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00:01
the executor will construct that array from cached opcodes faster than apc can create it .... additionally, you completely avoid the contention problem, opcache and apcu have separate locks on their shared memory, the contention of the opcache lock is unavoidable, but it's implementation of shared memory much simpler (bit faster) than apc anyway ... in this case, where you are just including a file which contains a large array, my starting place would be not putting anything in apcu ...
this is if you are using opcache and apcu
Well I'll run some tests - do you recommend any standardised load tester?
if you are using apc, then the same still applies, but for slightly different reasons; you don't want to store the same data in memory twice, which is what you are essentially doing by caching codes and data, additionally, the opcode cache and user cache in this scenario use the same shm (with the same lock) ...
and it is likely that your default apc installation does not use read/write locks, so does not allow multiple readers ... that will hold up every single request ...
@JoeWatkins Oh - I wasn't storing them twice. I just removed the classmap file entirely, so that every class gets located once, and then it's location gets stored in APC. I will run some tests, it did seem slightly faster.
but you do store it twice, you cache the opcodes which create the array and you create a copy of that array in apc's shm ...
@JoeWatkins No - I took the composer autoloader code, removed all reference to the classmap and so it's not using that classmap array anymore. So instead of the huge array, it's just storing tiny entries of where the file is for each class that gets autoloaded.
00:09
and like I said, the executor will construct the array faster than apc(u) can copy it from shm, so let the opcode cache take the hit and avoid user cache, test that first and go from there, I'd be quite surprised if you found a way to make it faster by invoking apc(u) ...
more entries is bad however you look at it ...
I really would just let the opcode cache take care of the caching of that data and forget about apc(u) (or any other cache actually) ...
there is a lockless cache for php ...
very clever ... on laurences github
he's very clever ... brilliant, but I'm not sure about the real world ... actually using locks serves the purpose of a user cache quite well ... since you are testing, you might include that in your tests ...
yac it's called ... very clever ...
I usually use that as an insult when I don't want people to know that I hate their code "Well, that sounds very clever".
not a word I throw about, genuinely, very clever ...
he done it in about a day or two, I was watching ...
Done through versioning? Or something else?
00:17
now if you write in mind of the fact that you have no locks, and certain aspects of yacs behaviour might effect you under heavy load and exacerbate the problem of being under heavy load, you would be able to create crazy fast caching php, the numbers it can achieve are truly astonishing ...
btw this may be of interest if you haven't see it already
http://martinfowler.com/articles/lmax.html
http://disruptor.googlecode.com/files/Disruptor-1.0.pdf
http://www.infoq.com/interviews/martin-thompson-Low-Latency
I really, super duper want to see some feedback for yac ... a user cache I am not too certain of the benfits of lockless operations, however, opcache could actually see very good gains ...
@crypticツ The question is really who to poll in that case. I'll consider adding it in, but I think creating breadcrumbs is a better use of that space.
someone linked me to that disruptor pdf earlier today from a pthreads issue ... started reading, still open ...
I used to work with that Martin Thompson guy - he is also a clever bugger.
I'm not saying that in general locking is better than lockless btw, that is obviously not the case, I'm saying that in the case of specifically a user cache, locking seems to make a degree of sense ....
when you think about why you cache anything ...
night @PeeHaa
it's to avoid overhead
the overhead of doing whatever it is that got you the data in the first place ...
data cannot be read before it is fully written, think about the following; an entry expires in the cache (or is not set), someone makes a request for the expired or unset key, nothing is returned, they start doing the work to get data
How can one estimate man-hour spendings if he don't have whole vision of how he can solve this problem. For example lets say you have a task of wrting logging component for some ORM, but you don't have expirience in that, although you know how it should work. How would you estimate time needed for solving this task? How you usualy estimate time for tasks or entire projects?
now multiple contexts might well do the work, there's no avoiding that really, but there is some reducing it, with no write lock, every context that requests a read will end up doing the work and setting the data in the cache ... with a write lock, the amount of contexts doing the work is reduced when the first context begins to write ...
