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11:00
@JoeWatkins well, x86 already has aes instructions for example. you know, aeskeygenassist / aesenc / aesdec
but apart from that, I don't think there's much readily available hardware crypto
@Fabien Nice
I played Dead Rising 3 pretty much solidly all weekend ~_~
@NikiC no, that happened like last week, didn't know that, not at all ...
even though every cpu already comes with an internal implementation of at least sha and rsa/dsa for verification of microcode updates
@Ocramius I see now
they don't expose them via instructions tho, that's my understanding of it, which is now apparently completely wrong ....
11:02
yeah, they don't expose those
this AES extension is out in the wild already is it ?
yeah
I have it !
aes, sure
that's been around for a while already
I should probably drop asm from the list of things I think I know about ...
@JoeWatkins posted on the ML about "why yet another function"
hope someone can explain exactly why in core and not in userland :)
dunno what any of these extensions are at all ...
> I was discussing about this RFC with Joe in Room 11 (where we keep him away
> from society, for the greater good).
hehe
11:07
read it as "for the greater food" at first glance
@JoeWatkins :D
@Suhosin I only have Mario ATM. Should get Pokemans and Zelda for Christmas
@zerkms well, we surely have cannibals in here
@Fabien Get mario kart
Game is awesome
@JoeWatkins The nice thing about a hardware aes implementation (apart from being much faster) is that it automatically saves you from cache timing attacks - something that's pretty hard to avoid with a software aes implementation, at least if you want it to be fast
11:08
@Fabien I pretty much only been playing my Xbone recently
@Suhosin The last christmas I've made a random purchase and bought Wii
@Suhosin <___<
played may be twice after unboxing
probably the most silly wasted money for the last several years by me
@Suhosin Pffrt all that PC power and no PC gaming.
@Fabien I run Linux, gaming is hassle :(
11:11
urgh
I linked master, not a tag
/me slaps himself
it's really surprising how many good code appears last days: github.com/bernardphp/chute
still cannot imagine a person who would implement a map-reduce in a hardcore production on php
@Suhosin Dual boot it. I got CoD Ghosts the other day.
@Fabien I hate rebooting, I'm on like 200 days uptime
My last downtime was when I moved house.
I'll get Ghosts on Xbone anyway
Lame -_-
@Ultimater Too bad most framework screw up all OOP principles
11:15
Aaaaaand morning !
Mooooooorngin @HamZa
I became a macro >.<
lol
woops
sorry
@PeeHaa I'm a big fan of phalconphp.
@PeeHaa I used to be a Zend Framework fan until I found it.
@Ocramius I hope I answered your question too ...
11:25
Nope... not really
I don't see a use case for making it fast
it's not about making it fast, that's a benefit of having a full set of tools, it's really about having a full set of tools ...
I have full sets of tools
but if you argue that you want a full set of tools
why not coding a HATEOAS library in core?
I could need it
as well as a graphviz clone
just because ;)
ok you have a full set of tools, php has an incomplete set, you had to complete it ...
it's obviously better to have a complete set, if there is to be a set at all
11:27
I don't even use the password stuff from PHP
I only use the wrappers from ZF2 usually
ok but it exists already, we implemented it as something we support
(which may use the password hashing api internally if needed)
so if we're going to do that at all, then better that it is a complete set, with as little requirement on the user, or framework as possible ...
@JoeWatkins it is an implementation detail of another API
@JoeWatkins ZF2 is BSD - can copy-pasta from it any moment
the point is that there's Enrico maintaining it, and he's got a fair amount of experience around crypto research
which is my point of trust
well maybe, but it exists, we provide a way to securely match a raw password and a hash but not two hashes, the logic exists to do either, I'd have exposed it in the first place and avoided this whole discussion, and the need for any framework or user to have to do any more legwork ...
11:30
internals has (had?) @ircmaxell
we still have him, and he wrote the code I propose we use, I think it's same as the rfc'd implementation but I propose we actually use the same exact code ...
he won't engage internals but he'll engage any one of us if we ask for help, and we're capable of doing that ...
