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17:01
@bwoebi Right, it would be if we standardized another interface such as FileLoopDriver.
Otherwise I don't see a good way of being interoperable.
@bwoebi The constructor helps avoid duplicating the spl_object_hash() call and timeout checks, etc.
possibly that's the way…
@bwoebi Somewhere in that thread I had a SignalLoopDriver example. Similar to that.
@Trowski I think you are probably right
I just cannot feel comfortable with supports()
@bwoebi Same. I strongly dislike supports()
@Trowski timeout checks? there's only one place?
oh ok
repeat and delay
17:07
Plus all other loop implementations wouldn't have to duplicate that logic.
I think I must be probably microoptimizing … :-D
But I feel like the loop indeed should be microoptimized…
@Trowski btw. we should only use one class, because polymorphic cache slots
(instead of different ones for each watcher type)
@bwoebi That's something I'm not familiar with.
@bwoebi Did you suggest supports?
@Trowski PHP internally stores caches property offsets on a per-class basis
@Trowski It's not solved by checking instanceof that's still the issue.
17:12
@kelunik No, I never liked it.
@Trowski I pinged @bwoebi.
@kelunik So you did... maybe I need more coffee :-D
@kelunik never said I'd like it nor suggested it
@bwoebi Hmm... I'll have to think about how to handle that.
@bwoebi Basic suggestion is from you, not in that form:
> a) I assume signal handlers will just throw an exception if you try to register one via onSignal() while unsupported? … Do we want to expose a way to actually access that information on whether it is supported without trying and catching?
17:18
@bwoebi Why would they all have to be the same? Once the engine has a Timer object, it would have the cached offsets, correct?
@kelunik right, not in that form. Also, not specifying what type of exception … might be as well an Error of not existing method
Multiple classes just means more sets of offsets to cache, but does that matter? Especially in any perceivable way?
@Trowski cache the objects within timer, but not for the other objects
@Trowski it can only cache one offset for one class
i.e. enable/disable need to frequently re-cache
@bwoebi So looking up $timer->id is more expensive?
@bwoebi Because I'm doing instanceof checks?
@Trowski It doesn't do instanceof checks but directly compare the class pointers
so, Timer extends Watcher are still different classes here, even if both are instanceof Watcher
$id
$callback
$data
$stream
$interval
$periodic
a single class with all these properties
That should be fastest
user2044560
17:29
This sounds like micro-optimization.
19 mins ago, by bwoebi
But I feel like the loop indeed should be microoptimized…
@bwoebi In which form then?
@kelunik nothing concrete at that point… Was really waiting for suggestions there
@coderstephen Which is sometimes required for the really hot code paths.
user2044560
@bwoebi If micro-optimization requires degrading an API, I always opt for the latter.
17:31
@bwoebi at that point, but what would be your suggestion now if you dislike supports?
@coderstephen Can we close your PR and issue?
user2044560
@kelunik I always value a good API over small optimization.
@kelunik I think @Trowski is right with his API
user2044560
@kelunik I believe so, if there's no way to solve the problem addressed with multiprocessing.
@coderstephen Depends, if it's really small, then yes. In case of Awaitables, no.
@coderstephen the API isn't degraded here. It's really just about the internal code inside the Driver
17:33
@coderstephen I don't see one, because it's always in the backtrace.
user2044560
@kelunik I was hoping to be able to discard old loops, but in that case there's no hope.
user2044560
@kelunik I should really get around to testing it with pthreads, since that's the thing that is most picky.
@coderstephen dunno, as long as you set the factory anew in each thread, it should not be a problem
@bwoebi Why do you need a new factory?
@kelunik to reset the main instance (the sync code…) if you use Loop::execute() directly, no problem
17:38
@bwoebi Setting a new factory will not replace the driver, just if there's none.
@bwoebi Otherwise it might have unintended side-effects.
It's really just for the one default loop instance for wait.
@kelunik side-effects? uhm … I think I disagree
well, at least as long as I'm not already running a driver
@Trowski If you want to join amphp, you should know that we don't follow PSR-2 completely. Opening curly braces must always be in the current line, not a new one.
