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20:00
@rdlowrey Should I know who that is?
@Ocramius line 3 of this reply: news.php.net/php.internals/74106
2
Q: Review queue should give me duplicates with low vote count

Second RikudoIn lieu of the new Dupehammer, I have a feature request. I'd prefer it if when the review queue wants to give me a duplicate on a tag in which I can single handedly vote and close, that it's give me one that doesn't already have 4 votes on it. The idea is that I can take on the "harder" cases, ...

@Chris so .... your boss works in php all day does he ?? your boss is qualified to make those decisions is he ?? pffft that really pisses me off ...
@NikiC yes, yes you should
Applies to folks with the privilege.
20:00
@Crell, Chicago, USA
Senior architect @Palantir.net. Drupal developer. Collaboration advocate. Clean code advocate. Clean government advocate. Geek. (Pick 3.)
27.8k tweets, 4.9k followers, following 203 users
@ircmaxell can't really imagine an abuse here. In the meantime it's annoying to have to declare additional non-sense parameters in a method...
@bwoebi then clean up the API
Oh geez. @newrelic posts a list of 24 important #PHP folks to follow, plus me: http://blog.newrelic.com/2014/05/02/25-php-developers-follow-online/ I count 4 #Drupal folks, too.
@TomBurman my general recommendation is "use this", but you probably should explain your requirements
@ircmaxell yeah, no, that's a no-go. Otherwise we may as well just go for docblock-based-development
20:01
@JoeWatkins My boss wouldn't know PHP from GWBASIC. He's a decent network guy. If I really started going off on the way we do things here, you'd probably grow to hate my boss, me, and the entire town we live in. I'll just put it this way: there is no documentation, and there is no testing. "No time for that, our budget something something"
@ircmaxell the question was more to show me please an example of a then possible abuse?
(which is what I'm doing nao)
@Ocramius :-D
@webarto that's annoying?
user895378
@ircmaxell Well, some of the things he said with the Eich situation bothered me as I have a sister who falls into the "people who would be harmed by Prop 8" category. So it was thin ice after that. But I find many of his musings self-important humble brags. And the remainder I find myself frequently disagreeing with in terms of programming philosophies. So I just unfollowed.
20:02
I edit the live code to spot-fix bugs routinely. We change public features in response to a single, non-reproducible complaint from a users.
@ircmaxell What @rdlowrey said. But I'm not likeable too.
@rdlowrey fair enough. He's actually quite bright, and extremely passionate. I don't agree with his politics, but he's done more for the PHP community than most people ever had, and most people ever will
If I don't get out of this place soon, I might be forever tainted as a developer :p
user895378
@ircmaxell Yeah I don't have any problems with the guy. Never met him. Just an accumulation of things that rubbed me the wrong way.
@teresko, my requirements are pretty simple. I just want to be able to create a single connection(instance) to my database so i dont have new instances every (keeping code clean) and then i want to be able to pass this connection into my DAL model file in order to use it. At the moment the DAL model is the only file that will need to use the DB connection. Ill have a little look at that link, thanks, if you could help me out any more now i have given you my requirements, it would be fantastic
20:04
@rdlowrey yeah. I can see that. Just sighing in general, because if we had more like him, we'd be in a better place. But I get it 100%. </rant>
user895378
:/
@NikiC It's because you have to bind results first. So dumb.
And fetch.
@bwoebi Well, I think it's worth having that discussion if we're after switching for 6 to be Covariant instead of invariant
user895378
Covariant would be nice ... I've run into that several times when implementing interfaces
user895378
My office's air conditioning is working again \o/
20:09
@LeviMorrison ^^
Congrats! :-)
@rdlowrey does the parameter not existing count as covariance though. That's an interesting question that I'm not sure I can answer...
@ircmaxell I see. Covariant seems promising.
1
Q: Getting the number of days between two dates

LamloumiI have a PHP application in which i have to compare between two dates $interval = date("Y-m-d",time()) - date("2013-07-1"); However, it always returns 0 as value for $interval. How can I modify the code to fix the problem?

