You could use tabs to indent your code, then allow each user to customise their tab width. Alternatively, agree on a set standard and stick to it - there are far more important things to worry about in software development than tab width. That said, anecdotally most people use four spaces as stan...
I have a register form, I want if user enter bad email (e.g. without @), I redirect him to the register form and show him a message. for sending that message should I use of session ?
It allows to use the same name for multiple subpattern - in this case value. So I can match different thing but access them with the same name in the match.
They're slower - PHP has to do work to create them each time the bootstrap is run. whereas just doing $injector->delegate('someClass', 'someFunctionName'); does much less work.
Like frame #2: PHP_CodeCoverage->append(data=unknown type: 10, id=SebastianBergmann\Money\MoneyTest, append=true, linesToBeCovered=array(1), linesToBeUsed=array(1)) at /Users/Bob/phpunit/vendor/phpunit/php-code-coverage/src/CodeCoverage.php:287 … A very normal backtrace line… as long as there are no line breaks.
I have two files, that needs to be executed every evening.
PHP file contains the latest records from database, and creates a source file in same directory.
And a normal file, even doesnt execute.
I tried to check in /var/log/syslog. found that below.
Log file
Jul 29 13:56:01 ocs2 CRON[7016]:...
@Rafee No. The ./ syntax is a hint to the shell that you're invoking the file in the current directory. You just need the path to the script. That's it. Nothing else.
so I'm planning on refactoring that typeInfo thing a bit, because I think we need much more info there. Because for simple types this is fine, but for type unions (int|float) it's not nearly enough...
@ircmaxell yea, I noticed your recent repository folly 2 days ago. The php-optimizer itself is very important. Do you think it's possible to have such kind of improvements totally independent from the core src?
@ircmaxell there was an attempt to do some forms of constant folding recently, on ast level, but it failed. And I started to wonder if these things really belong into core.
There are two types of DCE that can happen. Type one doesn't need to happen (code generated just won't be reached, the binary size may be smaller, but practically not much gain)
Doing optimizations on PHP's opcode stream, you gotta be very careful. Many totally innocuous looking changes turn out to break stuff in some weird edge case
So, my employer has temporarily brought on someone who broke away from the consulting firm they worked at to go independent; a consulting firm the employer has retained in the past. Well, while I've been working my ass off to build a usable dev and testing environment, and move away from the archaic and broken practices of current, this twat walks in and just starts shouting CONFLUENCE! JIRA! SCRUM!
Like, I try not to be a dick most of the day, regardless of circumstance. But I find that every single meeting we're in, I'm compelled to oppose his ideas. Mostly because of valid reasons, but it's almost become an instinct now.
@DanLugg this consultancy won't end well, don't quit yet, wait for it to fail ;)
user895378
@LeviMorrison Yeah we've got the amphp/redis thing but it's about to be updated to use the newly v1 amp under the hood so I'd give it a few days before using it
@marcio Well, the problem is the boss has his head in the clouds. He's like a senior toddler who plays with paper and tells stories about the good old days.
Even though I was hired under the premise to "fix all the things and modernize their practices", I'm guessing they didn't like the answer, per se (rewrite).
And wanted him to "corroborate" my ideas/plans, by which they meant redefine.
@DanLugg I know that kind. Someone comes selling gunpowder as the latest invention and he chooses to believe it and gets all enthusiastic.
user895378
@LeviMorrison cool, well should be fine by that time. We've just finally got a stable underlying library to work with so we're having to go through and update all the libs to use that.
@marcio Yep. Further to that, I was basically told outright that they don't exactly "trust my judgement exclusively", and because he's like "one of the family" they wanted his opinion.
@DanLugg So they really saying that you are smarter then them and they can't understand what you are doing so they want someone to dumb it down for them?
@DanLugg I work with consultancy 1/4 of my time and luckily it's usually to clean up the mess of the "CONFLUENCE! JIRA! SCRUM! Zend Framework!" gunpowder seller. Gunpowder burns quick.
i need to do something quite simple, use shell_exec to list the cron jobs in the root's crontab. No matter what i try, i get an error. I know it is because apache user is running PHP, so I use 'crontab -u root -l' but then I get this error: must be privileged to use -u
i tried that @Charles for some reason I was getting an error, let me try again so i can see what it was
'/var/spool/cron' is not a directory, bailing out.
that's the error i get
when the cron is set under apache
shell_exec('crontab -l 2>&1'); is the function call. If i try with -u apache i get a permissions issue error
Forgot i changed the permissions back. If I add read permissions to /var/spool/cron/* I get this error: System error You (apache) are not allowed to access to (crontab) because of pam configuration.
I have the issue that I am not able to use cron with my normal user ( other than root )
[coins@COINS-TEST ~]$ crontab -l
Authentication service cannot retrieve authentication info You (coins) are not allowed to access to (crontab) because of pam configuration.
Could you please explain me how ...
@samrap btw Cron is not a good fit for this....you would be better off just having a background task that is running all the time (but just sleeping mostly) and doing stuff when required. supervisord.org is good way of managing background tasks.
I don't have the time to read through the documentation of that. The lead recommended it as a cronjob and this is only my second day here so I doubt he will change his mind...
The problem with cron is that it's tied to a single machine, and hard to figure out if it's running correctly or not, and hard to pause, or re-schedule, as you're finding out.
Having a task that is managed by supervisord gives a nice little web page where you can see if the task is running or not, see it's log files, pause or restart it if necessary.
And having the task be able to read from whatever data source to check to see if it should be running or not, is far less fragile that twiddling cron files.
@Danack Not at this point. When it was a little bit shorter, yea. These days my problems are more like: "My beard got caught in my zipper" and "I wish the wind wasn't blowing my beard back into my face"
And other things that you don't think about until you have several inches of hair hanging off your face
I will still need to have a web interface that allows the user to update what time of day the process needs to run. I don't see how supervisor helps with this
@samrap It doesn't. But it means that you can just store that information in say a database, and just allow the task to check "Is it time to run now?" and if so, run what needs running, and if not, just sleep for 1 minute.
On Debian, when running:
$ fakeroot cdebootstrap stable /tmp/foo
cdebootstrap downloads the packages, but when it has to extract them, I get this error:
E: Failed to unshare: Operation not permitted
How can I run cdebootstrap as non-root?
@samrap If you are good at making RPMs/DEB packages then maybe....though supervisor is still a lot easier to deploy new tasks in - it's just a case of sym-linking the config file into the supervisord conf directory, rather than installing a new service, and having to setup monitoring/restarting yourself.