@bwoebi Right, but we can't detect that currently.
it's as much work as setting a variable in execute()
17:43
@Trowski Why do you use SplQueue for $deferQueue?
@kelunik hmm, I didn't look at the implementation itself yet
Method calls should be a lot more expensive than a simple array append.
user2044560
@kelunik Uh oh, that could be killer :D
@kelunik It's not the append, it's the shift.
@Trowski Which shift?
17:46
@coderstephen good joke :-P
@kelunik Shifting it out of the array when it's executed.
@Trowski you don't shift, you just iterate over current queue and reset the queue to an empty array
@Trowski You just do $old = $this->deferQueue; $this->deferQueue = []; foreach ($old as $oldCb) { … }
@bwoebi I ran into problems with memory filling because of that.
@Trowski uuuuhm?
17:47
The issue was sort of artificial though... I wonder how much it would happen in real-world code.
@kelunik you need to reset it before
@bwoebi Yes, I know, typo.
user2044560
Hey, the SPL structures aren't that bad; some of them actually do have memory / performance benefits.
@coderstephen PriorityQueue might be worth, but that one surely isn't.
@coderstephen That's true … but in this case it doesn't
17:49
@Trowski I don't see how that could be an issue.
@bwoebi This was the issue: github.com/icicleio/icicle/issues/14
Before that issue defer (queue) watchers were exactly like you said I should implement them.
That issue is fairly artificial. I'd probably be safe with just going back to an array queue.
@bwoebi I really think this is a microoptimization. Amp doesn't do this now.
@Trowski I know, it uses slow dynamic properties … was to lazy to do it :-(
@Trowski Just that you used array_slice instead of resetting the array.
Right, the array_slice() is probably quite bad
@kelunik There was a cap for the number of functions that could be executed per tick.
17:56
@Trowski also, your semantics were a bit different
In Amp, if you do immediately(), you're deferred to the next tick in any case
For amp I'll just reset the array.
user2044560
If we merge this into PHP, we can just use better structures: github.com/php-ds/extension :wink:
in Icicle, you seem to want to execute as many immediately's as you have, even the new ones
The cap was pretty useless. I was emulating node there for no real reason.
yep
And that's your issue too
17:58
@bwoebi ?
@Trowski I mean, the issue is really the slicing, using an array per se is not a problem here
@Trowski Any new scheduled immediately will directly be executed.
In the same while loop.
@bwoebi Ah, ok. I'll update that repo later and ping you.
@kelunik Right, the cap was per tick, but more could be added during the tick.
right. And Amp isn't doing that (allowing more to be added per tick)
@DaveRandom Consider enabling 2FA @ Github.
@Trowski What's your primary goal inside amphp for now? Asking, because of the teams I should add you to.
18:03
@kelunik he has admin rights for now.
It's fine.
@bwoebi I just removed that. :P
Why?
He doesn't need full admin / billing access. We have proper teams setup for that.
staabm and Dave also have no admin access.
I absolutely don't care…
@kelunik I planned on adding some repos for the new standard based libs, like loop and awaitable.
18:06
I care. I trust @Trowski. But least privilege is always a good principle.
i can chat now ) lol
Added a core team, so it's pingable. Also all members can now create new repositories.
I'd prefer admin just so I don't have to bug someone to do something simple. I don't plan on abusing the power.
(That's why a prefer admin too, …………)
@Trowski You should have access to everything you need now.
user2044560
18:12
@kelunik "With great power comes great responsibility."
@coderstephen Definitely.
Wes
Wes
E_TOO_MUCH_ASYNC_LATELY :B
user2044560
@bwoebi So what's the situation with Aerys? I don't know if @Trowski already mentioned this earlier, but I am working on a web framework on top of Icicle. If a merger is going to happen, I'll need to use Amp instead. I don't want to conflict with Aerys though.
@Wes Oh, how's the logo going?
user2044560
@Wes Error: "E_TOO_MUCH_ASYNC_LATELY" undefined
18:15
@coderstephen What exactly do you understand under web framework?
the same than Aerys?
Wes
Wes
@kelunik haven't worked on it since sunday. postponed to next weekend
@coderstephen Aerys has a sane API, you don't need a framework.