Anyone with a strong duplicate for that?
user895378
I'm trying to think of harmful consequences of allowing nonexistent params ...
20:11
The suggested one is meh.
example: function foo(A $a, B $b) could only become function foo(A $a) or function foo() or function foo(A $a =null, B $b) <-- really weird... Not sure I like that
anyone know what #imagine2014 refers to ?
something programmy, some kind of conference maybe
20:13
@ircmaxell you mean function foo (A $a, B $b = null) ?!
user895378
When someone mentions "Imagine" all I can think of is Oasis' "Don't Look Back in Anger" ...
@bwoebi huh?
user895378
/me shakes tiny fist at the Gallagher brothers
wow, those german guys working on that appserver thing took it to vegas ... effort
@ircmaxell Instead of function foo(A $a = null, B $b) … That looks wtf too me?
@JoeWatkins just because of you!
@bwoebi it's covariant. Allows a child to ignore the first parameter. In the case of @LeviMorrison's one RFC: foo(?A $a, B $b), as it wouldn't be optional
@bwoebi they appear to be doing quite well ... surge in effort recently, think they might have got funding perhaps ...
user895378
@JoeWatkins Vegas? Like to a convention in Las Vegas?
@rdlowrey yeah seems so ...
user895378
20:16
WTF.
@ircmaxell there exists some default keyword proposal for these cases too I think.
user895378
I should stop screwing with C and just do aerys.
@rdlowrey +1
@ircmaxell FWIW, our conversion would have been impossible without this, and it really hasn't been a big problem to deal with.
@SecondRikudo I thought the "target" question had a better answer than the referenced dup. I guess the magic number for seconds in the day is pretty safe.... until the earth's rotation slows in 1.2 billion years! GAH! Future-proof your code, people.
20:17
@Chris I can reorginize it pretty easily.
But I do believe that there's a better more canonical-like dupe out there I'm not finding.
@rdlowrey you should write the decent event abstraction first, then go back to ayres probably ...
@DanLugg seriously?
user895378
The thing is ... I can guarantee you that any script-kiddie could take down the app-server without the slightest bit of effort. People think it's enough to expose the HTTP functionality. It's not. Not for production. There's so much more to it.
user895378
Putting things like that into production is dangerous.
@Gordon Everyone has gone Simon_eQ on us :(
20:19
That hard-coded number of seconds in the day is a time bomb. You might think that no one will be using your code in 1.2 billion years, but you never know! People still use IE 6.
@SecondRikudo What I miss?
@JoeWatkins he has Alert. But there are really not a lot more abstractions you can do there (except maybe automatic writing)
@Fabien Hmmm, ircmaxell purging the owner list of the room?
@SecondRikudo he was serious though, wasnt he?
@Chris no, we'll then just redefine the second.
20:19
@Gordon I think he was. Don't know.
then 10 days it is
@teresko, if you did want to help me come up with a solution to my requirements, maybe you can post it as an answer to my question, it would be a great help, thanks for your time, tom
@rdlowrey probably true ... but it's also true that ayres cannot see production while relying on flawed abstractions of events ... I don't see a realistic way of seeing production without writing that wrapper first ...
actually, the amount of times people ask me to ban them makes it worth to think about implementing it as a feature
user895378
@JoeWatkins It's not flawed -- It can still do > 20,000 responses per second with 1,000 simultaneous clients with native only + pthreads.
20:21
@Gordon Yeah, worst case he can flag notice you some other way.
user895378
It could crush the app server thing right now.
@Gordon I actually think that a good idea...
@SecondRikudo Fair enough.
@Gordon Yup, with a nice dial for time and a friendly red push button :)
Although I don't see it happening :P
20:21
@SecondRikudo I'll suggest tomorrow when I finally got decent internet again
user895378
@JoeWatkins But I'm not trying to be performant on that level of competition. I'm trying to be performant on the level of tools like golang :)
@Gordon then there will be a lot of people complaining after two days "I want to chat :-("...
user895378
I'm firmly of the opinion that the solution is just to write a server in C using libuv. Embed the php interpreter to allow both non-blocking responses using the built-in event loop while allow requests to also be routed to the standard web SAPI for the specific things you want to do synchronously.
@bwoebi You mean withdrawal symptoms? lol
Why's Dan Lugg going on vacation?
20:22
@bwoebi so what, we cant hear them then :D
@rdlowrey they are flawed ... they do unsafe things ... I see no way around that ...
--TEST--
Inheritance contravariance
--FILE--
<?php
interface Test1 {
        public function foo();
}

interface Test2 extends Test1 {
        public function foo() : Test1;
}

class Test3 implements Test2 {
        public function foo() : Test3 {
                return $this;
        }
}

$t3 = new Test3;

var_dump($t3->foo());

