Hi anybody here who have free time and interested to develop a small PHP framework? Hehe, I know it's reinventing the wheel but I'm looking for a mixture of ease of usefulness and lightweight.
hey, quick question here folks. Why are variables not namespaced in PHP? I know there are a million ways to do whatever you're doing without namespacing variables, but it came up and im curious
I would assume $foo to be in a different scope though as its in a namespace. it seems odd that functions and classes are in a different scope, but not variables
@PhilSturgeon Even if they were namespaced, you've declared the variable in the example in the top level namespace, which I would hope makes it truly global
I guess it's apples and oranges, functions can only be defined once, so implicitly if you redeclare one in a namespace, you can assume it should be in that scope, but variable assignments can be done practically anywhere
@Leigh what are the valid use cases for "I declared a variable in the global scope, worked with it in a namespaced file and want it to modify any global variables that have the same name." ?
@bwoebi it depends on your expectations. if you're a massive OOP fan and you're all about classes all the time, then you'd just use properties. if you're coming from another language where variables (along with everything else) are namespaced then you're gonna really f**k yourself over
then you go googling to find out why you've ended up f**ked over and find out "Oh, lol, namespaces are only for classes, functions, constants, etc, but not variables." and its another lolphp
theeeen you ask somebody why its like that and everyone shrugs.
@PhilSturgeon that's the modus operandi of every PHP code relying on global variables out there. If you namespace variables, like languages with a decent package system do and which I think would be the saner thing to have, we would have a BC break on all shitty code everywhere.
@PhilSturgeon Well, there are reasons why e.g. in C++ you have namespaced variables… because namespaces are there a direct scope… you don't have code outside of functions. In C++ you have cases where you need global vars, while in PHP you just can in an OO world put everything in classes.
Or even… PHP functions can have static vars. Nothing we'd have in C… We need globals there.
So, in PHP we have the possibility to have true global variables, accessible without restrictions from everywhere.
@PhilSturgeon if you really want to propose such a thing without being combated like the devil incarnation by some internals and with a chance of success, you could try to add modifiers for variables so they could be selectively visible only on a given namespace :)
@marcio if you're all procedural, you can have value objects to share your vars. (value objects are procedural… see structs in C.) And if you need global state, you do something wrong. (It's like static in classes.)
@bwoebi Won't argue with that. I probably wouldn't use it because I hate variables floating around like that on PHP code, but hey, usually languages with first class package system have that and people use it without complains.
Yes. And if PHP ever get some kind of "first class" package system, namespaced variables should become a thing. But I think we'll have to use visibility modifiers so shitty code out there won't break.
I think the solution to the yield * problem is a doubly-linked tree, which all Generators referenced in maintain a reference to. I think it's impossible to avoid walking the tree in all cases.
With this solution I have in mind, we only need tree walks from leaf to root in case where some part of the yield * chain is passed to another yield *. (Update of leaf node pointer and list of multi-children nodes needed when leaf gets a child in direct path from leaf to root node.) But only in that case, which should be a fairly rare case (which is then possible, but not totally cheap).
The root of the tree is then the currently executed Generator. The subnodes of the tree (all except the root node) are all Generators which do yield *. Each node of the tree knows a pointer to one leaf descendant node. Each node with multiple children needs a list of all leaf descendant nodes paired with pointers to their respective child node. (The stack is determined by leaf node pointers)
Nodes with only one child just don't need a list, there it is enough to just have a pointer to the child node. Further, each node has a simple refcounter. Also, leaf nodes store a pointer to the root node.
That way, when we advance any generator, we just need to look up a leaf node (which all have a reference to a root node). Then we can see at the root node whether current Generator is finished. If it isn't, all is fine and we can just continue. If the Generator finished, there will be two cases.
Either it is a simple node with just one child: decrement refcounter, free node if needed and go down to child node.
Or it has multiple children and we now will remove the current leaf node from the list of nodes (unnecessary, is microoptimization), decrement refcounter and go down to the child node whose reference was paired with current leaf node. Child node is then removed its parent reference and becomes new top node.
Or the current node references the Generator we're currently executing, then we can continue from the YIELD_FROM opcode. When a node referenced as root node in a leaf node has a parent, then we go the way up until we find a root node without parent and increment the refcounter at each level.
In case we go into a new yield * level, a node is created on top of current root and becomes the new root. Leaf node needs to be updated with new root node then.
