobs ago was an asp guy who never did anything in PHP. Really smart guy and worked out pretty well
What's the best way to alter ini entries without marking them as modified? Is there any function or do I need to do this manually? zend_alter_ini_entry_ex is always pushing to EG(modified_ini_directives) …
@ircmaxell are we sure llvm is even a candidate, this is working for us because libjit has fast compilation, some people say it's between nine and fourty six (yep) times slower to compile the same code as libjit ....
@FlorianMargaine tbh although it's not 'allowed' forbidding that behaviour is probably going to break something somewhere. Just raising the warning would be enough, rather than changing the behaviour.
I wouldn't worry about someone who is relying on broken behaviour that violates RFC's, I would implement the function so that it is compliant with the RFC in question and let an RM decide which version should contain the change ...
since there is no standard way for browsers to handle the incorrect behaviour you are avoiding a non-issue at the expense of correctness
@JoeWatkins But he's not writing new code. He's modifying code that is already there.....it's entirely possible (and probable) that someone somewhere uses that behaviour.... There's no benefit in breaking it for people who are sane and aren't sending the same named cookie twice.....there's only a downside in breaking stuff for people who have a weird setup.
there's no way for any client to handle it properly, I'd do it properly ... the rfc says the header cannot be sent twice, says nothing about the language you are doing it from, obviously ... I'd implement the function so that you are allowed to execute setcookie() twice but it sends compliant headers
so long as same order there will be no bc break I think ...
there's very little point in fixing something if it is not fixed ...
emitting a warning and doing nothing doesn't make sense ..
@JoeWatkins Well, I disagree. Changing the behaviour is definitely a BC break, and making it handle stuff magically (i.e. concatenating headers) sounds like a bad plan.
@JoeWatkins The RFC seems to say should not, not must not "Servers SHOULD NOT include more than one Set-Cookie header field in the same response with the same cookie-name. (See Section 5.2 for how user agents handle this case.)"
@ircmaxell okay I'll research it further, but think we're going to take a serious hit there ... there hasn't been any real activity on the elf writer of libjit since 2006 ... so that's not happening ... the rather confusing thing is that it is used in projects that do appear to write out their binaries ... I dunno why ...
> Fixes? I fail to see how this fixes the problem, it only throws E_WARNING, but does not fix anything.
@Danack you can't argue with that ...
maybe the correct thing to do is going to be a warning on docs rather than changing code, I'm not sure ...
he's only trying to think of a way to actually fix it ... as in do something more useful than emit a warning without effecting outcome or behaviour ...
@RonniSkansing Let me tag a release and package the extension. Also a nice test to see whether chrome stable still allows sideloading. Give me a minute
@ircmaxell I remember you once posted a table which shows the time relations between the different actions of the computer (CPU cycle, RAM access, network i/o, etc)
we don't tell him to stop, we just hold his process for a while. And automatically do that after a few seconds, during which all requests from that user will be dismissed.
But the problem is, we want to allow requests from anonymous users (users not logged in). And IP address check is not reliable, so... how should we go about doing this?
@RonniSkansing hold the process as in, don't process the request he made, set a timout and process it after that timeout is over. until then, do other work. Subsequent request dismissal means don't approve any request from that user until the timeout is over.
This ought to be asynchronous so I doubt that. But still...
I had an idea that for holding the process, we can send the timeout value to the client and then, after that time, client can resend the request (automatically via javascript without user intervention).
But I am not sure if this is a good idea...
The biggest problem I am having is how do I uniquely identify the anonymous users since IP check is not reliable.
Uhh, reading this answer, it seems it is impossible.
@AwalGarg You will never be able to perfectly identify a "user" over a network. That doesn't matter though. Do whatever has a net benefit - be it IP based throttling, device fingerprinting, whatever. Don't let perfect be the enemy of good. Think of your goal as reducing misuse rather than preventing it entirely.
@SecondRikudo , I do not understand one thing what is difference between "mysql_fetch_array" and "mysql_fetch_assoc". IMO, both are used for same purpose. What's the difference then ? Note: I am a noob at PHP , you know already. :D
[**Please, don't use `mysql_*` functions in new code**](http://bit.ly/phpmsql). They are no longer maintained [and are officially deprecated](http://j.mp/XqV7Lp). See the [**red box**](http://j.mp/Te9zIL)? Learn about [*prepared statements*](http://j.mp/T9hLWi) instead, and use [PDO](http://php.net/pdo) or [MySQLi](http://php.net/mysqli) - [this article](http://j.mp/QEx8IB) will help you decide which. If you choose PDO, [here is a good tutorial](http://j.mp/PoWehJ).
[**Please, don't use `mysql_*` functions in new code**](http://bit.ly/phpmsql). They are no longer maintained [and are officially deprecated](http://j.mp/XqV7Lp). See the [**red box**](http://j.mp/Te9zIL)? Learn about [*prepared statements*](http://j.mp/T9hLWi) instead, and use [PDO](http://php.net/pdo) or [MySQLi](http://php.net/mysqli) - [this article](http://j.mp/QEx8IB) will help you decide which. If you choose PDO, [here is a good tutorial](http://j.mp/PoWehJ).
@NikiC the problem with the mpz_export tests is that when we discussed not exposing the count parameter to the user and I removed it, some tests were broken, so I emulated the count part with substr - so some tests were passing when they really shouldn't have been. I'm using the calculation provided on the GMP site to calc the size, which will result in size * "\0" as the export data for exporting GMP(0)