@JoeWatkins sure. I actually have a spare dual wan router knocking about in the office which I can mail to you if you want, could probably make life a lot simpler
It's old but still functional and would be fine for you I think
@samayo It basically represents numbers as strings, and then does maths on them. It lets you do maths on big numbers (i.e. > 64 bit), but it's very slow
@DaveRandom I got a fancy dual wan router, the problem is at the bthubs (or upstream from them) ... which I'm considering replacing with (2 of the same) adsl2+ modems ...
yeah, the bthubs, and you can't disable (completely) the firewall on one of them for some reason ... but the asus router is in dmz of both hubs, and the server in dmz of asus router
@Leigh Yup, I'm living in countryside Mc smalltown, and the ONLY company looking for developers in a 1-hour-drive-radius is the one I currently work for
daverandom@ubuntu-1gb-nyc3-01-gitamp:~$ cat /etc/resolv.conf # Dynamic resolv.conf(5) file for glibc resolver(3) generated by resolvconf(8) # DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE BY HAND -- YOUR CHANGES WILL BE OVERWRITTEN nameserver 127.0.0.53
Guys, what is the settings of PHP when running some source file gives output with opcode table and there is a setting which performs opcode optimisation?
object(Amp\Dns\NoRecordException)#180 (7) {
Jan 16 16:29:35 ubuntu-1gb-nyc3-01-gitamp php[2588]: ["message":protected]=>
Jan 16 16:29:35 ubuntu-1gb-nyc3-01-gitamp php[2588]: string(38) "No records returned for api.github.com"
Jan 16 16:29:35 ubuntu-1gb-nyc3-01-gitamp php[2588]: ["string":"Exception":private]=>
daverandom@ubuntu-1gb-nyc3-01-gitamp:~$ php /opt/gitamp/server.php PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'ekinhbayar\GitAmp\Github\Token' not found in /opt/gitamp/config.php:25
1. trigger events by static call as side effect 2. extend base entity and save events in the entity 3. inject event dispatcher into entities 4. return events from entity command methods @Ocramius did I miss anything or are those all the possible ways to trigger events in DDD?
@Shafizadeh No, it normally means you've gone too far with something or deviated from something too much. The meaning changes depending on the context really.
@JoeWatkins I saw somewhere where PHP outputs what op codes it'll be processing, for eg, when using backshlasher optimises some op's FCALLs etc. and there was a table with running ops in vm something I cannot find right now
@Shafizadeh no. "Got carried away" could translate as "got too enthusiastic". Let me give you a completely inappropriate example: bunch of criminal break in someones home and shoot everyone, and then on of said criminals turns around and start shooting his team-mates. That's what one could describe as "got carried away".
sigh as much as I hate SO.docs, but I guess it would be useful if someone added some examples for php c stuff in it given the absence of non-outdated examples on the web
... or you are trying to explain someone how nucleogenesis works in stars, and start making wide hand movements ... you could say that you got carried away, @Shafizadeh
@Gordon the documentation for all C projects is contained within the code itself ... once projects get to a certain size (linux, php, whatever), it cannot work any other way ... we could write the best documentation you ever seen in your life today, and in a year or two, it will be out of date ... the code can never be out of date as a source of documentation ...
@Gordon but we actually have, phpinternalsbook, read it for a few minutes and consider how much effort was put into that, then consider that today, it's mostly useless ... documenting C is just too much to ask IRL ... in a year or two, you will not care about this stuff ... you'll repeat the same things I've said to you today ...
@Gordon eventually, coredumps will be meaningful chunks of information ... they are actually useful ... nobody writes complex C without generating core dumps, it's part of life as a c programmer ...
@JoeWatkins the big question is: will I not care because I was driven away from c programming out of frustration or because I actually understood the mess php c is
@PeeHaa The underlying issue is down to the OS not "getting with the times", the root cause feels like a really old problem that no-one has bothered to fix yet
@Gordon eventually you'll have a model in your head that means you generate less mistakes ... but the model will be wrong, nikitas model is wrong, so is dmitry's, so is bobs, so is mine ... the more you work on a part of php-src the more high resolution your model becomes, and the less dumps and mistakes you generate ... systems such as this are so vastly complex, with different parts of the system interacting in such complex ways that nobody can ever build a flawless model ....
@Ekin it may just be controlling whether that IPv6 address is accessible from the internet, the template probably has it enabled by default because the assumption is that it won't break anything in applications that are no IPv6-aware, which to fair would be true if I had written it correctly in the first place.
Why do people answer shit questions, when OP doesn't show any effort? >< close-plshttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/41677813/how-to-add-two-array-that-have-the-same-key-value-pair?noredirect=1#comment70552840_41677813
@PeeHaa OK so in sentence: when the DNS server is on the LAN and the IP address is not in the arp cache, the network interface will arp for it before it sends the DNS packet (correct behaviour) but it will only queue one packet for transmission until it gets the arp response and discards the rest (fucking weird behaviour)
The upshot of which is that amp/dns is waiting for responses to requests that were silently discarded by the OS before transmission