Wes
Wes
how's the poll going, though?
user2044560
@bwoebi Well... I'm aiming for something that's similar to a traditional web app microframework.
Which version of the trunk do you prefer as a logo for @asyncphp? http://i.imgur.com/xCuIT8o.png
46 / 54
18:16
Anyway, brb, dinner
Wes
Wes
audience is not very convinced
@coderstephen So, basically, the Aerys API already covers it :-D
^ yup :D
user2044560
@bwoebi Well I'm not sure if my intended API is different enough to warrant a different framework to stand on its own.
@coderstephen Do you have anything I could look at?
user2044560
18:18
@kelunik Not much, most of my code is still private. Here's what I had a few months ago: github.com/coderstephen/muninn
user2044560
@kelunik Aerys seems more "low-level" than what I'm aiming for, if that helps.
@coderstephen Looking at the readme, yes, it's exactly Aerys.
@coderstephen Aerys is ... low-level? The only thing that's low-level is Middleware, which is the actual output middleware.
user2044560
@kelunik What seems odd to me is the amount of HTTP stuff in it. It would make more sense to have that as a separate package.
user2044560
Same with Artax.
Have what as a separate package?
user2044560
18:22
@kelunik HTTP protocol parsing
Wes
Wes
@kelunik needs more RT's for the last days
@coderstephen Uh-oh, do you know Munin?
@Wes Post on reddit? :P
@m6w6 That's what I also thought first. ^^
@coderstephen Why should that be separated?
user2044560
@m6w6 Nope. Now I do, just looked it up :P
Wes
Wes
@kelunik it's your logo :B
user2044560
18:24
@kelunik To avoid duplicated code across Aerys, Artax, and anything else in the future that needs async HTTP.
^ I have wondered this myself. It seems like a lot of code is being duplicated across those packages.
Wes
Wes
i mean, if it's ok for you to show it to a large audience even if it's not finished, then go ahead @kelunik
@coderstephen Oh, yes. We can factor that out. But I thought we were talking about the API?
user2044560
@kelunik @Trowski seems up for it, but I'm not sure I'm comfortable with Amp over Icicle. With something as key as lowish-level async libraries, extensibility and organization is very important.
@Trowski Not really. Just Artax and Aerys. And Aerys has just the newer code and Artax didn't receive any updates for a long time.
user2044560
18:27
@kelunik Mm, yes back to that. I just prefer a different middleware architecture is all.
What should be different?
user2044560
@kelunik I'm mostly talking about my own problems/unwillingness to use something else.
But apart from return it seems to be exactly the same.
@kelunik It might make sense to factor out some shared code so both packages could benefit.
user2044560
@kelunik I'd rather see immutable requests/responses passed along a layered chain, to allow for filtering the response.
18:30
@Trowski Yes, I already agreed.
@coderstephen You can filter the response using Middleware.
@coderstephen How does that work with streaming?
user2044560
Hmm, maybe I don't understand this then:

```
public function do(InternalRequest $ireq);
```

Does `InternalRequest` contain a response?
No, you get the response through a generator´
user2044560
@kelunik Perhaps you could point to an example?
Wes
Wes
TIL do() can be used as method name
@kelunik Sorry, not keep up well with chat.
I should be doing job-related work :-P
18:33
function do (InternalRequest $ireq) {
    $headers = yield;
    // modify $headers ...
    $yield = $headers;
    while ($yield = yield $yield) {
        // modify body chunk in $yield
    }
}
@kelunik Please format your code - hit Ctrl+K before sending and have a look at the FAQ.
@Wes php 7
user2044560
@kelunik Interesting
Wes
Wes
indeed
@coderstephen You can always return if you no longer want to filter anything.
user895378
18:37
There's a lot about artax that needs to be changed. It was the first async thing I worked on. It's been years ....
user895378
But there are fundamental differences in the performance characteristics required between artax and aerys
user895378
request/response Immutability is great and would be really awesome in something like artax
user895378
But that same immutability would murder performance in a server environment like aerys
user895378
It's not feasible at all for systems programming
18:38
@rdlowrey It'd murder perf too if you do webscraping with artax
user895378
Sure, but a client is just a different environment than what you need from a server in most cases.
