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16:00
@MattMcDonald too bad v4 is out of support :-P
user1385191
they've been on a downward spiral since 4
I don't know, I haven't used it since like 3.5
(since Chrome became reasonably stable)
@ircmaxell I posted a comment on your last blog post
I didn't get the birthday part
hi
does anyone among you has knowledge about PHP internals? I am working on a side project, it's quite interesting, but it feels like advancing very slowly.
@Artefacto Do you understand the birthday paradox?
16:08
Or maybe you don't know PHP internals, but you have robust knowledge of C and you want to learn?
@ircmaxell Yes
but I don't see how it applies
I assume the scenario is you're in possession of the database contents are now trying to access one account
Correct
I have to run out to grab lunch. I'll be back in a little while..
i.e. the problem is finding one password that, with the same salt that is in the db, generates the same hash
hey guys
darn me, I have millions (obvious overrating here mates) of projects to finish in a week.
16:12
@ircmaxell yeah, I meant php/core
I'm having a bit of a dilemma, and I don't think it fits a QA website, but more of a discussion
maybe you'll be able to help me
go for it
What would you say is the best way to handle errors?
as in typical fatal, syntax and etc errors?
I've seen many, throwing exceptions, return false; trigger_error(); but what do you think is best?
16:14
show them and log them
show them how?
simply echo them out?
i don't personally bother to do anything about them either, php by default already is useful by showing them
@ircmaxell there's not much to elaborate, constant 1s waiting time for both successful and failure attempts, synchronization on given user could help with this too
no, not echo, they echo by themselves
I mean errors that might happen in my code
16:15
you don't have to do anything, if you configuration is right it will manage on it's own when you hit a error
and then sow you
invalid query data, invalid custom function activity, nothing PHP will throw an error for
@ircmaxell I'd consider that as good enough anti-brute-force :)
mysql_query() or die(mysql_error());
a lot if elses also is useful at some point
BAH
mysql_
MY EYES!!!!
16:16
well this is php and majority of us php coders use mysql
/me dies
well SURE
but why not use mysqli, or better yet PDO?
habbit i guess, i've been stuck with mysql for years and i don't really feel a need for a change
anyone know how to make a validation rule in cakephp that would allow either 3 characters or 0 characters and nothing in between?
posted on August 02, 2011 by Bradley Holt

I’ve found CouchDB to be a great fit for domain-driven design (DDD). Specifically, CouchDB fits very well with the building block patterns and practices found within DDD. Two of these building blocks include Entities and Value Objects. Entities are objects defined by a thread of continuity and identity. A Value Object “is an object that describes some characteristic or attribute but carries no

