in python, there's a library called 'gevent', for example, that monkey patches stdlib and makes all the IO calls non-blocking, then manages the stack itself (with an event loop et al)
@NikiC yes, but that's all the same thing… it is always involving some sort of preemption and notification (via e.g. a new stackframe). … except for polling and select; I have no idea why this is even on that page; these are normal syscalls?!
at the very least for everything where we have control of in user mode programs.
Don't suppose there's any reason why apache would be running but isn't.. accessible? Pretty much my last straw before I just reimage the server and restore from backup
If iptables has name-based rules in it, it may hang trying to resolve them if it has no DNS resolver. Same goes for apache. Depends how they are configured, obviously, but when network things inexplicably hang, DNS is often to blame in one way or another.
What is the equivalent of $reactor->run(); in modern Amp? Context - I'm migrating some old code that uses Artax, that was using that to wait for all requests, and all the subsequent requests that the responses generate are complete.
@DaveRandom I possibly should just wait to try this tomorrow, when I have more brain power available....but the problem with migrating my code to be like that, is that there are more requests being sent to Artax when the initial requests are returned.
i.e. the list of promises isn't known at the outside scope.
@Ekin well only in the sense that it doesn't tell you much about what is actually happening i.e. a little code does an awful lot. But that's not an entirely rational answer and is definitely a bit vague, sorry
@Ekin equally though, frameworks like amp are deliberately black boxes, because they are essentially a runtime all of their own - something like wait() becomes a "core function" that you treat as if it is bug-free at all times, in that same way as you don't test whether file_get_contents() actually did what it was supposed to when you are testing your PHP application
I do not understand it, like, at all. I just don't get it. It seems to me like someone should have come up with a sane interface for it by now instead of having to issue mind bending commands and be completely unable to visualise any of it, but if such a thing exists then I have never seen it
I want to have one public variable $users = User::all(); so i could use it in different methods inside controller and it doesn't work this way:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use App\Http\Requests;
use App\User;
class AdminController extends Controller
{
...
> A Part-Of-Speech Tagger (POS Tagger) is a piece of software that reads text in some language and assigns parts of speech to each word (and other token), such as noun, verb, adjective, etc., although generally computational applications use more fine-grained POS tags like 'noun-plural'.
@lewis4u you would need to initialise it in a function, like maybe the constructor. PHP doesn't allow you to initialise properties with function calls.
@DaveRandom btw, has anyone given you the advice of practicing your talk standing up, rather than sitting down yet?