ok, so let me put it this way
if there's no other reason than "complete the API", I don't think it's worth adding
it's not a language feature, it's a library feature that is erroneously stuffed into a language
as always happens in PHP :P
if there's stronger arguments, fine
that's what I'm looking for
@Ultimater Yeah I know it. Would personally never use it
there are benefits from having a complete api, and there are draw backs in having an incomplete one ... while we're thinking about designing a language we don't necessarily think the same way as when designing a framework or application using one, an incomplete api is more of a problem than an unimplemented one imo
a benefit is speed, but you can't really argue that, since if php is slow it's our fault kinda
Speed is not even relevant here - people having relevant APIs built on password hashing use video cards or ASICs
:D
as for the api completeness
I'd say PHP shouldn't have the API in first place
the entire password_hashing thing
it came out as required because PHP is so incredibly slow at maths that it would be just impossible to do something like that in PHP itself
(the failed travis builds with out of memory exceptions and so on)
maybe as an extension
but stuffing more methods into the language "just because we need more tools" feels wrong if the tools can be imported
11:37
@JoeWatkins protip: Don't indent your emails ;)
emails != code :D
here's my thought process, there are an infinite amount of things you might add to a language on a function by function basis, there is no way that statistically you will fall upon an acceptable implementation of the language, as a whole, if you do it like that ... so I don't think about whether something is possible in userland, or if it's been written by every framework that exists, ever ...
what I think about is first, do we support what is in question, we do here, then should we if we don't, then how if we should ...
you don't get very far into that, perfectly sane, thought process before you decide that this should exist ...
@JoeWatkins I got a very simple snippet for my thought process on what should land in the language
if (! $feature->canBeImplementedInUserland()) {
    addCoreFunctionalityThatAllows($feature);
}
there ya go
Agree.
even all the array functions aren't needed
But, I'd make an exception for password_hash
11:42
they are required because PHP_IS_FUCKING_SLOOOOOOW
that's pretty crazy, almost anything can be implemented in userland, the kinds of software you would have if we removed everything in favour of userland implementations would be ruddy awful ...
The reason being that you have to consider real usage, and most real users suck at dealing with crypto. You also have to consider that 'just import libs' isn't a real solution.
@JoeWatkins why would they be awful? Here's java.lang - docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/…
@Suhosin we have libraries with experts behind that
If the code comes from W3Schools, assume witchcraft. — BoltClock 8 mins ago
once again, a sane process for everything, because there's not enough time in the world, or expertise to consider everything on a case by case basis ...
so I do have a simple process, that's perfectly sane, and it leads me to think that it should exist because in some form it already does, though is not exposed to the user ...
once PHP gets to a certain level, the kind of development you're talking about is possible
11:44
@Suhosin one interesting thing is that (but I can't confirm it), stuff like the password_compat library by Anthony just thrown at HHVM would be fast enuff. And that is because the core feature enables the userland implementation
the kind where we can actually say, we don't support that now, lets not
but we can't do that now, and shouldn't leave things half baked
@JoeWatkins where's the problem in just linking something and saying "use this"?
I did line two hundred and something of a C file in the core it is ...
if we had no api, we could say here are some sane implementations, and we could still say that and the question might go away
but it wouldn't improve anything at all
and that's what we're engaging in, improvement ... not just problem solving ...
I'm kinda losing the thread
where's the improvement here?
I see code duplication...
in the completion of the API that already exists
there would be no duplication had I written the patch, and there won't be in the final patch if it goes in ...
it doesn't belong with str at all, it belongs in password stuff ...
11:49
it doesn't belong with password stuff
it does
it's not specific to passwords
the only place we have it now is there
so?
its not sane to have it in string, you wouldn't want all string comparisons to happen like that would you ?
11:49
Exists in userland, you copy it into the C code (actually use an impl that is already a detail of another API) and then you say it's no duplication?
@JoeWatkins It's a string function, so why not have it in string? Just give it a proper name like str_fixed_time_equals rather than just str_equals...
really ??
Yes, seems sane to me. Has nothing to do with hashing
where else is it useful, outside of the context of working with hashed passwords ?
@JoeWatkins computing UUIDs?
11:51
@JoeWatkins "the" use-case for a fixed-time string comparison is actually comparing hmacs ;)
so by that logic you should put the function into ext/hash
and call it hash_compare ^^
ah okay
I suggested that at first
or hmac_compare or whatever
but we already have the logic being rfc'd so thought better it go there, to avoid resistance ... fair enough tho, maybe post that on list ...
I mentioned hash_compare and password_compare in first response but wasn't sure really where, but string certainly doesn't make all the sense ...
I mean it'll appear in manual next to str_repeat, str_replace ...
I think hash_compare makes the most sense, so far!
I'll just go with "whatever" - I'm waiting for an internal method to print me a vectorized version of rainbow_dash() on screen, because it completes the API :P
11:57
hehe
I wouldn't take it that far ...
