« first day (1154 days earlier)      last day (4021 days later) » 

00:00
Open Source is really amazing...
When I work for companies, I'm always afraid something is not getting approved, you have to write docs before you code anything and shit...
Sick of hearing "not a priority".
especially when the priorities seem so strange
Exactly
That really kills creativity if you make piece with it.
there is talk of starting real discussion around php6 ... I really do hope people can just chill with the bc thing ...
You mean be open to BC breaks or what?
yeah
there's no way of moving forward, I don't mean in leaps and bounds I mean at all, unless we can break some stuff ...
I'd like to see references removed, but that's a pretty radical change.
I honestly think PHP would be better for it though.
For starters, make everything consistent.
But a lot smarter people will discuss that :)
I'm just afraid because everyone is smart it will lead nowhere.
well consistent with what ... I guess you're talking about the stuff everyone normally talks about, parameter order, string functions ...
Right, right. And cleanup e.g. DateTime and stuff like that.
say we fixed it, tomorrow .... we'd break the expectations of everyone using php today, they expect it to be the way it is now, in a way, being consistent would be keeping it the same ...
00:07
Can't word it properly.
@JoeWatkins Deep.
Meanwhile...
DateTime is not good, there doesn't half seem to be a lot of very trivial bugs lurking in there ...
> WordPress 3.8 has just been released! Make sure you've updated all your sites!
@JoeWatkins so happy you'll be on Credits page! :)
Life achievement: Unlocked.
@JoeWatkins I don't care too much about parameter order being wonky; I would like to see better API standardization as part of removing references.
It would require it anyway.
Just look at RFC's on right. That would make PHP twice as better :)
I think before anything can actually happen, it needs to be decided what php6 will actually be, what paradigms it will attempt to support, it's no good continuing with our heads buried in the sand that we can be all things to all men in all possible ways, nothing can ... say if we said, right we're not just going to have and object model, but we are going to support it the best we can, favour it even, then the problem with inconsistent api's goes away, we do break expectations
we remove completely the old string api and do something sensible like nikis scalar methods patch
00:11
I'm actually against the named parameter RFC; don't tell @NikiC.
Oops :)
that's perfectly reasonable thing to do, methods on non-objects is what allows java to say everything is an object ...
it solves a problem I have never had ...
however I can't say that I wouldn't use it ... since it's something you can only use during solving problems if it is available ...
I love arg unpacking/forwarding though.
@LeviMorrison Whaaaaat.
I'm sure you have a reason, tho.
I don't even think it can be finished nicely unless the engine throws exceptions ...
I'm also against automatic property initialization, but only because I'd like to revisit object boilerplate as a whole and not tackle just initialization.
00:13
you mean setters/getters ?
I will be hiding under a table when that is brought up for discussion ...
The reasons for all of my changes are based on the basic idea: what actually hinders me when writing PHP code?
References and arrays are by far the #1 hindrance.
Can you explain issue with references?
I think setters/getters are always going to be a problem
00:15
If arrays didn't have 'value' semantics I would almost never use references.
yeah show us some code to explain what you mean ?
References are a maintenance and optimization problem.
I like references, I like anything that allows me to be precise ...
I don't know, whenever I used them I like to think there was no other way.
well I'm not sure what you mean, because you could be talking about two things, it seems like you might be talking about both ...
I cannot imagine a version of zend that doesn't copy on write and refcount and still behave in a similar way to zend now ...
but I can imagine that you could infer whether a reference (as in &) is really required at call time ...
well an object implementing array access can act as if by-ref array
00:21
I'd love to talk about it more but I have that aforementioned paper to write ^^
Ciao; I'll check back in later or tomorrow if it takes that long.
@LeviMorrison np do real work, we all understand :)
all 3 of us !
quiet @BenjaminGruenbaum
But, I do want to say that you should focus on the problems you regularly have when writing code when thinking about PHP 6.
Haha!
user895378
lol
00:34
does anyone else see jim carey, the mask ?
Haha I just took screenshot moments before.
Smokin'.
its' definitely there, right ?
Yup, what else.
@rdlowrey remember when I said I'd have shutdown handlers working in a day ... I was totally and utterly wrong about that ... the only way I can get it to work is rubbish, no use, no scope, nothing .. which is pooh, but if I don't copy the actual opcodes the context dtors em on bailout from another context, which is a problem I did not forsee ...
user895378
@JoeWatkins I do remember a time a few months ago when I was able to successfully use shutdown handlers ... I mean, I'm not in a big hurry if you think it's something that you can work out with time. How likely would you say it is that it just won't work?
user895378
00:42
@JoeWatkins And yes, that is absolutely Jim Carey from The Mask.
well wrapping them in an object should always work, I think ?
user895378
I can't say TBH. I've only dealt very specifically with ext/openssl stuff ... I have precious little understanding of how zend deals with those kinds of things.
I mean this approach:
<?php
class MyShutdownHandler extends Stackable {
	public function run() {
		register_shutdown_function(function() {
            echo "shutdown function\n";
        });
	}
}

