@Danack Shit like that doesnt even surprise me anymore
The number of sane services is very limited
user895378
@Danack FWIW you aren't the first person to see wonky non-blocking crypto behavior under high load. This may be something I have no choice but to search out and fix because if it is a problem with PHP it will also affect my server.
user895378
PHP's non-blocking crypto stuff is a mess internally. It's all bolted onto an API that never considered non-blocking as a possibility.
Yeah that sounds similar. I'm think I'm on far few open connections. The number of open file-descriptors I have when the zend_mm corruption happens seems to be 891
class someClass {
private $success = "success\n";
function getReflection() {
return new ReflectionFunction(function() {
print $this->success;
});
}
}
$reflection = (new someClass)->getReflection();
$reflection->invoke();
When I run this, I get a
Fatal e...
I seem to be having a mental block on something that should be quite easy. Take 2 numbers ranging from 0-100 and work out the combined result in a percentage..
If someone in Syria right now was on Skype with me, in the middle of the war-zone. What do you think the chances of them running a VPN or Proxy would be?
Bleh, nvm. I guess the real question is how do they have a connection to the internet, but I doubt I could find out how without being told.
Fig 1. The wrong end of a stickphpdbg is a debugging platform that was merged into 5.6, recently it got some cool updates, and is the first working debugger for PHP7. One chap done all the work required to make it compatible with PHP7, and wrote all the cool new stuff. That was Bob Weinand (@bwoebi). Before I go further, thank you Bob. One of these cool updates was the improvement of remote…
this is partly why I never wanted development to only happen in php-src, we never wanted to hand over control of the project to internals ... we didn't vote on that ...
@JoeWatkins I think we didn't really. These discussions sometimes come and go. Just like phpng was also a push from today to tomorrow. It got a lot of complaints, but nothing dramatic...
And with the time other people eventually joined in.
And, by the way, at the point where phpdbg is really mature (maybe in one year). At that point it'll be perfectly fine to really hand control over to internals.
As I found out tonight in my question (stackoverflow.com/q/26568785/2153758) all the Closures ReflectionFunction interacts with are unbound… Is that behavior really intended?
@CodeCrack that's because there isn't one. Sorry to disappoint you. There's no such thing as a "high quality framework" that will allow you to magically code and keep maintenance cost low. That's your job as a programmer, not the framework's. The framework's job is to get you started quickly, most frameworks don't really help you beyond that, and some even do that badly. — Madara Uchiha29 secs ago
@tereško I'm starting to see your rational on abandoning that post