I think waiting on a lock is likely to turn out to be the lesser evil between waiting on a lock and doing the heavy lifting you're trying to avoid ...
@JoeWatkins It sounds better than every context doing the same work, but it sounds like it's trying to force an implementation of a queue of work into something that may not support it naturally.
if you write with that in mind, you might be able to avoid some of that work in userland ... like
<?php
if (($cached = yac_fetch("mykey"))) {
    $cached = do_the_heavy_lifting();

    if (!yac_exists("mykey")) {
        yac_set(
            "mykey", $cached);
    }
}
?>
I dunno what the yac api looks like now but you get the general idea ...
and it's not really a matter of forcing anything this just happens to be the way it works by happy coincidence ...
usually lockless is obviously better, but here waiting for a lock is the lesser evil in my opinion anyway ...
that code was wrong, in an obvious place ... the first line ...
00:42
^^
Right - well I'm installing Siege now to do some tests, so will let you know how they go.
01:04
I hate mediawiki sometimes (just encountered bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=13260, which made my post‐expand include size explode)… but mostly I like it... But this is an example where devs consider it as a minor issue while users have real problems… (the hardest was here to find the bug…) :-(
 
2 hours later…
03:10
@MadaraUchiha Well it kinda makes sense.
 
1 hour later…
04:14
@Gordon I'm still waiting for cyberbrain
 
1 hour later…
05:14
@teresko If you have a moment would you offer criticism on this api?
I'm really not in the mood
seems ok at the first glance
@Orangepill boolean arguments are usually bad design, fyi.
@LeviMorrison yeah , he's right about it
new \Geronimo\UrlFilter\SameDomainRule($url, true) <- what is the true for
@teresko that's cool... don't feel obligated
05:17
also this $sitemap = $report->runReport($results); line seems off
Prefer class constants?
@Orangepill that is not his point
a boolean parameter usually means that there are two different behaviors in the method
Okay I see...
Possibly two separate implementations.
they should be in two different methods .. or maybe even - different classes
That particular one is to allow subdomains to pass the filter.
implementation is likely overly simplistic and error prone but I'm concerned more at this point with the overall architecture.
05:21
@Orangepill A named class constant would be a slight improvement on the boolean, yes.
@LeviMorrison I can see how that would clarify things.
But as tereško mentioned it still possibly belongs as two classes or maybe methods; details on where depend on each situation.
The run report line... what is wrong with that... poor naming choice or fundamentally flawed in concept
$report is a report object and it takes in the crawl results and provides formatted output.... should it be called render or fetchOutput
I'm not sure what tereško was thinking on that particular bit, but I'd restructure a tiny bit such that you bind data to a report and then run.
$report = new \Geronimo\Report\XmlSiteMap();

// could maybe bind in the constructor
$report->bind($crawlResults);
$report->run();
I like that...
05:31
From a quick glance I think the design is decent. I'm sure using it would help flush out other design problems.
Thank you guys for your insight.
Rename Sequencial -> Sequential, just a spelling error.
Thanks.
Code editor doesn't catch those errors :D
@LeviMorrison the part that seems bad to me are methods like run(), work(), do() ... that's the part that feels off to me about your code
those method names gave completely no meaning
Rename run -> generateReport | createReport or similar then.
05:41
especially since I suspect that run() method does something quite specific in that context
@Orangepill ^ more feedback in case you afk'd since you thought we were done
@teresko That makes sense...
@igorw This could maybe use the ... (splat) operator from @NikiC depending on whether the fields are stored in the correct order. That'd be a little syntactic nicety in my opinion, though in this particular case the clarity might be better. Just something I noticed so I thought I'd ping it.
I should probably stop here and get the other members of the project up to speed before there is any more changes to the api.
@teresko @levimorrison Thank you again for your guidance.
@igorw The User class could use JsonSerializable instead of leaving that up to other objects such as here. It's a design decision, but this is precisely why JsonSerializable was created. The project appears to be PHP 5.4 compatible, so no problem there.
Just an idea.
And it's important to note that JsonSerializable just defines what would be serialized, not actually persist it anywhere, so it doesn't violate that particular boundary. It may still do so in spirit, your call.