class MyTask extends Stackable {
    function run() {
        echo 'test';
    }
}

class MyWorker extends Worker {
    function run() {

    }
}

$tasks[] = $myTask = new MyTask;
$tasks[] = $myShutdown = new MyShutdownHandler;

$myWorker = new MyWorker;
$myWorker->start();
$myWorker->stack($myTask);
$myWorker->stack($myShutdown);
if I can solve the problem you originally had, wanting to set the shutdown handler in the run method of the worker itself, I could implement a tidy addShutdownHandler, but it wouldn't be necessary ... I think this ^ might be "the way" ...
user895378
That's totally fine with me ... I don't care too much how it's possible as long as I'm able to do something to handle react to (why would I want EngineException anyway?) a fatal inside a thread/worker :)
@JoeWatkins Look at this line of parse_url_ex() ... that would lead me to believe that parse_url(':123/hello') would work, but it doesn't ... any idea why?
Not saying it should actually work, because that's just bogus behaviour, but the code seems to suggest it.
00:51
@rdlowrey also, this works (does same and works for Thread/Worker)
<?php
class Test extends Worker {
	public function shut() {
		echo "shutdown";
	}

	public function run (){
		register_shutdown_function(
			array(&$this, 'shut'));
	}
}
$test = new Test;
$test->start();
user895378
Are you sure ... ? I believe I tried that a bit ago. Let me double-check.
Call time pass by ref??
@Jack if ((e = memchr(s, ':', length)) && (e - s)) {
sorry jack
Hmm?
I thought levi asked that ...
00:54
The next in line is if (e) { ... } which is where the link points to.
the call time pass by reference is specifically to force the object to behave correctly when you pass it ...
But doesn't that give notice?
oh sorry ...
no it doesn't ...
Ohhh right, still early here I guess. You're not passing the array as ref ;)
yeah I think you're right ...
step through it ...
00:57
I'll do gdb later :)
Must have overlooked something there.
It's a fool that looks for logic in the chambers of php_url_parse_ex().
I would be looking but I'm drawing a blank, is 1am
user895378
@JoeWatkins Hmm weird. [&$this, 'func'] works with the simple example but my shutdown function is never invoked when I use it with my real code. Will try to poke at it some more ...
I will keep looking too, the object wrap in worker should be okay if it's stopping you moving ... I'll find a solution, somehow ...
sleep now
night chaps
good morning
user895378
01:13
@JoeWatkins 'night
user895378
@happy 'morning
This is like a train station.
@rdlowrey got a moment?
user895378
Sure, though whether or not I'll be helpful isn't assured :)
PATCH /index.php
This endpoint should update ... The following POST parameters are supported:
:)
How can this be possible?
PATCH and POST at the same time.
You know RFCs and shit :)
user895378
Is the second line the response you get back when you do PATCH /index.php?
01:17
No no, PATCH is like heading/title.
Better :)
user895378
Oh okay.
user895378
Well basically PATCH is just a way to send a partial set of data to update a resource (which you likely already know).
user895378
So that documentation is basically just saying ...
Understood, but how can you PATCH and POST at the same time?
I mean, how can you issue such request and such request be parsed.
user895378
Well, assuming the POST request is sent like this:
user895378
01:20
POST /index.php
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Content-Length: 42

lineNumber=21&title=some_title
user895378
Those docs are saying you can do this:
user895378
PATCH /index.php
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Content-Length: ...