--EXPECTF--
object(Test3)#%d (0) {
}
@Gordon they'll ping you mods with flags
user895378
@JoeWatkins Then any code using pthreads is flawed.
nope
because pthreads solves the problem
they do not
20:23
pthreads is still not inherently safe.
user895378
Then how is native + pthreads flawed?
it's nothing to do with pthreads
Closed 40 more questions today :)
user895378
Then why did you say it's flawed?
Lovin' the hamma!
20:24
@TomBurman writing answers take time, and I have already written 6 this year. The idea that you pass the DB connection instance to factory in the constructor (either directly, or as a anonymous function to be executed later). Then,when factory instance is create, it will already contain said DB connection. And it can pass it to every new instance that this factory is producing
@ircmaxell oh, I totally missed to followup on the return type rfc. is it accepted?
The hamma is noice!
@bwoebi it's as safe as TSRM is, so it's pretty safe ...
@ircmaxell looks perfectly valid too me.
@Gordon Hasn't come to a vote yet.
20:24
@bwoebi that works with the current RFC
@JoeWatkins see the problem. It's just as safe as TSRM.
@TomBurman the article that I linked you to contains two videos. Watch them - should help
@Jack kk
@Gordon there's one outstanding issue that I have a fix for (or think I do at least)
@bwoebi TSRM sets the bar though, that's the only guarantee any of php has ...
20:25
@Gordon Btw, I would like to ask for a personal mod favour ;-)
and there's nothing actually wrong with tsrm, you couldn't say that it does anything unsafe, its not fast, but it's not unsafe either ...
@JoeWatkins I still didn't really get the problem with libevent and pthreads...
@bwoebi this never happened with people that asked me to ban them.
I am finding the code
I will try to explain again
20:26
@Gordon I mean when it gets a feature for everyone.
@JoeWatkins yes, please.
show me libevent github repo ?
@Jack hand over the money then :D
@Gordon Aww man =((
hehe
user895378
@JoeWatkins the pecl extension or the actual libevent?
@bwoebi Yeah, "self ban".
20:26
pecl
@JoeWatkins github.com/chobie/php-uv … oh you asked for libevent. no idea where it is.
@Gordon dough
How much is it this time? =p
@Jack double it was was last time
user895378
FWIW I don't think it's safe to use libuv extensions
20:27
@ircmaxell thanks
The dupehammer tag is officially a thing :D
Oh, alright then ... I have an outstanding flag to have one of my questions removed; if you think that another mod will eventually handle it, that's fine .. but it's been two weeks now :) @Gordon
user895378
I'm talking about implementing the server in C and using worker processes for the real work. Threads are only used with new tsrm contexts for handling synchronous responses. That's just as safe as tsrm
@Jack link?
20:28
@Gordon link.
user895378
Short of @JoeWatkins implementing it I seriously doubt any userland threading will function safely in conjunction with libuv or libevent
user895378
@JoeWatkins lol yeah that's a timebomb
user895378
I don't know why people ever thought that was a good solution.
this is in all of the implementations I have found and cannot be assumed safe, just because it works doesn't make it correct ...
@JoeWatkins yeah, you've shown that already to us. I just don't know the inherent problem with that line. I'm not a TSRM freak...
20:30
Hi everyone
user924016
Hi @IdrissNeumann
All caught up now. I like the list of room owners as it currently is. A few others spring to mind as could have remained but I certainly don't see anyone I wouldn't want up there.
@Jack hmm, doesnt look useless to me
@Gordon Personally I didn't see a big issue with the question either, but I suppose others found it either too n00b level or not solving their own similar issue ... not sure ;-)
user895378
@bwoebi the libevent code does things that aren't threadsafe with that data. You can't just pull it all from the same tsrm and expect there to not be problems.
20:31
It's at your discretion of course ...
@rdlowrey and why can't it be fixed then?
it assumes the context belongs to it, and in some situations it certainly does not belong to it, in any situation where libevent actually uses threads, and that function was created in context A and called in context B, you will get unexpected behaviour, "undefined", it shouldn't work at all, as it is, most of zend will bring itself up (in the sense of construct module globals etc) upon access, but the opcodes themselves, the classes/functions/constants, nope, shouldn't work
user895378
@bwoebi My point is it doesn't matter if it's fixed. That sort of thing is better implemented in C and hidden from userland. It's more performant. The end goal isn't to make everything work in userland; it's to maximize performance in a compiled language and only expose what's explicitly necessary in userland.
user895378
In my opinion, of course.
20:33
Earlier I posted a popular question about returning database results where the id was in an array. All of the answers are vulnerable to SQL injection, so I wrote this answer to address it:
0
A: PHP/MYSQL using an array in WHERE clause

Levi MorrisonTo check if a variable exists in an array you use the IN () clause. The code below uses prepared statements for MySQLi or PDO so it's easier; error checking is omitted for brevity. $in = join(',', array_fill(0, count($ids), '?')); $select = <<<SQL SELECT * FROM galleries WHERE id I...