06:38
Good morning,...
Sem
Sem
@Duikboot Goede morgen
@Gordon Looks like he did it again
06:55
@Touki thanks. destroying
HI !
Rao
Rao
07:12
hey, i have a question(not related to php), can I setup email with gmail for my domain which has no hosting attached to it?
Yep
Rao
Rao
thanks!
mornign
please share some reliable cheap vps
07:24
bah feeling ill today
https://github.com/reactphp/react/wiki/FAQ
"PHP is single threaded. Therefore it is technically impossible to do multithreading in PHP."
:O :O :O :O
@JoeWatkins extensions don't count :P
Also, it's a wiki, go edit it! :P
so before PHP5.5, it was technically impossible to cache opcodes or user variables ?
apc
:D
@Jack extensions don't count ...
07:29
Then, no.
I can't really correct it, they have started the page with "Because PHP is single threaded ..."
How would sleep() not block the process? Even with pthreads.
guys is vpscheap.net good vps host?
@Jack really you shouldn't use sleep, it is intended to sleep a process, usleep is intended to sleep a thread ... but as is always the case, what sleep does was down to the implementor on the day of imlpementation, that's how posix works ... so on my distribution I am able to sleep threads using normal sleep ...
<?php
class T extends Thread {
        public function run() {
                sleep(5);
        }
}
$t = new T();
$t->start();
while ($t->isRunning())
        echo ".";
$t->join();
?>
07:36
how is ipage.com web host? m planning to get one, please let me knw
@Leri Wow, connect to a database to load the database credentials; how innovative.
you shouldn't really use sleep in multithreaded programming at all, it does not leave threads in a receptive state, you should use wait() on the thread you wish to sleep, such that anyone else can notify() and wake it up at any time ...
lol'd
Are there API's to track phone-call's ? ( non-mboile phones)
07:43
ask snowden ...
There will be 4 phones with a RJ11 connector I think, is there a way I can track how long a user is calling etc? There are some rumors about starting a 'small' callcenter for campagin informatin and 4 phone's should be used but there is need for a web-application/application to track how long a call was and who made the call..
Mornings
moin
oh that's igorw's project ...
@JoeWatkins what is Igorw's project?
that's a bit disappointing, he's known about pthreads for a while, and has probably heard me complain about the billion websites perpetuating the myth that php cannot multi-thread ...
reactphp
07:48
@Duikboot What PABX is being used? Telephony is decidedly my area
@JoeWatkins And they are not quite wrong with that. At this moment php does not support multi-threading without extension.
nonsense, since may 2000, php4, PHP HAS been able to multi-thread ...
You won't be able to do it if you just have 4 lines connected directly to the PSTN, I don't know of any service provider in the world that provides live data like that. But with a VoIP provider or a PABX, chances are it's just a question of writing a bit of API consuming middleware
oh ok, thanks for the infomation @DaveRandom I was thinking about my self what software helpdesks are using for doing that?
without extension doesn't mean anything by the way ... everything is an extension, APC included, and nobody would have ever said that php cannot cache opcodes or user variables ...
07:52
@Duikboot Most PBX systems have custom call logging software, and it's usually a premium add-on. Many of them also provide 3rd party APIs, but it's 100% down to the system in use, there is certainly no standard mechanism for making that kind of data available.
Some of them are a lot easier to use than others as well.
I seems like you know something about it :-) for me it's totally new. Do you have suggestions for software?
We should track : the person who called, duration, ... not that much information just standard.
@JoeWatkins I have not said, they are right but on the other hand they are not wrong as well. without extension means with everything what comes with default binaries from official source. In most web-hosts you can't go multi-threaded.
@Duikboot I can't help you at all without knowing what the telephony set up is - if they are using a PBX, what PBX they are using, if not using a PBX what provider they are using with services over what infrastructure (PSTN, ISDN, VoIP). It's totally dependent on that. Once you know that, the software choice becomes a lot easier
you know xampp has been using multit-hreaded php for years, most apache windows installs do ... it's the default deploy on windows systems to use threads because windows doesn't like huge amounts of processes ... they are wrong, php has been able to execute the interpreter multi-threaded for years and years and years ...
and it does so, without any extensions ...
