uniqid will work for that. The only concern is the collisions when using it multiple times per-request. It is based on microtime, so between two requests it will probably be ok.... otherwise, you might have to go whole-hog and use a UUID
@ChrisBaker yea, that's what I'm trying to stay away from. I don't need a UUID type 4, and I don't want to rely on another UUID/math lib just to provide some log context. :/
@Rican7 There's still race condition concerns with anything time-based. You'd have to track previously-generated strings and regenerate on duplication... and still be vulnerable to race conditions if you wrote that record to a file or something.
@LeviMorrison the question is whether it's a defining or not. You can also say… We define the anon function at compile-time and bind it at instantiation-time (at run-time)
@LeviMorrison @bwoebi So this is how I think LSB should work: If there is $this the called_scope is get_class($this). If there is no $this (static closure) then: If the outer called_scope is instanceof the closure scope, use that, otherwise use the closure scope.
I think that would be a good compromise between matching normal static:: behavior and not exposing any particularly weird cases like having static not be instanceof self
I'm building a AST parser. Going from template to AST. But keeping context. So it not only has statements and expressions, but also literals and html elements
@NikiC "If the outer called_scope is instanceof the closure scope, use that, otherwise use the closure scope." … that sounds a bit inconsistent to me… too many variables.
@LeviMorrison @bwoebi Okay, had a logic error there. Instead: Use the called_scope and scope from definition time by default. If a rebind is done, use the given scope both for called_scope and scope
@LeviMorrison The idea here is basically: If the closure is not rebound, it should behave exactly as if you put the code of the closure directly in the method.
And for that we need to keep the called_scope of the point where the closure was instantiated
$d =& $c; // $a, $b -> zend_array_1(refcount=2, value=[])
// $c, $d -> zend_reference_1(refcount=2) ---^
// Note that all variables share the same zend_array, even though some are
// PHP references and some aren't.
@bwoebi We've had handling for traits (where self is different from the active_class_entry), but closures were conveniently forgotten nearly everywhere ^^
@PeeHaa There are a few places where classes are hidden, one of them does password manipulation... the other hilarious example is the database class. That's when I gave up.
@bwoebi So when you call B::test the called scope is a zce of B, and the scope on the method is A (assuming A::test is defined on be and B::test is not defined and B extends A)
@JoeWatkins thinking about the SAPI, here's an idea. Implement PSR7 in core. So when you start the server, it runs the configured php file, which calls register_http_handler(callable $handler). It runs it to the end, then stops. Then it waits for a request, and then calls the handler :-)