Or a gif socket
but this is code I can point at and give you a line number for, surely that does complete an api, to expose some existing idea we have internally that you have to emulate externally ...
lol
also is it really slowness that is better here, or is it predictability, and consistency ??
It is not "emulation" :P
predictability is the problem here
must not be predictable
or more precisely even predictable consistency ...
yeah I guess they are pretty crappy words to try and describe it ...
well, the fact here is that it makes no difference if it is implemented in PHP or in C
12:00
I dunno, but I don't like slowness being important !
from a very rough far sight, the only problem here is that we want to move from an O(N) operation to an O(MAX(N, M)) operation
so you can even implement it in javascript, executed in a golang VM, built on a java VM, compiled via JCC, ran in a VM that is built on top of PHP
doesn't matter
well now who is taking it too far :D
well, I hope it is clear
the userland impl is NOT an emulation
no emulation was a bad word ...
if it's admirable then there's no reason not to work towards it, in all areas of php, not just ones where no good implementation exists in userland ... I don't know enough about everything to decide in any other way ...
It's dupe code :P
12:05
remember you had to show me what he was talking about before I had an opinion ...
Yes, but I'm no expert either
we could bring this discussion into something like array_find imo
none of us are, so better to have a sane process than try and decide on a function by function or rfc by rfc basis if things should get done or not ...
actually, does array_find exist or is there a find_array?
or array_search? I don't know, this API is SOOOO COMPLETE! :D
hrhr
ok, I'm now really being only a troll - better get working
12:07
I can't be held responsible for silliness before I arrived ... or silliness since I arrived actually since I'm only one person ... and am usually wrong ...
/me cracks whip ...
lata @Ocramius
I'm off out ... lata all
@JoeWatkins see ya
12:31
good day everbody!
12:41
Hey! :)
12:57
well, I don't know how good the day is, however, this is kind of my first real Magento specific answer on SO: stackoverflow.com/a/20741698/367456
hi every one
morning..
13:19
Good morning
@ircmaxell same!
morning @ircmaxell
How's it going?
not too shabby
13:21
das is good
@reikyoushin How did that get flagged????
lol
attention seeking ;-) good moaning!
@PeeHaa what was flagged?
Your message
13:24
@PeeHaa dunno.. >.<
weird
maybe 'same' is very offensive in some language we don't know of
@Jack how come i dont see it as flagged? my rep is too low? :P
@reikyoushin it's been invalidated.
Or somebody doesn't like monday monrings
13:27
@Jack ahh. but i'm supposed to see it too?
In that case I should have validated the thing :)
@reikyoushin yeah, it would have a blue thingy on the right.
oh okay. ^_^
because nobody had that problem before, yeah. >.<
=P
> when the number of potatoes is more than the cost of the cursor.
WAT!?!
What is a cursor btw? :)P
@PeeHaa makes sense... uhmm. right?
13:30
ummm
what's a potatoe
@ircmaxell It's that thing in your feet
:P
morning mourning moaning
Male camel toe :P
13:33
@PeeHaa I learn something new everyday in this room..
@reikyoushin :P
2:0 for me on the work pool table.
@salathe potato-naaaah!
13:48
Just awesome that this is driving somewhere in space
0
Q: Search by product id

Mr_GreenIf we want to search by name or sku, we can just alter the their respective attribute settings in admin panel. But how to search by mentioning product id? I thought changing Mage_Adminhtml_Model_Search_Catalog would do the same but I figured it out that it doesn't. $collection = Mage::helper('c...

^ Any help?
@Mr_Green Please don't cross post
@PeeHaa means?
@Rikesh I am asking in both sites.. I haven't got good response there yet. — Mr_Green 44 mins ago
kk
please ignore this for now
I am in very bad situation
14:08
I have .is(':visible') working fine the first 3 clicks but then it continues to return the wrong value.
> Questions concerning problems with code you've written must <b>describe the specific problem</b> — and <b>include valid code</b> to reproduce it — in the question itself. See <a href="http://sscce.org/" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">SSCCE.org</a> for guidance.
:D
:P
working example?
@Fabien where's the HTML?
should I read DDD or GoF next? Last book was PoEEA
14:12
@Patrick DDD comes after all the rest IMO
<~ still not finished with PoEAA haha
@reikyoushin Ugly HTML. tbh it works in fiddle.
So probably a dumb issue
@Fabien if it works in fiddle, then there's something else you included that makes it so..
Aye
@Fabien maybe somebody is messing with your #menu?
Jay
Jay
14:16
whats tje best way to encrypt a license key?
you mean ... encrypt any string?