I can certainly help you if you can find that out, since I was a PBX engineer for 8 years, the last 4 of which I spent writing 2 call logging platforms as a side project
07:58
Good question currently there are already about ... 10 phones here but I don't know what type ( PSTN,ISDN,VoIP,...)
@Duikboot If they're plugged into RJ11s they're either POTS or digi, how many buttons have you got on the phone?
In fact, can you see a make/model on the handset?
I guess, you slightly misunderstood what I am saying. I meant you can't create thread and start some function execution inside without creating new process by default, can you? I assume they mean the same.
to assert that PHP is single threaded, and that multi-threading is technically impossible is wrong ... end of ...
Monrinrring
08:03
moin @PeeHaa
@Duikboot Looking around on the internet, it looks like you probably have one of these systems, you'll need to find out which one
Probably a 500 series but there does seem to be a certain amount of interconnect crossover between exchanges and handsets
centerain amount of interconnect crossover?
Either way, it doesn't look like they provide a documented 3rd party API, you'd have to either buy their software (support.en.belgacom.be/euf/assets/images/telephony/manuals/…) or reverse engineer it to extract the live feed
@Duikboot i.e. you can use some of the handsets with more than one system
oh ok
but I think there will be new phones maybe for that part of the company
4 new phones on a maybe seperated line
but we need a tool to manage it all
@Duikboot You probably want something out of the box, rolling your own is a time consuming and (to be brutally honest) pretty boring job
It looks like that system you already have supports quite a bit of segregation though (like virtual independent systems, sort of the telephony equivalent of a VPS platform) so you might be able to expand what you already have, which would almost definitely work out as the cheapest option by quite a large margin
My first step would be contact the current system supplier/maintainer, tell them what you want to do and ask them what they can offer.
I can recommend a couple of decent products but they will not be cheap
08:19
As of PHP 5.6 Foo::bar() calls that assume a $this that's not "instanceof Foo" are deprecated.
What would you recommend/?
Morning
@NikiC Could you give an example of that?
@Jack yes
class A {
    function test() { var_dump($this instanceof A); }
}
class C {
    function test() { A::test(); }
}
$c = new C;
$c->test();
@DaveRandom Thanks a lot by the way for the great explaation made some notes to keep in mind.
08:24
will dump false. And now throw a deprecation warning ;)
@NikiC I guess, class C should be extending class A, am I missing something?
@Jack I meant just A::test()
That makes more sense.
I'm glad to say that this will not affect my code :)
Oh, never mind. Can't delete anymore. :(
@Jack An interesting bit of information: When the RFC for this was accepted some guy started a lengthy thread (30 mails) complaining how this would break all his code and that this usage was totally normal :)
08:30
are there pro's contra's using pbx , isdnm or VoIP?
@Duikboot Based on what you've said, my preferred system would be a Splicecom Maximiser 5108. I don't know if they have any dealers in mainland Europe though.
@NikiC =O ... btw, the deprecation notice is because the call crosses the current class hierarchy boundary right?
@Jack because it assumes an incompatible $this
@Duikboot A PBX acts as an abstraction, a good one will allow you to use PSTN, ISDN and VoIP all on the same system. A workstation shouldn't be tied to a specific breakout route (unless you configure it to be)
@Jack But yes, that's it. You get a $this that's totally outside the class hierarchy - and that's stupid
08:32
But my preferred breakout mechanism for business telephony (in the UK, at least) would be ISDN, all things considered
@NikiC Somehow I've missed that thread ... was it recent?
@Jack no
But VoIP is rapidly catching up there, even 2 years ago it was a lot more unreliable than it is now. And VoIP has a lot of very attractive features. But if you want five-nines reliability (which almost all business applications do) then ISDN is currently the winner (in the UK, it may be better in your area, I don't know)
this was originally a 5.5 proposal ;)
@NikiC Ah, was it Alan Knowles?