What if the messages provided to handlers were immutable, but mutable for the server itself?
user2044560
@bwoebi I guess I mixed up Middleware with handlers?
@bwoebi Do we prime middlewares before request handlers are invoked?
@kelunik yes
18:39
So I can modify the request with them?
user895378
@kelunik yes
@Trowski Request is immutable, it doesn't have setters.
@coderstephen Probably yes… amphp.org/docs/aerys/http/intro.html … just have a quick look at the first chapter of the tutorial
@coderstephen Yes, what you want are handlers, that's really the same thing as muninn.
@kelunik that's part of the point
18:41
Only used them for output so far.
user2044560
@rdlowrey In my tests, I can still get around 4000+ req/sec even with replacing lots of immutable responses with lots of middleware
@coderstephen How about 100k/s? Are we talking about a hello world handler?
Which server?
user2044560
@kelunik Icicle's HTTP
@coderstephen refactoring out isn't that easy as it's somewhat bound to the Aerys needs too, i.e. body size limiting, keepAlive, checks whether to stop, which will be slightly different on clients
@coderstephen I was talking about the hardware. ^^
user2044560
18:43
@kelunik My local laptop
user2044560
@kelunik Not the best hardware in the world
@coderstephen Local laptop from 3 years ago here is able to handle 40k req/s (actually more)
@kelunik You cannot do 100k/s with Aerys... it's more like 10k (per worker). I was able to do 8k on similar hardware with Icicle's HTTP.
@coderstephen Lots of middleware or a hello world app?
@Trowski Talking about @LeviMorrison's server. ^^
@kelunik Then I can believe that :-)
user2044560
18:44
@kelunik Lots of middleware. Including one that used blocking file I/O for "caching" (I have an SSD)
@coderstephen your kernel is caching a lot too…
@coderstephen That doesn't really matter if you're benching a single page, as kernel is caching.
user2044560
@kelunik Specifically cache + session storage + routing + logger. The logger is a bit slow though
routing is about 5% perf impact
\\ afk
19:16
@MattPrelude I have this nagging suspicion, that 290x is not compatible with AMDGPU drivers.
@bwoebi and DB is 85%
@tereško not quite
Db was like ~60% (of total runtime)
@tereško For the server it really doesn't matter how long the database takes as long as everything is async.
@kelunik database processing is very expensive though, regardless of waiting times
Good night, guys o/
@Trowski @bwoebi Would you be fine merging the current Awaitable spec and opening issues for all issues? Makes it ordered and we have a good overview then.
19:33
@kelunik I'd just wish to have a meta-document or at least the rationale separated out into a separate section at the bottom
After that, I'm fine with individual issues
Once we have merged it, you can add that as PR.
@kelunik Nah, I don't really want to have it merged that way
@kelunik But I may do a PR to your current PR if you wish?
@bwoebi Why then not just merge it and do the PR then?
@bwoebi Fine if you want ....
@bwoebi any update on github.com/php/php-src/pull/1849 ?
@kelunik Go ahead. Merge #5 too.
19:41
@Andrea Was there anything missing before I can merge
@bwoebi I don't think so…
@kelunik well, okay, just go ahead then
aside from NEWS and UPGRADING
@Andrea Okay, I'll do later that day then
@bwoebi okay :)
19:42
@bwoebi tests :P
@NikiC which ones?
assign by ref is covered by list() tests
@bwoebi the failure conditions
to which it's anyway equivalent in AST terms there
everything that is going to show up as red lines on gcov
@NikiC mh k
19:47
oh right, gcov exists
gcov's test failures screen makes us look bad
We should be really careful: 3v4l.org/brmcI vs. 3v4l.org/vZM0p @bwoebi @Trowski
certain kinds of tests always seem to fail on gcov but not on Travis
@bwoebi That's what I also meant with MUST NOT change.
@kelunik That's stupid PHP semantics
Nevertheless, we should consider that.
19:50
That's why we need to enforce by-ref passing on caller and callee side in PHP…
@kelunik urgh
@NikiC yup.
@bwoebi yup.