is there a regex for it?
16:20
@Code
@CodeInACan make the effort, you'll like PDO
I'll check it out
user1385191
PDO kept me up far too late last night
noone?...
Sorry Neal, i prefer codeigniter to cake and as such choice i have no idea what-so-ever about cake.
@Neal preg regex?
user1385191
16:24
that's a pretty vague regex
@Neal preg_match("#.{3}|#", $val); //if character means anything
@KamilTomšík ?
im using cake vaildation
but you probably want #\w{3}|#
either 0 char or 3 char
user1385191
...and you can't check against the string length?
16:26
@MattMcDonald im using cake!
...
im using the model to validate
@Neal there should be some regex validator
@KamilTomšík there is
@CodeInACan you shouldnt be using mysql* anymore. Use mysqli. That's also explicitly noted in the PHP Manual and efforts are underway to deprecate mysql* completely in favor of mysqli.
ive used it
@KamilTomšík #\w{3}|# should do what I want?
Gorgon, i think I am using mysqli
i'll check my server settings
16:28
if you dont use mysqli_* in your function calls, you are not ;)
@Artefacto Which isn't terribly difficult actually
user1385191
here's the regex in js: /^(.{3})?$/
@KamilTomšík you're talking sleep(1)?
@KamilTomšík i just tested that here: quanetic.com/Regex it doesnt work
@MattMcDonald im going to try that
@MattMcDonald awesome, it seems to work ^_^
user1385191
whoops, it will run for any multiple of 3
16:29
@MattMcDonald !
ahhh. how do u fix that?
user1385191
take off the asterisk
@ircmaxell yes, something like that (but that could cause DoS in php IIRC)
@MattMcDonald thanky ^_^
@Neal #^(.{3}|)*$# will do what you want (matches 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, etc)
@KamilTomšík correct
@ircmaxell i only want 0 and 3
16:30
@Neal Then remove the *
@ircmaxell @MattMcDonald's soln works fine
user1385191
:)
but I'd suggest something like in_array(strlen($foo), array(0, 3))
@KamilTomšík and it doesn't actually increase the difficulty, so anyone who gets your password from a db leak will be able to remove the delay and hash just as fast, so not secure
user1385191
having a truthful result from a match on a blank string seems stupid
@ircmaxell cant do that in cake...
user1385191
16:31
so I'd agree on string length
@Neal Then Cake is retarted (well, that much is known already)
@MattMcDonald they can enter in a system id but it can be null, so if it is not null it has to be 3 characters
@ircmaxell no its not ^_^ i just started using it and it is pretty awesome ^_^
ahhh back
@Neal I stand behind my original statement
so, do anyone remember my question? :P
16:32
@ircmaxell :-P
what is the best way of handling custom errors (by custom I mean like your function has an error, but not something PHP will generate an error for).
@RikudoSennin I would use Exceptions. PHP's error system is horridly broken and inadequate for most needs
@ircmaxell I've tried it once, it's nice and all, but you need to try; catch; a million times :X
for every possible function
not really fun if you ask me :X
@RikudoSennin No you don't. Only for errors which you can handle
16:36
and for errors I can't?
let the exception bubble up
that's the purpose of exceptions
why not use, for instance, trigger_error();?
because you can't properly handle an error set by trigger_error()
what do you mean by an error set?
PHP's error system is not designed for handling errors. It's only designed for reporting them (and logging them). That makes it very difficult to handle errors programatically (especially expected errors)
16:40
I see
I see
Anyone with a robust knowledge of C here who would like to get involved in creating a very interesting php extension? The project is already started, but it feels like it advances very slowly
> Don't ask whether someone is here or can help. Just ask us. If anybody can and wants to help, they will. But no one can know before you actually ask your question.
@ircmaxell uhm, that was the question :)
then it's not a real question...
16:45
@ircmaxell to my understanding, it is. It has a question mark and it is semantically speaking a question, so ...
darn
@ircmaxell is right, but @Flavius also didn't really do much harm so guys, remember that we are a rare branch of people, with higher knowledge compared to regular civilians, keep it together and keep us together.
@CodeInACan I didn't tell him to get out or anything. Just trying to point out that if he would explain what he needs help with rather than just asking for help, he'd likely get more response
@CodeInACan it is not a technical question, but it IS a question
I'm not saying anyone did anything, I would just love to feel a lil bit more chillaxingly friendlier moodflow here
a lot of times it sounds here like corporate talking to a corporate
@CodeInACan Have you ever been on IRC?
16:48
@ircmaxell I don't follow on this one - db leak can be addressed by app salt, or so
yea, I have, point being?
@KamilTomšík The point is, if an attacker gets your salt and the stored password (they do every day), you want some reasonable protection against brute forcing.
otherwise why not just store the plaintext password?
@ircmaxell my point is - when you have hashing algo+hashes, you can't prevent brute-forcing, right?
@KamilTomšík You can't prevent it. But you can make it so slow it's not worth it
how?
ooooh
I see
16:52
@KamilTomšík stretching it. Or using a memory-hard function like bcrypt or scrypt
You can't prevent anyone from breaking into your system. But you can make it difficult enough where most people won't bother. But if someone wants to get in bad enough, there is always a way...
you mean time-consuming algo
yeah, you're right about that one
@KamilTomšík correct. One that's computationally difficult. So a single run isn't bad (perhaps 0.1 seconds per hash). But brute forcing becomes silly because it takes too long...
but I don't know, stretching is okay, but I don't like too much wasting cpu resources for such things. sleep(1|2) seems like reasonable trade-off
@ircmaxell I'm with you on this one, but not at all :) 0.25, or so that could be okay, rest should be sleep
@KamilTomšík sleep is actually worse since it opens DOS opportunities, since the PHP process is locked (and the apache thread too if using mod_php) for the entire time. Sure it's nice on the CPU, but it's hard on processes
Plus an attacker can just remove the sleep() call from the algorithm and speed it up significantly since sleep just adds a delay, it's not adding anything computational to the product
@ircmaxell right, so something like that :)
or non-apache solution
@ircmaxell stop it :) I see your point, and I agree, but it's madness :-P
16:56
the best way is to tax the CPU
@ircmaxell there's one flaw with this
when attacker knows complete algo, he can run it using cloud
or even using botnet, this is not solution (from my point of view)
@KamilTomšík which is why it's important to make it computationally hard
@ircmaxell it's not
@ircmaxell botnet can easily count thousands of machines
@KamilTomšík Clouds are expensive, GPUs are cheap. I can do with one $500 GPU what it would take you literally tens of thousands of machines
And if I want to invest a few thousand dollars, I can make an ASIC which can do it even better...
fair, so do you suggest hashing on gpu? in such way it would take at least 1s?
16:59
but if I use PBKDF2 with an iteration count of 1 million, it'll take about 0.25 seconds on a normal CPU. But if run parallelized to brute force, even with a 100GPU cluster it would still take hundreds of years to brute force the entire 8 character spectrum
whereas if I did a simple salted hash, I could brute force the entire 8 character spectrum on a single GPU in about 2 days
@ircmaxell The point is that for an alphanumeric 8-length password on average you'll need about 62^8/2, not the birthday number
@Artefacto give me a second to think on that...
@ircmaxell yes... but don't forget on this fact:
1. your application will live at least 2 years
2. gpu power will increase
3. opencoin gpu "clouds"