@ircmaxell hey, you took me out of the room owners list? =/
@teresko, yeah i have read the article you suggested, and it all makes sense what your saying, except i dont understand what the $name variable is doing when it is passed to create?, in all honestly, im not sure what create is doing at all, could you expand a little maybe?
@rdlowrey I want it to be possible in userland. I didn't say that C shouldn't be used, but it should be at least possible in userland.
@Jack check out the starred and pinned list, we had a large discussion on this
20:34
@teresko and thanks for being patient, i understand your answers take a long time to write, but if you dont ask you dont get right! haha
@Jack I think its good enough for keeping. its well phrased. it might be a noob question. I cant tell though because I dont do android. to me it looks useful. +1
user895378
@bwoebi Oh, well that's up to you ... you'd likely have to integrate libevent and pthreads together in C to make it work. I believe that was the impetus for creating a new SAPI in the first place.
@ircmaxell yeah, i saw the pinned note ... however, due to a different timezone I've missed most of the discussion.
@rdlowrey Why would we need to couple it. Can't we just make it tsrm safe?
just moving away from CGI would do us a world of good, that interface cripples what we can really do and defines to a large extent how php works ..
user895378
@JoeWatkins You mean the CGI spec itself?
@JoeWatkins actually we work anyway with CLI.
@TomBurman when you call $factory->create($name); , it create new instance of class, whith the name , that was in the $name string and passes the connection to it in the constructor. Basically, calling create('Foobar') returns the result of new Foobar($connection)
@JoeWatkins why would you still use CGI instead of FCGI at least?
I wouldn't use any of it ...
20:38
@TomBurman the connection instance gets shared amongst all of the instance that you create using factory
@Gordon Thanks! I've just wired you the dough ;-)
the thing that really costs us, on every single request, php_request_startup and php_request_shutdown, needlessly allocating and destroying several hashtables per extension loaded and other such things done in RINIT/RSHUTDDOWN, not to mention the fact we just closed resources, connections, everything, things that cost us to create and we used for milionths of a second and will need again before another million passes ...
this doesn't make any sense today ...
@TomBurman keep in mind that "lazy factory" is not really a trivial piece of code, since it combines both object-oriented and functional programming paradigms
@teresko, ahhh so if i pass $factory->create('database') i will then be able to use something like $dbh = new database($connection) and then pass $dbh to my model DAL etc...
@teresko, ill have to look up lazy factory to see what you mean
user895378
@JoeWatkins Totally agree. That's why an event driven server with a consistent context can smash the performance of the web SAPI as it exists now.
20:41
@JoeWatkins Is that not a deeply structural issue, though? Is it possible to split some of that off onto some kind of persistent service layer without fundamentally changing the nature of PHP?
@rdlowrey that's why even a "simple" pthreads solution like appserver is faster than web SAPIs
@TomBurman Except... YOU do the $db = new Db(); call one time, then make your factory (new Factory($db);) and hand that Db() instance to it. It hangs on to that instance, and passes it into all the objects it creates.
there's no problem with an application existing in memory between requests, we want that, we could restructure the SAPI to move away completely from CGI and provide much much faster alternatives by default ... warming up will always be expensive, but ideally warmup is
<?php
$app = new Framework\Application();
$app
->route("/something", new Framework\Controller())
->route(...);
/* ... */
$app->dispatch();
?>
by any means necessary, subsequent requests should really be
<?php
$app->dispatch();
?>
@TomBurman put the complete code in a single file and then place echo 1 and echo 2 and echo 3 after each line
that woud let you see how the code gets executed
@ircmaxell in any case, pls consider adding me to cover the asiapac timezone :)
20:44
there's just the inherent problem with apps being designed to adhere to RINIT/RSHUTDOWN model.
@Jack that discussion we had already, too.
of which the outcome was ... ?
that it wouldn't be necessary for any tz...
@Chris you can do one of two things, you can work within the current model, ayres serves to prove this, or you can change the model, if we were working with a new language I would say lets choose a sensible model, but we have to care about the past like no other project does ...
@ircmaxell not sure why DaveRandom is owner, while salathe isn't
so we have to work within the current model, but that is not impossible, there is nothing stopping us implementing complimentary garbage collection threads and other such machinery that would be needed to make it happen ... we can allow the rest of php to think everything is still simple, and then just manipulate it ...
at this very moment, we couldn't have that in particular, but I think an allocator is coming that might allow it ... or we can write our own allocators ...
20:47
@tereško I made an on-the-spot judgement call. I'm 100% open to reversing, and changing. But let's try it out for a bit...?
actually
@tereko ohh ok so i actually pass the $factory variable to the model etc because the $dbh gets passed to the factory then the factory spits out the class intantiation to the $factory variable where the connection is stored, then pass it to any methods i need too, great! thanks for much for you time patience and explanations
this might be another way around the libevent thing ... it's only shared nothing because the manager enforces it ...
if we wrote allocators that use anonymous mapped shared memory, and we implement the safety on function calls, we totally work around shared nothing, it doesn't matter anymore and libevent can do almost what it likes ... I think ...
@tereko and i alsow want to thank you for the great detailed answers you give to questions, you dont know how much it helps out people that are trying to learn compared to jsut being told do it liek this or use a framework
@bwoebi fancy writing a decent allocator to test that kind of theory, seems like your kind of thing ??
20:50
@TomBurman yeah, that's actually how it works. Only in the case, when you use a "lazy factory" which accepts the "connection" as anonymous function, the PDO instance gets crated only when you try to create first instance which will need it. When you define the $provider, the function there doesn't get executed
that lets you postpone the creation .. it tends to get somwhat important, if instead of PDO, you are storing data via SOAP client ... some something like that
it still seems sound a few minutes after it first crossed my mind ...
@JoeWatkins totally. I'd just need more knowledge about efficent memory management.
And btw. how would a new memory allocator help? Reading helps.
@JoeWatkins but then we'd need to make everything shm?
user895378
I find that implementing things you probably aren't qualified to implement also helps as long as you don't have to put them directly into production :)
user895378
That's how I learn everything, anyway.
MAP_SHARED | MAP_ANON
20:52
@teresko, excellent well ill try implementing this tomorrow when i have a bit of time and see how it goes, speak soon
k
and now I need to sleep
To be clear; right now I am repwhoring for the community right now. This answer is sorely needed for a highly popular, canonical question and I need a gold badge:
2
A: PHP/MYSQL using an array in WHERE clause