When a Generator referenced by a node of the tree is added to yield *, that node now gets a list of children (we need to walk the descendants of that node and nodes of the tree of the other Generator down to the first multi-children node and copy all the leaf node pointers from there). In case there was no multi-children node (linear tree), we just add a pair (pointer to leaf node, pointer to child node), with the child node being in a direct path from leaf to the node.
Also, each time a node is created, refcounter of referenced Generator is incremented, and each time the refcounter of a node drops to zero, it is removed (and the eventual children list too) and refcounter of referenced Generator is decremented.
typedef struct _generator_node generator_node;
struct _generator_node {
generator_node *parent; // NULL for root
zend_object *gen;
uint32_t refcount;
/* 32 bit alignment padding? */
simple_linked_list *children_list; // maybe HashTable ? ... we need to test perf here.
generator_node *child; // if just one child (integrate into linked list maybe)
};
^ @NikiC @rdlowrey
@BenjaminGruenbaum AAAAAARGH… you broke my combo :-(
@BenjaminGruenbaum you now can advance the two Generators in $gens independently.
so, if you advance $gens[0], $gens[1] and then $gens[0], you should get 1, 2, 3.
yield * is nothing else than proxying yield through other Generators. When you advance $gen by the one Generator, you still can advance $gen by the other.
Yeah, that makes sense, though since you can't send values to generators in PHP or throw exceptions to them or all that other JS stuff - can't you just implement it like a for loop? Why would it even need that special engine support?
Well, I assumed there was some way to handle coroutines that's similar to send() and throw() but now that makes your life oh-so-much harder with yield *
To add: @NikiC @rdlowrey A linear tree (all generators are yield * only once) is then just like a simple stacked approach and exhibits the same performance characteristics. Even with multiple yield * on a same Generator, it's still pretty fast, but when you do that too often, that will slow down too linearly (upper bound is the number of yield* you applied to that chain).
It's the best I could come up now. Please try to understand and imagine in your head what I wrote… I hope I don't have a fundamental flaw in my thoughts…
@BenjaminGruenbaum It makes implementation harder, yes. But that's the price to pay to have nice things ;-) At least we try the fastest way to achieve it, which is in best case O(1) (no multiple yield * of one same Generator). (Which should be also the usual use case).
Also, constant factor is fairly low here.
@BenjaminGruenbaum But I think, with these features, Generator functionality will then finally be complete. We even have Generator keys :-P
@BenjaminGruenbaum I just can assure you, that with Daniels Amp framework, we will need yield* much more often. (Well, we need if nearly all the time…)
@ircmaxell Here it's 3 a.m.… Does that count as morning? … Well… Good morning :-)
God… I spend last 4 hours thinking about optimal yield * implementation and doing nothing else… That's really fatiguing. Thinking about an implementation costs a lot of brain power…
@BenjaminGruenbaum Didn't we have that discussion recently in the t@lk chat? Where Amp accepts Generators as yield argument too and not only Promises. That's because we need to wrap it to forward it to the general Generator resolver in Amp.
we wouldn't then need to have a wrapper any more, but can just directly resolve Generators. Should be a lot faster and also, we have then syntactic sugar to differentiate from a coroutine and a Promise…
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm now a bit too tired to explain that all… @rdlowrey is currently writing the RFC for yield *, I'm sure he will explain this use case in detail, then you can read that ;-)
and until this happens… It's a nice long-term goal… but short-term, we need yield* which is feasible to implement in a few days. (chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/21838759#21838759 and following posts about what I think to implement)
typedef struct _generator_node generator_node;
struct _generator_node {
generator_node *parent; // NULL for root
zend_object *gen;
uint32_t refcount;
uint32_t children;
union {
simple_linked_list *children_list; // maybe HashTable ? ... we need to test perf here.
generator_node *child; // if just one child (integrate into linked list maybe)
};
union {
generator_node *leaf; // if > 0 children
generator_node *root; // if 0 children
};
};
@NikiC @rdlowrey was sleeping… but noticed that I forgot leaf/root node information in struct.
@Danack hi, I took this library redbeanphp.com/download, copied the source code inside a if(false) { statement and run it like 10.000 times. No diff noticed, both patched and non patched versions oscillated a lot around ~ the same numbers. So I decided not to proceed with a better benchmark.
Oh, and the PHP test suite takes the same amount of time to finish too. But I encourage people on other environments to do the same and see the results.