so - 2 years later, your hash could take much less time, but you can't rehash it (not at once), from this point of view, it seems to me like semi-solution
I hope you see my point :) cause I'm really bad at expressing
increased cpu/gpu power is the reason why I see this as bad thing (and why sleep should be there anyway)
@KamilTomšík Which is why the ideal solution would involve a memory-hard algorithm like scrypt which avoids that issue. And you can encode the iteration count in the hash itself, so you can "raise" the default over time and have the application update the hashes either on re-login or on change...
@KamilTomšík sleep has no purpose here. It adds absolutely nothing
@ircmaxell yes, but you can't do that in batch (more hashing strategies, screwed architecture)
17:06
@KamilTomšík Actually, that's how linux stores user passwords. So I beg to differ
@ircmaxell if you would depend only on cpu-intensive hashing, your 0.2s would become 0.05 after few years, with sleep, it would be still at least 0.5 (for example)
assuming the hashing function is injective when the domain is the 8-length passwords + hash (it most likely is), the probability of getting it right with n tries is 1 - the probability of failing every time, which is (1-1/y)*(1-1/(y-1))*...*(1-1/(y-1)), with y=number of passwords
@Kamil: sleep adds no cryptographic strength. So it is not effective at all
@ircmaxell we were not talking about cryptography (when discussion started), but rather about brute-forcing
but brute forcing is nothing more than applied crypto-analysis
17:08
well, gtg, I believe we agree, just not entirely... so let's leave this for later
1.09e14 for 50% chance
@ircmaxell if you don't have algo, you can't brute-force without waiting for "sleep"
if you do have algo, brute-forcing is only matter of time (and money)
@KamilTomšík Security Through Obscurity. Which can never work
@KamilTomšík If one thing has been proven over the past decade, it's that a vetted and secure public algorithm is FAR better than a private custom and unvetted algorithm...
@ircmaxell security is relative, what has been secure before 10 years, doesn't have to be now
@ircmaxell omg, once again - I'd vote for pkdbf + sleep, you'd vote only for pkdbf, that's it
@KamilTomšík AES has been around for 13 years, and is still as secure as when it was introduced
@KamilTomšík If you want added delay, add the time you would have spent sleeping to added iterations.
17:13
@ircmaxell okay, whatever :)
gtg, sorry
@Artefacto I think you're right. The birthday attack is still applicable, just not in the context I used it
I'll recompute the numbers and update the post
posted on August 02, 2011 by Pádraic Brady

