2.6GHz 2.6GHz dual-core Intel Core i5 processor (Turbo Boost up to 3.1GHz) with 3MB shared L3 cache Configurable to 2.8GHz dual-core Intel Core i5 (Turbo Boost up to 3.3GHz) with 3MB shared L3 cache or 3.0GHz dual-core Intel Core i7 (Turbo Boost up to 3.5GHz) with 4MB shared L3 cache.
@TheSerenin That is a horrible naming scheme then (createIP() at the very least). Also I now realise what you are doing makes no sense... you replaced the createRange() method with a mock, it's no longer got an internal implementation, so it won't behave as you expect. You'd have to create a partial mock where only the create() method is mocked to verify that it's called 256 times.
at my job we're going to get access to an oracle big data appliance for a big data project soon, the starter edition is 6 nodes each containing two of those 18 core cpu's
@DaveRandom the problem is one of geography, i'll be in one country, the server will be in another country ... curse you internet, always thwarting me!
@NikiC @bwoebi In PHP 5.5, usleep() is interrupted by the arrival of signal, but in PHP 5.6 the signal does not interrupt sleeping. Is there something that changed between releases or something with configuration/compiling I'm not aware of?
@Trowski a stab in the dark ... since the php impl is just calling the system function, it's probably that the 5.5 build has zend signals enabled and the others don't, or vice versa ...
a signal should interrupt usleep ...
possibly zend signals disables trapping (or traps for another reason) that signal, not sure ... or it might ignore it completely ...
pcntl_signal(SIGUSR1, function ($signo) {
printf("Recieved signal: %d\n", $signo);
});
posix_kill(posix_getpid(), SIGUSR1);
$start = microtime(true);
usleep(1e6); // Sleep for 1 second.
printf("Slept for %4f seconds.\n", microtime(true) - $start);
pcntl_signal_dispatch();
@JoeWatkins I'll have to test it at home again, but I've had that script interrupt usleep() immediately and trigger the signal, so it only sleeps for a few fractions of a second.
Clearly I have to put pcntl_signal_dispatch() on a timer though.
Adding declare(ticks=1) also solves the problem, but I imagine would be a performance nightmare.
one of the things I'm thinking about is checking the CE to see if it's one I know about, and if so do direct property/method access rather than indirect
so $foo->bar would be compiled as if (CE(foo) === internal) { result = foo.p_bar } else { result = zend_lookup_property(foo, "bar") } (semi-pseudo-code)
in C land, there is little need for such dark magic ... also you could know about a class I extended and am using magic in php land ... __get/__set ...
@bwoebi I can, because I'm only talking about using the static lookup if I know the class entry (meaning the instantiated class) is actually an internal compiled class
@bwoebi I can't do that anyway with a dynamic prop access. I need to use the normal lookup mechanism
@ircmaxell I mean an example like … class foo { public function __get($x) { return NULL; } public function __set($var, $x) { $this->var = $x; } } $foo = new foo; var_dump($foo->var); /* __get */ $foo->do_set = 1; var_dump($foo->var); /* no __get */
by generated result, I was talking about running normal phpt's against a "test" (the developed demo) extension, totally normal using run-tests.php ... we can do that easily, tests are stable, runner is stable, everything is okay ...
I think testing the generated code, before it is built, is definitely worthwhile, but might be made harder by the fact that it would be brand new code and we haven't tested anything else ...