Levi MorrisonTo check if a variable exists in an array you use the IN () clause. The code below uses prepared statements for MySQLi or PDO to help mitigate SQL injection attacks; error checking is omitted for brevity. Additionally, because it uses bound parameters it is easy to change between strings and in...

@rdlowrey I mean it's the genre of puzzling I like. I really like exploring concepts. (Disliking to code things to just do a with input b)
user924016
Going for the gold =] @Lev
user895378
@LeviMorrison lol "I am repwhoring for the community"
20:54
@rdlowrey I do one of two things when faced with the "write allocator" task, which is not all that uncommon in the world of C ... I do what opcache does, nice and simple, but bit crappy over long periods/lots of operations ... or I do what APC does, really complicated, try to support everything, ignore incompatibilities, have one mode that works and 5 that don't, or might ... so bob is pretty good at complex, and it does have to be complex ... good task for him, we'll get a better allocator :D
I am. It's sorely needed and I need a gold badge.
It's a win-win.
meh
writing answers takes too much effort
user895378
@bwoebi That's good, because those kinds of things make my small brain hurt and I end up taking a nap instead.
@rdlowrey those kinds of things is now referring to what?
@rdlowrey I'm always sleepy.
user895378
20:56
@bwoebi The opposite of protocol things where you take input A and massage it to do B.
@rdlowrey Yeah, they're boring...
@webarto weak mortal
user895378
@bwoebi Those things are less mentally taxing. I can spend as much time as necessary to learn all the minute details of a protocol to shuffle bits and bytes around. Sometimes the hard things ... I don't know if they're within my reach :)
@tereško Sleepy, but not asleep.
.. that's kinda obvious
20:59
Hey..can anyone tell which is better L n T or Cognizant?Im in dilemma...
@rdlowrey man up ... pretty boy !!
user924016
lol
@JoeWatkins I think PHP endeavors to care about the past like no other project does, but I would examine the phrase have to -- you are not compelled. You like to, there is a culture of BC (that a lot of people appreciate, no mistake). Every new release presents a new cost/benefit analysis, eventually, it seems like things would reach the breaking point where it is more worthwhile to advance the language than it is to continue to carry a cloud of BC considerations into every move considered.
@rdlowrey The harder the better (as long as it isn't impossible).

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