whats the reason behind the function anyway? Back in the days socket_open and such things were forbidden on free webspaces but with containerrization going on sandboxing is getting less and less a problem.
and there were workarounds for a lot of "disabled" functions
Not the first time in recent history. A few months ago someone published an NGINX/PHP-FPM exploit as soon as a patch was made, even though there wasn't a release. The exploit ended up being used to attack thousands of sites
Any suggestions as to why any PHP process is claiming 200+mb of virtual memory? Kubernetes in particular is reports the virtual memory rather than the in-use.
@NikiC Thats valid but i think its mainly used for security its even the first sentence in the docs: This directive allows you to disable certain functions for security reasons.
@MarkR Also, consider that once the process allocates memory it doesn't release it back to the system until the RSHUTDOWN stage. So the heap grows up, never down.
If I did something to cause it yes, but because I disabled the memory limits it wont count them in the horizontal pod autoscaler, which isn't ideal, but it's fine when everything is CPU bound
I'm wanting to read the last <?> items off the end of an array but only after a certain key, I've used a couple of while loops, one to traverse backwards until I find the key, and one to traverse forward from that point to get the elements, but seems a bit convoluted.
I could do as Sherif suggests and shift onto the list from the front, but I'd need to change my data structures to store the key along with the data, and the same for the results.
It's used to unset the value in the array when it is superseded by a new value which would get pushed onto the front. It means the overwrite mechanism would have to search for it in userland to remove it, i'd need to profile it but that might be a worthwhile tradeoff. The alternative would be a second array which maps what would have been the key value, onto the actual key value.
But could be that it just makes sense to eat the few hundred userland calls on write rather than read.