@Danack the last 3 iterations of each group were made without waiting for the CPU to cool down. I considered there is no noticeable diff because the difference might be so negligible I'm probably benchmarking how my CPU works at 27°C vs 60°C
Following a linear logic, it was expected to have the patched version consistently slower at least by a small margin. But... we are using a lexer generator. Only the activation of the lookahead macro github.com/php/php-src/pull/1054/… already created a gigantic diff on the generated file.
I simply concluded there is no good way to know the exact difference neither by tracking the changes on the generated lexer and neither by exhausting the lexer with a huge number of iterations. Too much iterations and you are benchmarking your processing power. Too few iterations and the diff will be almost random for each side.
Maybe somebody with more knowledge about RE2C lexer generator could make a better benchmark.
@Danack right, but remember we are trying to isolate the lexing/parsing phase as much as possible, hence the "if(false){" trick. Execution should not be measured.
The instructions 'retired' may be more useful an indicator than the actual timing on box that is not otherwise under load.
That's a really small code base that you're testing against, as it's only 10k lines, most of which are comments. Unless your computer is under other load, it's not going to be an accurate speed test, as the data caches, memory bandwidth and disk IO and all going to be completely available to the parser.
As I said, I don't particularly care. Unless the patch makes it massively slower, releasing the keywords to be used would still be good. But it's ought to be checked.
I don't think there is a way to recompile PHP from source.
If you want to delay the execution of the loop you could use the sleep function, which is used for delaying execution.
For example, I want to print 10 number after every 2 seconds then the code below should do the job.
for($i=0;$i<=10...
> I don't think there is a way to recompile PHP from source.
Any idea why PATCH and PUT wouldn't be accepting multipart/form-data file uploads?
When I run var_dump($_FILES) it outputs array(0) { }. Any ideas why this is happening? If I POST the file, it works fine.
Below is an example of the request I am running.
Thanks in advance!
PUT /test.php HTTP/...
There is a non-wsdl web service URL. This web service takes some authentication parameters directly in URL with XML format :
[Snip: I changed my actual domain with example]
http://example.com/WSV2/StaticData.php?xml=<StaticDataRequest><Header><Code>TT4533</Code><Username>skyman211</Username><Pa...
oh okay =] "Here is what I tried so far, and I'm not sure below statement are correct or not :" so have you debugged it? What does it respond, do you have errors/notices on?
@RonniSkansing Oh yea. here is errors: Warning: SoapClient::__soapCall() expects at least 2 parameters, 0 given in /srv/www/htdocs/ortmas/inc/client.php on line 41
@RonniSkansing But in my case there is no function to call !
@VeeeneX Yes. But..
@RonniSkansing This web service parameter and function kept in URL : http://example.com/WSV2/StaticData.php?xml=<StaticDataRequest><Header><Code>TT4533</Code><Username>skyman211</Username><Password>ammkj43</Password></Header><Body><GetStaticData>cities</GetStaticData><ExtraParams><CountryCode>98</CountryCode></ExtraParams></Body></StaticDataRequest>
Code, Username, Password ans some other parameters
Can someone please advise me as to why my question stackoverflow.com/questions/28792419/… has 42 views but no answers? im not complaining but is it because the question is poor?
hi i have problem in calling the log in function of the account class in codeigniter A3m. home page is loaded but when i try to login it shows me error ---redzoon.com/account/sign_in
@VeeeneX please help me. i try everything, even i changed .htaccess file several times but nothing changed. i think there is some problem in .htaccess
RewriteEngine on RewriteBase /CodeIgniter2.2_A3M/ # Directs all EE web requests through the site index file RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d RewriteRule ^(.*)$ ./index.php/$1 [L]
@SajadA I dunno how to help you... I would suggest spending some time checking 1. how to debug server errors (check the log files) .. 2. learning how .htacccess works
RewriteBase /CodeIgniter2.2_A3M
# Directs all EE web requests through the site index file
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ index.php/$1 [L]
@VeeeneX i made a benchmark with hhvm and theres no such difference (0.003725 vs. 0.003821 ms or 3v4l.org/iQDjn ), the work is also done in the constructor. a case were a object creation makes no sense to me.
@nikita2206 One of these days, I'm going to download SugarCRM and see what it looks like inside it, if one of (the?) senior guy working on it has such weird beliefs about code.