@JoeWatkins Would it ever not resolve the path but still return SUCCESS?
I'm looking at other places that have code like this, and the checks are less robust. I don't know if those other places are wrong, or if this is overly cautious.
But I don't know streams well, so it's hard to understand.
@LeviMorrison for the file wrapper, probably not, but the stream wrapper system is used, and some other wrapper may not set an opened path (it may not be applicable to the wrapper)
the dtor function actually closes the file (because it wasn't added to includes), the destroy function doesn't, just nullifies because the mapped stream etc may still be in use
@Levi ping me later on if you're still wanting input ... I guess your'e asleep now ...
so ... I'm not sure what to do about pthreads, I announced at the beginning of the year I would halt development of it, and basically two contributors don't want to let it go ...
(on behalf of a quite large userbase, apparently in the thousands)
there's a long list of reasons it should die, and I think I've given them all during different exchanges with these particular contributors ... it doesn't seem to matter ...
parallel, which I'm actively developing, but because they are different concurrency models, people can't see their way to a migration path and I don't have time to educate them, or write the code for them ... writing some sort of shim makes no sense either ...
they see the model parallel has as a limitation, and it isn't, and it's so obvious to me that it's not a limitation that I can't find the words to explain the important differences, so I wrote a really quite nice example ages ago and distributed it, and I know they read it, but they still talk about sharing objects as necessary ...
technically it's incompatible with the JIT and will always be incompatible with the JIT, it makes no sense whatever to write parallalized code that can be executed faster in one thread than in however many you wish to create, and that's the future it's looking at ...
even if I ignore that, and somehow magically fix it (I can't see a way to do that), pthreads damages the cause of parallelism in the core ... it's taken god knows how many years to get other core devs to seriously consider adding any parallel user api, and that api is the one parallel has ... while pthreads exists it's harmful, whether it works properly or not ...
also, the quality of the code has dropped considerably, it's not easy to write a thing like pthreads and since I let go of the reigns some years ago, some really questionable code has been added, but I allowed it because it was added by these contributors that are basically representative of the only user base, so if they wanna fix something and it works for them, why not ... nobody else was really using it ...
what I want is to archive the repo and mark the extension unmaintained, and halt it's development, but they seem pretty keen for that not to happen ... so even if I do archive the thing and mark it unmaintained they'll just fork it and it will continue to exist ... a pile of shit by any other name will smell just as crappy, and does exactly the same damage ...
also, they had 8 months notice ...
I can't think of a thing I can't write or rewrite in 8 months ...
I understand, walked through parallel in manual, not all understand yet but was wondering if parallel uses event loop this is another implementation of event loop and PHP does have few implementations of event loop. The question is why PHP can't have just one event loop impl?
the user base probably would switch as soon as PHP would bring something built in I think
are there any chances for that, or it is just not gonna happen soon?
I've used loop only once, for a rmq consumer which handles max 5 messages (simultaniously) by querying massive resultset from mysql writing huge CSV file and updating job progress in redis. I had to create another Dockerfile to add needed extensions so it may work
and to do that I had to make a research on ready to pick up solutions and install pecl extensions cause there is nothing built in PHP which could handle that kind of task out of the box
@JoeWatkins You can't prevent people from continue using code you once released and since there's no fixing it, it'll die eventually. Until then some people are apparently happy to continue using it as-is. Just archive your repo and forget about it :)
@Sjon can confirm that, 2yrs ago I made a troll package to find Visual Debt in PHP Code was inspired by some Larevil guy's screencast on Laracast and I just found out there were some installs of it even this year, probably most of them were courius abouthow it work otherwise I have no idea why they've installed it packagist.org/packages/phpvisualdebt/phpvisualdebt/stats
I don't wanna compare my project to pthreads only saying that something what is broken sometimes just doesn't deserve to be maintaned anymore
@JoeWatkins, I don't quite understand the problem. :) AIUI, it doesn't even build with PHP 7.4 now, and it can't possibly work with JIT. If that is so, it certainly will fade out eventually, and if someone wants to put effort into it in the meantime – that's their decision.
If you want to push parallel forward, why don't you suggest to bundle it with PHP 8?
btw, it seems that 7.4 on Windows never uses SHM, but always falls back to file cache (or no caching at all). Likely the same on master. I'm debugging.
@NikiC ok i think i fixed everything on the dom arginfo now, i didn't compile that branch with --enable-debug so didn't see the zpp / arginfo missmatch errors. sorry again for the sloppy work :) its green now (azure failed for unrelated resaon - disconnect to Mac build machine): github.com/php/php-src/pull/4721
COMP11449:morrisonlevi levi.morrison$ git branch
* PHP-7.3
PHP-7.4
master
COMP11449:morrisonlevi levi.morrison$ git pull --rebase upstream HEAD
From git.php.net/repository/php-src
* branch HEAD -> FETCH_HEAD
Current branch PHP-7.3 is up to date.
COMP11449:morrisonlevi levi.morrison$ git checkout PHP-7.4
Switched to branch 'PHP-7.4'
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/PHP-7.4'.
COMP11449:morrisonlevi levi.morrison$ git pull --rebase upstream HEAD
From git.php.net/repository/php-src
> JIT will able to eliminate type checks only if it exactly knows the called function at caller site. Unfortunately, this is quite rare case, because the functions may be declared in different files, OOP, type variance, etc.
^^ That's AOT, not JIT............... o_O
> In my experience, static optimizations are not able to eliminate most type checks in PHP
Which is why it's a JIT compiler, not an AOT compiler...
@ircmaxell Not entirely. Just because it was known at call time doesn't mean it could be known entirely through static analysis. But yes, I get the idea :)
Do we store a fully qualified method name somewhere all the time? I'm noticing that I spend a fair bit of time in my tracer just making {$class}::{$method} strings.