lineNumber=42
Correct!
user895378
So I'm not sure I understand what you're asking?
But then $_POST is empty.
I am asking, is the one who wrote these requirements a bit retarded?
user895378
01:22
Ohhh, I see.
I need to implement this, I'm not the one sending requests :)
Do I have grounds to object?
user895378
Oh, well all you have to do to parse it is use parse_str on the entity body.
Sure, sure.
That's the same as PATCH & GET in the end?
user895378
if (method === 'PATCH') {
    $_PATCH = parse_str(file_get_contents('php://input'));
}
user895378
^^ Faking a superglobal.
01:24
$HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA = file_get_contents('php://input');
parse_str($HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA, $_POST);
$_REQUEST += $_POST;
Less elegant :\
Yup!
Just wanted to ask you if that's wrong.
user895378
No, I mean the requirements make sense from an HTTP standpoint.
user895378
Though technically it's wrong to assume the resource was created via POST
For example, parameters are not seen in request in that case?
Thank you!
user895378
It's perfectly valid to create a resource using PUT if you know the resource's URI
user895378
If the server will be creating a new URI for the resource then POST is correct.
user895378
01:28
So for example if your service identifies resources by name and you want to create a resource at /rdlowrey you should use a PUT request with the information needed to create that resource.
user895378
By contrast if your service autogenerates a new ID for each new resource when it receives a submission then POST is the semantically correct method.
Not in requirements but thank you for clearing it up for me :) I never worked with this.
user895378
np
user895378
@webarto Something else to be aware of ... successful PATCH requests are supposed to return a 204 response -- NOT 200.
01:40
Awesome!
TIL everything @rdlowrey just said about HTTP PUT and POST
Hey guys. I'm trying to create a script that will increment the sleep() time on every new page load under that session. How would I go about doing this? I appreciate it.
@HelpingHand Why would you want to increase sleep time?
@cspray In the case of a password brute-force attack, you can slow down the hackers password attempts by an increment at every entry.
That is my goal.
Why not just exit the script early after so many attempts? Seems like if you just steadily put your server to sleep for longer and longer that would be a DoS vulnerability
Granted I'm not an expert in this kind of thing but that seems like something you wouldn't want to do
01:53
@HelpingHand what the f* ?
But sleep() only effects the intended user. If a hacker were to attempt a brute-force attack, it would only delay HIS request... not everyones...
@webarto Huh?
Dude, log failed password attempts and just kill that user after e.g. 5 bad passwords...
$_SESSION['fail'] = 0; ... $_SESSION['fail']++; ... if ($_SESSION['fail'] >= 5) exit;
@HelpingHand So? If you're worried about brute force it probably isn't gonna be just one guy putting requests in by hand. He's gonna hit your server with a lot of requests and each time will become increasingly longer; at some point that will start impacting your other users
@webarto And after that... bingo! He's back onto the login site unless I block him indefinitely.
Do what @webarto said
01:56
@HelpingHand Block his IP, what's the problem?
@HelpingHand So? Not every single time somebody forgets their password it is a brute force attack. Legitimate users might appreciate the chance to get it right this time around
You're just shooting yourself in the foot because of what @cspray said.
If you notice the IP doing it over and over again just block it
That problem was solved probably 15 years ago (more or less), don't try to solve it yourself.
@PeeHaa did you get your answer?
02:01
@cspray Yeah... I wouldn't need my server doing it for me automatically. My idea with sleep() will allow me to see what he does instead of having users e-mailing me of how they were PERMANENTLY blocked out of my site because of 5 password attempts! (Or more for that matter)
@HelpingHand Ok buddy. Implement some solution with sleep() if you want to
@PeeHaa AFAIK it won't ban you, it just throttles the requests to one every few seconds. There is no API for chat, so can't even use an API key for it, just gotta do an old fashioned scrape.
@cspray Smart move, you're experienced :D The beard of Wisdom.
@webarto Hey, I got to where I can make a decent living with PHP and programming because I listened to people. If newbies don't wanna listen then learn the hard way ;)
@cspray Not a newbie.
02:04
@HelpingHand I don't mean it to offend you but sleep() is really not good for what you're doing
And really isn't useful for most situations in PHP
@HelpingHand Yeah, really? I haven't seen someone brute forces anything in a while...
The entire language is designed to be short-lived and you're intentionally making it longer-lived then it should be
Not only that but you're opening yourself up to a variety of other attacks and problems
@cspray Which?
@cspray Not entirely about that, chances are he's using Apache, he'll ran out of threads and it'll be unresponsive.
That's already been explained