@kelunik I think that falls into the category of "you are stupid; won't fix"
Which is the same response you give if your software does not work with mbstring function overloads
@NikiC I think I agree… but we nevertheless shall fix it some day in php-src…
Or if someone enables a german locale for float printing
19:52
@NikiC I think it's an easy fix that ensures it won't break.
Or any number of other stupid things programmers might do
@NikiC yup.
@kelunik an extra assign upon each when call, yay!
the when() method is so hot, every assign there is affecting performance in promille range
it being called hundreds of thousands of times per second…
(And PHP in total only executing a 5-15 million ops per second…)
Yay: We don't have that issue. 3v4l.org/QnJ50
Only HHVM, but who cares about HHVM.
anyone using php-amqplib with RabbitMQ?
what happens If I don't close connections?
20:15
@kelunik Eww... I'm working on an awaitable implementation. I'll make sure to avoid that.
Wes
Wes
!!eval if(PHP_VERSION === '7.0.6') echo random_int(0, 1) ? "Go to bed" : "Have a coffee";
Wes
Wes
don't tell me what to do jeeves i'll have a coffee instead
@Trowski You don't have to:
21 mins ago, by kelunik
Yay: We don't have that issue. https://3v4l.org/QnJ50
@Wes lol
20:17
@Wes lol
Ekn
Ekn
:p
Wes
Wes
and there we go again in australia timezone, but from europe
i so want to create Testicle. i'm the perfect man for that job
@Wes You're the perfect man for the logo :P
is php similar to node.js?
as in the way they work
ThW
ThW
@Wes Look up the original name of the Karma test runner :-)
Wes
Wes
20:25
@ThW hahaha
ThW
ThW
@NathanMarotta typically no, but it can be used that way.
@bwoebi @Trowski Do you think it's worth having a coroutine that uses watch for progress updates of the coroutine?
@ThW lol
@kelunik you mean a coroutine which consumes watch()? I.e. uses send() with the watch() result?
That would basically then usable then as PromiseStream.
Just a random thought …
Originally had this idea for debugging purposes.
@Trowski Please ping we once you have a new coroutine implementation ready.
Wes
Wes
i give up with naming. seriously, there's no hope
> which had been implemented in many PHP Promise libraries at the time of writing this specification
writing of this specification
Wes
Wes
i'm gonna call my classes Bob1 Bob2 Bob3 Bob4 from now on
> Additionally Coroutines do not
Additionally, coroutines do not
20:43
@kelunik yeah, it's just a draft, not yet checked for grammar or typos… I rather wanted to know whether it's fine in general, but thanks
@kelunik Are you sure on that one? I think yours is actually wrong
@bwoebi TBH, I'd just leave the whole off. Just at the time of writing
> Awaitable creation and managing is out of scope of the specification
@kelunik Ok. I'd like to show you and @bwoebi what I have in mind before you get too far ahead of me.
I'd use this specification
@Trowski yeah
@kelunik I think Observables might be able to replace watch(). Let me put together some code before we discuss that.
20:47
@Trowski I think so too.
It can just be useful for things like Artax. Because usually you don't want to observe it, you just want the response. But sometimes you want a progress bar or log redirects.
@Trowski yep, Observables are equivalent to Amps Promises
user895378
@coderstephen yes but that's not what I would call "high performance" ... aerys does 50,000 responses per second on my work laptop with a million other applications running. I've seen it do as much as 90,000 on regular consumer-grade hardware ....
I wish we could have nice backtraces for async.
ThW
ThW
hehe
user895378
In a server I think it's important to start from a point of "performance is the highest priority" and then make it possible for people to layer on abstractions to simplify after that.
21:00
@kelunik we'd need native await for that…
Even then it's impossible. I think.
Because you want the actual cause.
@bwoebi Could you rename it to META.md?
@kelunik well, native await can retain Generator trees. If it happens somewhere inside an onReadable handler, yeah, then it's going much harder
Will have a look tomorrow.
@bwoebi Yes, and that's almost always the case.
21:10
@kelunik done
Keeping track of generators is something we could already do (except yield from, but it works if you use resolve always)
21:50
I need some help.
Please send help.
And this changed in PHP 5.5: 3v4l.org/jHHLP

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