Image via Wikipedia Some time ago, in between working on Zend Framework, I booted up a couple of libraries that I really wanted to integrate into my workflow. Recently, I’ve been being putting these through the grindmill so they can be properly released and supported for public consumption across PEAR. Just as Mockery fell out of older work on PHPMock, Mutagenesis will fall ou

17:27
@Artefacto Edited in
At least the numbers are still pretty shocking (17 hours to brute force a reduced 8 character password)
all right. I can now congratulate you on your post
off to home
Thank you very much, keep the feedback coming!
if only I could get my blog into PlanetPHP. But I emailed the maintainers like 3 weeks ago and nothing
18:04
anyone know how i can list all the files with extensions .jsp in a folder, like search a root folder with subdirectories for .jsp....Its very frustrating as I am worknig with struts for the first time and I cant find the jsp file the config xml lists
*nix or windows?
windows
I'm so sorry...
Usage hints are in the comments.
Would type but I have a squirming, whining infant on my lap.
@ircmaxell omg when did they add that
18:10
@Charles thats cute is he learning to program :P
huh, 5.3
yeah, 5.3
it's not recursive, but it's powerful
teach him some php or ruby for his first language :P
or her
heh. we'll see. his older brother looks like he's gonna be a gearhead. cars and computers run in the family
Hello everyone, ive got a question would doesn't merit a proper SO post yet so though id see if you could give me some pointers
18:22
Anyone with a robust knowledge of C here who would like to get involved in creating a very interesting php extension? The project is already started, but it feels like it advances very slowly
Simply, I was wondering what would be involved in showing a 'live' number of results from my database AS a user makes selections in my form. I assume its an Ajax thing (which i've never touched)
All i'd want to show is the number of results as selections are made
@Dan correct
@Dan then just SELECT COUNT(*)
@Dan
@Flavius hi and thanks, is it complicated and is it worth it vs the expected performance issues
ie slowing down the page etc
@Dan no it's not worth it, you have generated the UI on the server, rely on that being valid and do the counting on the client. Still check for valid data on the server only upon form submission
@Dan so your question has little to do with programming, it's about user interaction, accessibility, usability
@Flavius that's what i thought to be honest. Seems like a nice touch but not really adding anything
@Flavius yes i suppose so, sorry about that :)
18:27
well it has to do with programming, but in javascript :)
@Flavius I already thinks theres too much javascript on the web
so, to my question ... noone?
@Dan the trend is clear, js becomes more and more important, and browsers make it worth: we have JIT compilation to binary code, etc
@Flavius I don't know C well enough to be considered "robust"
@Charles are you fluent enough so you can learn about PHP internals from the source code and while debugging with gdb, on the go?
18:31
@Flavius Yes, no and no, in order. What are you building?
@Flavius: just a suggestion, actually post what you're trying to do, preferably with a link to the project...
im soooooo frustrated......cant find or edit the html from a struts....any ideas? cant evne find the jsp file that it sources from
@ircmaxell I don't want to push it out to the wide public yet, it's still a prototype. I only need interested people. Thanks for the suggestion though
@Flavius How can we be interested if we don't know what it is?
@JeffHodge wrong room :)
18:33
so you want help, although you can't tell us what it is you want help with...
@ircmaxell you put it wrong, I don't want help for myself, it's open-source. But it would be cool if some more would join in :)
If it's OS, post a link to the project
well, now that's interesting.
Interesting.
im stuck on this since friday.....I downloaded service desk plus which is a network monitoring tool. Once tool is downloaded it runs local host on my pc...Its setup files contains a bunch of xml and .jar zips I found....I tried finding the html to edit it so i can add an additional option to the menu navigation. So my whole purpose is to add an additional menu option to the navigation bar so I can attach my php scritps to that option