@webarto Yea, I don't really think that's an issue I was just being pedantic :P
@webarto The wife has been wanting to braid my beard
2
02:06
@webarto How? The hacker will not reach that amount. Maybe you're right that I should use a limit.
Instead of sleep()
@HelpingHand Plain stupid idea really, I could just launch parallel requests and put your server to sleep.
Am I incorrect in saying that sleep() doesn't effect the server at all; but rather, the timing of an individual's response from the server?
@cspray Nooooooooooooooo.
@HelpingHand Well, of course it effects the server. It still has to keep that PHP process running for the duration of the sleep
@webarto :P I haven't let her yet. I don't think it is long enough yet to have a decent braid. I might let her put a single braid in it one of these days
For about an hour :P
@cspray Yeah obviously.
02:09
@HelpingHand Well...then you answered your own question :P
@HelpingHand It does nothing in terms of CPU usage, but you'll ran out of threads pretty soon, if Apache. Lockup.
@cspray Well, you should make your wife happy! Grow dat beard!
@webarto haha, I'm working on it. I'm shooting for being competitive in a regional beard competition or two
Use the money from PHP to buy some 'roids for beard growth!
(what am I even saying)
I'm just going to assume that my wife's nightly beard rubbings will continue the facial hair growth
02:31
bitcoin value is higher than yesterday which prove time exists
02:50
@webarto How would I go about automatically blocking an IP?
In Apache that is.
@happy (Automatically from PHP code)
@happy (Adding the IP of the current user to the array of blocked guys)
@HelpingHand the example shown in the link I provided could be easily modify to accept any kind of input and iterate it to compare with the current ip. imo
02:59
@happy Alright... Gotcha.
user895378
Note that the above works well until I unplug my router and force my ISP to give me a new dynamic IP. Or until I use a proxy server. Or a compromised computer in a botnet.
@rdlowrey I think it depend on the kind of provider you are with. Cable doesn't works that way but dsl does.
still you would be using the same ip block
@rdlowrey Yep, that's how a lot of useless jerks spam political wiki projects (not of their own beliefs) as they are blocked.
user895378
It has nothing to do with cable or DSL. Regardless, my point is that if you're under attack by someone who knows what they're doing then those methods are utterly useless.
@rdlowrey again, the spawn user would be using different ip from a same ip block
03:02
@rdlowrey Not really... If you're blocked, you're blocked. Unless you change you're name.
user895378
So when I route my request through a proxy server 5,000 miles away that's going to use the same IP block? Not hardly.
@rdlowrey Good point... Tor time!
you are basically saying that this chatroom could be flooded of fake people anytime soon?
You guys probably have no idea what I just said... Right? ;)
@happy Need an account. Use random proxy servers to hide true IP in registering. (I myself would never do such a thing). (Note: Tor is an Anonymity network of proxies)
user895378
I'm saying nothing of the sort. What I am saying is that manually filtering out requests by IP at either the htaccess or PHP layer affords exactly zero protection against a sophisticated attacker.
user895378
03:06
But feel free to use it.
@rdlowrey But you can't block their whole domain, because there could be legitimate users within the same range.
locking my doors is not the most efficient way to protect my goods against thief, still it is what you do too, right?
user895378
@happy Good analogy!
user895378
I'm not arguing with you. I'm trying to help you. Off to the tiny avatar list it is.
03:09
@rdlowrey Look guys, there's no debate here.
@PHPGeek I don't think its okay to post questions here anymore. git.io/chatroom-pact
"Don'ts: 1. Dump a link to your question (spamming)."
@crypticツ Good job.
he's always doing that, just dropping by to dump question, and I then just delete it.
@crypticツ Well, a mistake is a mistake.
@HelpingHand not when it's repeated =oP That just plain stupidity in that case.
user895378
03:14
@crypticツ +1
I got myself a new expression: (ಠ益ಠ)
@crypticツ Is there forgiveness in cryptic's heart of stone?
The scrooge of Christmas present is he/she?
@HelpingHand *she, and I am forgiving, just not tolerant of those who blatantly disregard the peace of the chat and don't care if they annoy people with their one-boxed question dumps constantly.
is the a bot in this room? a comparison of the question link with the question author comparison against the chatroom user could works?
yield should save memory in certain cases (rather than filling up e.g. array and returning)?
user895378
03:19
Correct.
Awesomesauce!
user895378
Generators are the new hotness for real.
@crypticツ Tolerance was never known to expire with those who forgive. Pure love is known to tolerate much, such as Jesus' offering on the cross. Sorry, getting a little philosophical/theological.
yeah...I'm Atheist, so any Jesus talk is just crazy talk to me, no offense =oP
@crypticツ Funny how I guessed that before you said it.
03:23
oh snap!
@crypticツ Do you agree that love requires tolerance?
$resource = fopen('application/data/movies.list', 'rb');

