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1:56 AM
My memory is fuzzy on this point. I need to do more digging. I think there are undesirable effects of always returning by reference just because something might need a reference, but I can't remember exactly what they are.
 
7 hours later…
9:02 AM
Any clue if I should send a report through github security advisory page or directly on mail [email protected]? I sent it on Github's few days ago and I don't know whether it was received.
9:23 AM
@JSowa GA Advisory is fine (and probably preferred). We received it.
@LeviMorrison If you have a way of figuring out what the exact reasons were (i.e. if you remember in what context this was discussed), that would be great.
@IluTov thanks for confirmation
 
6 hours later…
3:27 PM
@IluTov I need to clone and play around to check my logic, but I won't get to this soon so I'm just communicating a scenario instead. You have an object $a which has a getter that returns a reference, which you haven't used yet. Clone $a to $b and then modify $b property, and it won't affect $a's. But if you call $a's &get property, whether you needed the reference or not, and then clone to $b and modify $b, I'm pretty sure it will affect $a, right?
4:15 PM
@LeviMorrison Indeed, but this is the default behavior for clone, even for non-hooked properties, and is not resolved by separating &get from get (at least I don't see how). Instead, __clone would be responsible for separating the reference whatever property stores.
It fixes it because if fetch is separate from get, you only get this behavior if you actually need the references. Well, avoids it is a better word.
4:58 PM
@LeviMorrison Even if the property is technically a reference, it gets auto-unwrapped when cloned if RC=1. It's only when the reference is still referenced somewhere else (i.e. it has RC>1) that it survives the clone. 3v4l.org/tcoRG So, I believe this is a non-issue, but I'll add a test to make sure.

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