@JeffHodge wrong room :)
@JeffHodge anyway fgrep -rn should help
18:37
@JeffHodge try grep
the entire software is written in struts
but due to struts not being so common no one can really tell me much
@JeffHodge you've got the solution already
are you talknig about maxell?
his solution?
it's the same solution as mine, basically
someone told me that the struts-config has a jsp attached to it which holds the hmtl
but problem is I can not find any jsp files in that folder at all
ill try fgrep -rn and grep
18:41
god and I've promised myself I'll ignore trolls from now on
im using windows
@JeffHodge then complain about windows not having the right tools to make you a productive programmer
install cygwin
i have it
18:49
what are you grepping for?
a file with extension .jsp
@Charles so? you in?
@JeffHodge unzip the .jar
flavius there are about 150 .jar files in various folders
then you're using the wrong command
if you're looking for a jsp file, find . -name '*.jsp' should do you (IIRC)
@JeffHodge whiners guide to hacking web apps' UI: 1. install the app so you can use it, via localhost 2. point with firebug at the element you want to change 3. grep for a distinctive thing around the area where you want to make the change, like a 'class' or an 'id' attribute
piece of cake
18:56
++
screw this im sick of it....its so much faster just to decompile the program
19:17
after going throguh the .jars all I could find were .class javafiles
19:28
Decompiling is illegal. -
oh
r u sure?
the famous word for it is reverse engineering
hi people
@Dino hi dinosaur
quick question does anyone know how to setup a cron, in centos
lol
lol (?) this is not a server chat room
19:35
@JeffHodge Yes, if its not your code. Yup Reverse Engineering is illegal. Its like breaking into a house and taking something. But. . . I do it all the time :D
hahaha
ok thought it crosses into the realms of php as its a php script that I want to run weekly
i am an idiot beyond recognition
for so long i have coded and coded without even knowing that mysql_ is basically deprecated
@CodeInACan it is?
as i found out today, it will be in future release (es)
mysqli is the future now
19:39
@CodeInACan .... but thats what i use
:-(
indeed
@Dino same way as in any other NIX distro
im so frustrated now
Why was it deprecated?
@CodeInACan where did u hear this?
19:40
here in the chat it was mentioned and then i continued reading
in one of the future releases the good ol' mysql_connect will be deprecated and mysqli_connect will take over
as an alternative, which by the way is even better, i think, haven't concentrated much yet
@Mobinga, horrible security issues and much, much better alternatives in PDO and mysqli
i think the biggest hurdle toward deprecating ext/mysql is all the tutorials and schooling that are using it for beginners. then the beginner never learns anything different and continues to use ext/mysql thinking everything is fine because that's what they were taught
The roadmap to ext/mysql deprecation: marc.info/?l=php-internals&m=131031747409271&w=2
> What this means to ext/mysql:

- Softly deprecate ext/mysql with education (docs) starting today
- Not adding E_DEPRECATED errors in 5.4, but revisit for 5.5/6.0
- Add pdo_mysql examples within the ext/mysql docs that mimic the current
examples, but occasionally introduce features like prepared statements
- Focus energy on cleaning up the pdo_mysql and mysqli documentation
- Create a general "The MySQL situation" document that explains the situation
@Gordon i bet u code for hours, how do u do it without ur backside hurting like hell
@JeffHodge who said it doesnt hurt like hell ;)
19:55
oh
mine is so bad right now knee hurts so do the heels....ive never had this
but actually, i was away for sports inbetween. i just keep the computer running and idle in here withouth being there
anyway.. afk again :)
20:37
@rockerest , that method is called "dependency injection" , and is much much much better then using global variables within the classes
emm ... for others : this is what i am referring to
1
Q: Create database model classes dynamically

rockerestI am trying to improve the method that I am using to to database transactions in a light framework I've built. Information to understand the question: Here's a class I've written (where connect.php loads up database credentials; a wrapper for the PHP PDO, stored in $db; and Base.php): <...