$parserRegex = new \TunedIn\Imdb\Parser\Regex($resource);

foreach ($parserRegex->parse() as $key => $array)
{
  $file->writeLine(implode(';', $array));
}
@rdlowrey not the best use, but it's HOT.
user895378
Hey @webarto, why is @crypticツ talking to herself?
@HelpingHand yeah of course, but I don't see Christians practicing this thing called 'tolerance' so I guess they lack that thing called 'love'. Must be an Atheist thing =oP
@rdlowrey She's mentioning some Jesus dude.
03:24
@rdlowrey lol, tiny avatar, good idea, doh.
user895378
@webarto Hmm, I guess this Spanish guy Jesus must be on my tiny avatar list too.
Jesús!
@crypticツ There are faults on both sides. The sign that atheists.org just put up in New York City is not what I consider tolerant.
@crypticツ Damn you! I thought there's a dirt above u, scratching and it doesn't go off.
03:27
@webarto I usually just scroll to find out =oP, shame on you for putting your dirty fingers on your screen!
Is this what you call tolerance? @cryptic news.atheists.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/…
m59
m59
I had a typo in a gitignore rule and I used git add --all, which added an unwanted directory with a ton of files to the staging area. I'm new with this...how do I get that directory's files out of the staging area?
good evening to everyone
morning @Wesabi
m59
m59
@HelpingHand that's not very kind
user652649
03:29
morning
@m59 What isn't? The sign, because I agree with you if that's what you mean.
m59
m59
Oh. I see :)
user652649
in my sleepy state the @ notification sound is like chalk on blackboard
user652649
thanks @crypticツ
user652649
@crypticツ
user652649
03:31
and @crypticツ
user895378
@m59 have you committed the changes yet?
it burns, it burns @Wesabi
m59
m59
@rdlowrey nope, just did the add all
user652649
byeeeeeeee
m59
m59
03:32
:'(
user895378
@m59 $ git reset /path/to/file/to/unstage
m59
m59
I think I tried that...but there's like 500 files lol. I tried the whole directory and it failed
user895378
git reset -- *
m59
m59
lol nm
worked this time what the heck.
well thanks =D
user895378
03:33
np
m59
m59
AHH DERN. I had a type in the path last time. face-palm.
typo**
^ irony...sigh
lol
user652649
we have plenty of people with beard already
m59
m59
@Wesabi couldn't be any more silly than the Jedi Church.
user652649
like @crypticツ and cspray
03:41
...how did we get on the religion topic?
user652649
lol
@Wesabi what what what?
@Wesabi you too? this is a pattern lol
m59
m59
So, if I'm thinking correctly here...I can commit all my files to my local repository all I want, then commit that repository to gitHub with git add remote master ...err
I can't remember now heh
user652649
03:49
not going to argue with you, this is exactly what i'm trying to avoid
@crypticツ Gotcha... merely stating my position in a conversation that has already brought forth many viewpoints.
i like #7 rule: Start religious or political discussions. (go make your own room)
@Wesabi Debate... not argue.
1
A: Disable Browser Rubber Band effect in Windows Phone 8 HTML5 App?

user3095728By using this the rubber band and bouncing effect has stopped but it has hampered the scrolling of the page i.e. we are not able to scroll the page. Please suggest the solution ASAP.

Wow, how did that "answer" get upvotes?
Again with the question posting in chat.
user652649
03:52
ban him!!
Despite rule 8
@HelpingHand Did you notice the A: in that onebox?
user652649
@Jack ahahahah
user652649
epic answer
Oh... sorry about that! Nevermind. Forgiveness is due.
03:54
A thing of beauty.
user652649
:P
@HelpingHand Yeah, I would like a bagel with my latte =p
@Jack Truly! I second that!
@Jack Forgiveness comes in many varieties.
Right, it's good to know there are still humble people around ;-)
@Jack 'murrica #1 !!!
03:59
@HelpingHand You can post links to questions in chat; you just cannot dump them here.
@webarto Brilliant :)

« first day (1154 days earlier)      last day (4021 days later) »