That's from a thread early this year, Jan 29th :)
08:37
@NikiC That is completely ridiculous. Personally I'd like to see static calls blow up if they try and use $this at all, although that then becomes confusing with function foo() { parent::foo(); }
@DaveRandom You'd like to see that because you do not understand what :: means
@DaveRandom It's not a static call :)
Reminder: :: has nothing to do with static calls, it has to do with scope resolution
<class-name>:: has to do with static calls, though, afaik.
08:39
Just when I thought I knew what :: did :(
@NikiC Right, fine, but how is you code sample not a static call? You may not have declared test() static, but when you leave the current inheritance hierarchy like that, that's a static call. You can't just steal instance methods from another branch, that's ridiculous
@DaveRandom that's why that is being deprecated ^^
In general :: just does an explicitly-scoped call. That does often coincide with a static method call, but not always and I think it's better not to think of it this way
For the record, I do understand that :: does not instantly make something static (case in point being parent::foo()) but maybe it needs disambiguating
E.g. $this->foo() and static::foo() are (afaik) exactly the same in a context that has $this ;)
@NikiC Yeh I was trying to find a case where it wasn't the other day when you asked the question and I failed. I thought I could catch it out with a closure but those darn pesky internals guys were one step ahead of me the whole time.
08:54
It seems they want to start here with 2 phone's for the 'call-center'
but they want to expand it
soon
So I have to keep in mind what to buy so it can be extended easily.
@Duikboot If it were me and money were no object, I would buy a Splicecom Max 5100 or an Avaya IPOffice based system, rip out what you are currently running on and run the whole office on a unified system. They can both be configured in such a way that they can behave as multiple independent systems, are almost infinitely expandable (the max supports 256 extensions per call server, across up to 512 call servers, I forget what the IPO max capacity is but it's comparable).
Neither of them are cheap but at the end of the day, you get what you pay for
Both of them have really nice CTI platforms, loads of 3rd party APIs, a wide range of call centre software choices, and both are extremely reliable, in a way that a lot of those small new-kids-on-the-block just aren't
Avaya in particular have a world-class support infrastructure as well
@Mr.Alien How much is different 4 hours from the default of 30 minutes? If you build unsecure systems, even 1 minute is too long. — Marek 7 mins ago
I think they won't replace the current phones.
but buying them as new phones is not an option?
And if you only take one thing away from this: NEVER buy Cisco telephony products. They work brilliantly if you can find someone who understands how to set the system up, which you can't, because they are insane. Like, literally, make no sense whatsoever. I've met qualified Cisco engineers, really intelligent guys who work on massive data-centre infrastructures, who freely admit that the telephony solutions make no sense at all
@Duikboot It is, but it will give you much less choice in the long term. People have a tendency to think about what the want now and buy a thing that does that. But actually what you want is a thing that does what you want it to now, and also does what you are going to want it to 3 years later.
Like I said before: you get what you pay for. If you cut corners, it will come back and bite you later, it's just a question of when.
@DaveRandom In fact, intelligence may actually be in the way :)
09:07
@Jack The one thing you can say for Cisco is that their SIP implementation is fantastic. It's just a shame that SIP is fundamentally flawed in many ways.
That's why I recommend Avaya and Splicecom, they are both H.323 internally and it all works brilliantly and interconnects brilliantly.
Oh, and neither support G.729, which is a big plus in my view. There are loads of people who think it's the best thing since sliced bread, but it really isn't. Not for fixed telephony.
What's so bad about g.729?
It's sacrificing quality for bandwidth and encode/decode complexity, in a way that's totally unnecessary in the modern world
It would make sense for mobile though, yeah?
It's power hungry and the overall call quality it terrible, because it's much more difficult to implement error correction, as a result of which there are two competing error correction overlays which aren't compatible with each other, and you have to support both
I've read about the annex a, which actually makes it worse though less power hungry.
