@bwoebi wait, why was it leaving sockets in CLOSE_WAIT then? surely there's still logic within artax/socket to avoid that? i.e. the timer was still presumably firing?
@DaveRandom the timer fired, but the Closure containing the SocketPoolStruct was retained (and the SocketPoolStruct held the final reference on the stream resource)
it is difficult to know what is possible ... I think we (you) should try something and work up a patch, and hope it be merged upstream (probably would be if it were well tested on every platform)
It's also a drink that gets you drunk from the bottom upwards, you can talk fine and people think you are suave and/or sober until you attempt to stand up to go to the toilet and you fall over
@PeeHaa Apart from ternary operators, is my approach to use isset() and empty() right? (Or should I go for array_key_exists()? I am getting the desired output currently, but who knows future.
all you need to download is the binary tools package, the release you want to test against, and the devel pack for that release and you can phpize extensions like you do on proper operating systems
so did I, all these years I have been compiling all of php, just to build one extension ...
I just found out the other day you don't have to do that ... someone fixed phpize ages ago and never thought to write it down anywhere, or announce it, or even whisper to anyone ...
I was gonna do a page the other day for the wiki, but I can't get my head around the requirements, and when you ask anyone about them, the conversation never actually ends ...
it will be simpler when we don't have to care about 5 anymore
@JoeWatkins I came across an SO post a while ago where someone (I think Johannes?) mentioned it in a comment. On an SO answer. Apparently that's what passes for an announcement.
you're trying to do something like that, or you think that happens ?
it's for very fast access to declared properties, it works by allocating additional memory after each zend_object (you are responsible for this in create handler) suitable for storing sizeof(zval) * numDeclaredProperties
then when a property is looked up, we don't necessarily have to do a ht lookup, we cache offset from property info in this routine, or as you can see at the top, hit the cache on subsequent executions ...
you can set a gc handler, and it can cleanup declared properties (zval** param and int* param), and a HashTable* (return value), but not more than one hashtable ... so if you store objects or arrays inline like that where they have circular references, you will get leaks ...
a better way to do it is use the property table, but cache the pointer to the property, letting the engine do the work the first time ...
and then set a write handler that prohibits writing as appropriate, if appropriate ...
Oh right I see, so this magic stuff is only really happening when you're running with Amp
Looking at the doc parts where it's saying you can wait for a promise by assigning it to a yield, but I'm guessing that's because there's something underneath where your code is which is pushing the result back up to you