21:08
Hey how do i add on to this regex to allow for .? REGEX: |^[0-9a-zA-Z_-]*$|
@ircmaxell but where?
i tryed after the dash but it ddnt work
this is the code:
 preg_match('|^[0-9a-zA-Z_-]*$|', $value);
user1385191
lol
user1385191
you're matching a word character
@MattMcDonald ?
user1385191
21:12
except with a hyphen added on I think
preg_match('|^[0-9a-zA-Z_.-]*$|', $value);
but also, don't use | or any other regex special character as a delimiter.
2
@ircmaxell one min. testing
you'll regret it in the end
k
@ircmaxell i ddnt create this. its from a cakephp plugin
ok cool, it works
user1385191
/^[\w-]$/ :)
21:13
I will refrain from commenting
@ircmaxell thank you ^_^
only because you know why
user1385191
uh, I see an unescaped period
@MattMcDonald wazzat?
@MattMcDonald it doesn't need to be escaped inside of a character class
21:14
@ircmaxell bc u dont like mvc? bc u dont like cake?...?
user1385191
oh ok
@Neal Cake is not MVC
@ircmaxell yes it is
user1385191
thats why im trying it
bc it is mvc
21:14
No it's not. It may look like it from a distance. It may call itself MVC. But it's definitely not MVC
and i had never used mvc's before
@ircmaxell why is it not an mvc?
@Neal Because it got the principle backwards. An ORM is not a model. A model may use an ORM, but the model is more than that
it's OVC (ORM View Controller)
@ircmaxell ??
what do u mean?
21:16
I don't have time to explain it
@ircmaxell can u let me know when u do?
(have time)
google. There's plenty of information out there on why cake is not a good example of MVC
not to mention has some significant design issues
hmmm google results are confusing
user1385191
I can tell this will go nowhere
Personal preference is personal.
21:19
@imoda To some extent, yes. But what I've said goes deeper than personal preference
user1385191
I'd say it's teetering towards comprehension
@Neal You want to try real MVC (or as close of an implementation in PHP as I've seen), try symfony2...
14
Q: symfony vs cakephp

What is conceptually the difference between symfony and cakephp?

@ircmaxell also what about codeignitor?
eih, I was never a fan of CI, but I have nothing really against it
@ircmaxell but u do against cake. in ter est ing
21:23
It's not just about the framework, @Neal, it's about how poorly MVC maps to web applications and how ORM != the Model.
The current (but soon to be former) release of Cake is designed for PHP 4 and thus uses PHP4isms all over the damned place.
Never been a fan of pre-built frameworks.
They have their place. I like bits and pieces of Zend Framework.
@Charles Zend is a library, no matter what they call themselves
I can't see how one project can ever require something as complicated as something like Cake... one of the more "simple" prewritten frameworks.
21:25
@ircmaxell This is true.
@Charles like what?
@Neal Their mangling of ActiveRecord into PHP4 thinking is a great horrible example.
@Charles But I wouldn't want to load up a whole framework for one or two uses
@imoda Yeah, which is why the well-designed ones are loosely coupled. IIRC, Symfony 2 was going that route. Haven't had the bandwidth to check it out yet.
suggestion for topic: discussion for all things PHP and the eternal fight against stupidity and ignorance
21:29
@teresko aka, life
@Charles especially since ActiveRecord itself is horrible
@teresko ORM is horrible. Most of the time.
21:42
:-P

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