09:13
@Jack It has done for many years and continues to do so. But that's why your mobile phone call quality is terrible even when you're standing next to a tower
And why, ridiculously, Skype on your mobile offers better call quality than just making a call
Sounds legit :)
Although to be fair the new 4G network in the UK favours G.711
Which is basically PCM wav, and doesn't alias nearly as badly
How the hell do you guys know all this :D
1 hour ago, by DaveRandom
I can certainly help you if you can find that out, since I was a PBX engineer for 8 years, the last 4 of which I spent writing 2 call logging platforms as a side project
I don't always make phone calls with my mobile phone, but when I do I prefer to use an RJ11 plug :)
09:16
Oh didn't saw that sentence cool you quitted doing that?
@Jack Yeh all our DSL in this country is annex A, because our copper network is mostly a bunch of very low-grade copper and some alu :-(
@Duikboot Wikipedia :)
The vast majority was layed down in the '80s, when for a brief period the copper in a 1 pence coin was worth more than 1 pence
Yet another thing that's all Thatcher's fault
haha
What's the safe/correct way to exec a cli command from your browser?
09:18
That's what we like to tell ourselves, it's not really true at all, that particular issue was mostly cause by opposition lobbying, as I understand it
@DaveRandom Btw, is it the properties of a copper cable that makes ADSL possible?
@Fabien What you mean exec() ? In which case do you mean escapeshellarg()? Although most of the time the correct answer is "don't"
Aye. :(
I've got to get a screenshot of an URL requested through browser. I have PhantomJS to do the screenshot.
@Jack Not really, any transmission media will do, you can actually make a telephone line run on two pieces of wet string, I used to work with a guy who used to do it when he was teaching training courses. But DSL is much more SNR-sensitive, so really it's about SNR degradation, and in practice that means copper is your best option, since gold cable would be prohibitively expensive
But DSL is actually a very simple concept: you just trim the top/bottom frequency bands of the voice signal (the bits of signal that are inaudible on a telephone handset anyway, and human speech doesn't really emit them), and put data down there.
While currently I am using escapeshellarg() and exec() it's not actually doing anything. I know the command is right. I think maybe permission issue. I installed phantomjs to my home directory and I am using a full path to it. Probably my issue :(
09:23
Yeah, they typically give you a splitter that makes sure the telephone line stays outside of the DSL frequencies :)
@DaveRandom Hmm, so the difference with the old modems is that the former actually used the speech frequencies? :)
Hi everyone
@Jack You should use one even if you don't use the voice component of the line, the NTE and network have a lot of interference shielding built in, but CPE generally does not. Even that 0.5 metre cable connecting your modem to the line can pick up enough interference to drop the line speed by a couple of Mb/s, using a decent filter can almost completely negate that effect
<?php
$str = '1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14';
$str2 = (explode(",",$str));
echo '<table border="1">';
foreach ($str2 as $str3)
{
echo '<tr>';

for($i=0;$i<5;$i++)
{
echo '
<td>'.$str3[$i].'</td>
';
}
echo '</tr>';
}
echo '</table>';
?>
hello check this code...
@DaveRandom Yeah, the filter that my provider gave me is 10cm from plug :)
@Jack Yeh old school modems use the full band of the line, and actually mostly used the the speech frequencies because they tended to be cleaner from background interference (certainly at the higher end of the spectrum). But these days the just use end-to-end mag filters between the exchange and your house and it's not a problem
09:27
@vinaysingh ctrl + k for code-block
@vinaysingh remove [$i]
I want this output
@Fabien with which?
@vinaysingh E_INT_NOT_IN_LINE
@DaveRandom Of course, this all matters no more, because we have fiber cable now ;-)
09:29
Maybe as well as unsigned int, we now have unlined int
@Jimbo what is this?
@vinaysingh Error thrown for your diagram
@Jimbo i could not get it
@Jimbo This is just for understanding..
@Jack You and your posh city-states with your good infrastructure /shakes fist
@Fabien 2>&1 can often provide useful info there, with exec you can't see STDERR unless you dump it somewhere
@DaveRandom :) For the money I paid to drive my car I could afford driving a Jaguar in your country
09:33
@DaveRandom Ah cool cheers.
@Fabien i checked with removing [$i] but not getting expected result
@Jack As long as you live outside London. London hates the motorist.