@Jay You could look at this answer and see what you can use.
I am back after loooooooooong time everyone. :)
It doesn't include tamper proofing the encrypted strings, though.
@YogeshSuthar Helloooo!
What brings you back just before Christmas?
@Jack Hi, you are still here.
fixed
Jay
Jay
14:20
k @Jack thc
thx
Sometimes you have to ask to reveal a solution
@Jack Nothing, just started to look for job change.
@Fabien and how did it you fix it?
@Fabien Happens to me all the time
:)
Removing the hide() and show() funcitonality to make it less confusing.
14:22
@YogeshSuthar Yeah? Fancy working for Yahoo for a change? ;-)
I just wrote a procedural script and it felt awesome!
@Jack You are near to 70K. Congrats. :P I am still at 17K. :(
@YogeshSuthar Wrong ping. There ya go :)
Jay
Jay
lol
@YogeshSuthar Trust me, the last few kays went slowly :)
14:25
@Jack this chat is not working properly. Yeah, when I have last visited you were at around 63K.
In the meantime I've become Marshal two more times lol
They only count once, though :(
ohhh congrats.
I swear this page is about 95% jQuery
scroll this, click that
jDominate
Can someone quickly read through my answer stackoverflow.com/questions/20743064/… to make sure that I am not saying something wrong? (still learning myself)
14:44
@Patrick the controller is not part of the presentation layer, it is a separate layer afaik.. i'm a newb in MVC too so i'm not sure..
anyway, @Patrick wtf is the other answer.. LOL
@reikyoushin I think that's correct though i.sstatic.net/OpWgt.png
The presentation layer consists of views and controllers.
(typically)
@Patrick i tend to think it more like this
but yeah, maybe you are right too.. ^_^
15:03
Ugggh,,, need to learn Laravel.... no lust... Q___Q... anyone any inspiring words ?>?
why @Sangoku
user895378
What was the deadline for new features in 5.6 again? Anybody remember?
15:22
first alpha early 2014
@rdlowrey march 16
huh ?
oh march 16th you mean ?
yeah
I read march 2016
that's the beta1 release date according to the current timeline
user895378
15:24
Cool. I'm working on exposing some functionality so I'll have non-blocking Postgres access ... it would just be adding a couple of userland functions for ext/pgsql -- nothing crazy.
cool ... I thought features had to be in discussion by first alpha ?
user895378
I'm not sure that really needs "discussion" on the list, right?
@JoeWatkins aint nobody care about that
user895378
Just wanted to make sure I didn't have to finish it before I left for Christmas vacation or anything :)
15:25
I dunno @rdlowrey if you can get hold of the ext maintainer, maybe not ?
user895378
@JoeWatkins Yeah ... emailed them ... no real response. I don't think they care.
user895378
Anyway, if it works, is tested, isn't buggy and isn't leaky I don't really see the problem.
tested what happens in zts ?
user895378
Well it's not implemented yet, but of course I will test that too :)
I dunno about pgsql internals or if it takes notice of the build type ... but crosses my mind anyway ...
15:30
> any inspiring words?
^ don't.. thats what people here will say ^_^
Train cancellation city
user895378
<3 <3 <3 lxr.php.net <3 <3 <3
user895378
Not sure how anyone would I would not be able to work on PHP without it.
^ i use google then i land either on php.net or here in SO :P
15:43
@rdlowrey using the own lxr on localhost?^^
user895378
Nope. I'm noob-core and just hammer the remote lxr.
hehe, me too^^
fgrep is pretty good
@bwoebi no windows today, please, I will look over the holidays, but no one is in a rush to test over the next few days ...
I tried to setup opengrok locally
so I could search in patches and forks and pthreads etc ...
@JoeWatkins But… I want to continue and I'd like to have a working windows version before continuing
did not work ...
I don't like windows anymore than you, don't know much more about it than you, I'll look when I have to go back to windows anyway, I'm not doing it today, I'll do it over the holidays sometime ...
15:49
well… I bet you know it much better than me… you have no idea how rarely I use windows…
you'll have used it, had it as your operating system, more recently than me, that's for sure ...
plus I had longer to build up the hatred to unprecedented heights ... it's something I actively work on in my spare time ... hating windows ...
user2518044
Hello
how a mac user can complain about windows...
audacious
o.o Why shouldn't they?
Mac is UNIX-based :P
user2518044
Is in PHP something similar to "child::"?
user2518044
15:59
I know that "parent::" exists, but I need to change childs parameter value inside the parent class, is it possible?

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