@Fabien you can see this after removing the [$i]
@vinaysingh perhaps this will be easier phpjabbers.com/php-snippet/draw-table-with-php.php
@Fabien actually this is the solution of what i need in my db related website.
09:37
@DaveRandom Here, motorists hate Singapore :) on the whole it's nicer to drive in Malaysia :)
Better road manners too.
@Fabien coincidentally, may be related to your problem (although if you've confirmed the command is correct then maybe not):
From the manual page for escapeshellarg() (emphasis mine): escapeshellarg() adds single quotes around a string and quotes/escapes any existing single quotes allowing you to pass a string directly to a shell function and having it be treated as a single safe argument. — DaveRandom 47 secs ago
I want extract records in a table with 5 cells and then some rows as i given in table image
^^ but might just need a tidy up, it is RTFM but it's also a gotcha so...
@Jack Couldnt afford to run a Jaguar in the UK. :P
I used foreach loop because that variable contains many id in one field.
09:40
@Jack Yeh but that may just be the city effect. Everyone hates everybody in cities, as far as I can tell.
@SweetieBelle Hi
@Jack Running anything bigger than a 1.6 in the UK is fiscal suicide. :D
@DaveRandom Command is correct yeah. nothing in the output of the exec() too.
Or Europe as a whole, for that matter.
I know it's possible, certainly from github.com/microweber/screen but my phantomjs isn't installed in the same place.
09:42
@Fabien It's worth inspecting stderr, the shell may tell you something, it's also worth having a go with proc_open() because that gives you much more granular control and therefore better error detection granularity. But it is waaay more complicated to use.
@Fabien codez?
$location = 'files/screenshots/alerts/' . $id . '-screenshot.jpg';
$cmd = escapeshellcmd('/home/ec2-user/phantomjs/bin/phantomjs ' . SITE_ROOT . 'static/js/phantom/rasterize.coffee ' . $url . ' ' . SITE_ROOT . $location);
exec($cmd);
id is passed from browser to a get an url from db.
@DaveRandom You may be right :)
@SweetieBelle With all the rules in place here you wouldn't be able to afford even a 1.3l Mitsubishi ;-)
@Jack I wouldnt choose to drive if I lived in a city state. The public transport is usually epic.
Yeah, I passed my driving test 7 years ago. I haven't driven since.
Is anyone able to help/explain a small thing to me? I have currently the following code running, http://pastie.org/private/np4utudk66mznydx7dta It's working perfect but I receive the comments ' everytime we click the button the page snaps again to the top' is there a way to approve someone in the list without having that problem?

I know that is possible with AJAX but i really have no clue how to do that.
09:52
Always lived in the city.
@Fabien I dont drive, have had a license 6 years.
I know I have to add this in my index.php : pastie.org/private/1734cbd8vb7tm4oow6wyw But now Im stuck.
If you've ever lived in Italy you'll know why I dont drive.
@SweetieBelle It's nice to have the extra income each month. Though presently with an aircast on my leg it's a little annoying.
09:54
You don't drive in Italy, it's one big banger rally.
@Fabien Where I live buses/metro are cheaper than driving.
@SweetieBelle It's epic alright, my friend happily reported this morning that he had to let 7 trains pass before he could board :)
That is the javascript part but I don't know there what call to make to the php side.
Can anyone answer my question
@Fabien Though metro is a bit dodgy.
@vinaysingh From topic: Don't ask whether someone is here to help you. If someone is around and wants to help they will.
@vinaysingh Link your question on the main site, people are more likely to help if they get rep out of it. :P
09:55
@SweetieBelle In Italy the term "two-way" road is not compatible with most other countries ;-)
@SweetieBelle ok. I know it.
But this is not a big problem.
good mornings
@Jack The concept of 'space' is not taken seriously either. You get a car 8 inches in front and one 8 inches behind.
@Jack For a country that makes such great cars, the driving is terrible.
As of PHP 5.6 Foo::bar() calls that assume a $this that's not "instanceof Foo" are deprecated.

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