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00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

00:08
:D
is nice, is expensive damnit
$55k used
How is the new job @ircmaxell?
Write us a blog post.
So far so awesome. And no, no blog post
Really, it feels awesome to the point I question significantly if I am an imposter...
00:30
Awesome :)
You belong to those kind of companies, like Google.
Still not easy. But really makes me wonder what another company could do to woo me away...
00:46
hello all
00:57
Hello All I have a question regarding composer.
Basically I created a package then I tried to include that package in a different package. When I run composer install on the dependent package everything downloads great the packages all show up, however my required package namespace doesn't show up in the autoload_namespaces file.
Does anyone have any idea?
01:46
Hi - anyone here have any experience in Apache? I'm trying to set up ViewGit and its driving me insane
I've got the viewgit folder in my htdocs, and i created a phpinfo page which works within that
But when I go to ViewGit's index.php nothing appears
literally NOTHING
I've chmodded the entire directory
SELINUX is disabled
the .htaccess is set to Allow from all
fffffffffffffffff
by chmodded i mean chmod 777 -R viewgit/
02:03
morning
02:27
So, I forgot I have the xkcd: Substitutions plugin, and was wondering why we're holding the "2014 Moderator Eating Contest".
Every eating contest has three phases:
1. Nomination
2. Primary
3. Eating contest
@DanLugg Awesome. Almost as cool as 'cloud' => 'my butt' substitution plugin
^^ :-)
Y'know, I used to really like how null is an invalid argument to a non-optional typed parameter, however, I'm starting to think otherwise.
02:42
@DanLugg Why's that?
Actually, scratch that...
And just to be clear you're talking about passing null to something like foo(Bar $var);
It was a by-reference thing, but it wouldn't make a difference.
@cspray Correct.
@DanLugg Ah, yea. By-Ref snags me up a lot
I'm getting all befuddled between PHP and static languages.
02:43
I try to avoid using it whenever possible
Yea, fortunately I don't have to make that swap very often
Basically at my own leisure
lol, yea; it hurts daily.
I'm starting to think that static typed languages better fit my coding style though
PHP's wishy-washy "vision" makes me sad sometimes
They definitely make many things easier; but, then they make lots of stuff harder.
I tried going over to Ruby (not Rails but Ruby).
So much agree on the vision.
lol, I read Ruby as Ruby, not RoR. I use Sass and have to hack it all the time to make it do what I want.
02:45
But the duck-typing, lack of interfaces/abstract classes and just generally a different way of thinking has me questioning whether I could use it full time
It's certainly a different approach to problem solving.
A lot of respond_to
Yea
I just want a language with all of the dynamic facilities of something like PHP, but with all the static facilities of something like Java or C#.
lol, I just read that and its like "derp, cake and eat it too"
I'm used to thinking up the behavior I want and coming up with a set of interfaces exposing that behavior. With that not even being a concept I find it difficult to think about how to solve the problem
@DanLugg haha
Really I just want PHP to decide if it is going to support OOP and if it is stop with all this nonsense that core OOP features go against PHP's vision, whatever that happens to be.
Things like return type hinting
Scalar type hinting
Return type hinting is a big stickler for me
Scalar type casting...
02:48
Scalar type something
Yea, the lack of return typing halves the usefulness of interfaces.
I understand the general disposition is "I know you all think that what already exists is fucked, but we're not touching it", however I'd like to see some more sensible proxies to the core behaviors, whether exposed through a procedural or object-oriented interface.
So much of this "case 1) returns a string, case 2) returns an array, case 3) returns a boolean", really pisses me off.
@DanLugg Mind going in detail here. Not sure what you mean by "core behaviors"
Well, really any function or method in core that could return any one of the types.
Ah, yea
For instance; I favor the try* convention; such as bool tryParse($input, &$output)
It'll always return a boolean; the result is dumped into $output.
02:52
Yea, I've seen those kinds of things occasionally
I've used them a couple times myself
If it succeeds expectedly, it returns true with $output populated. If it fails expectedly, it returns false. If it borks entirely, it throws. Not a difficult concept.
Actually, here's an answer I wrote on the subject: stackoverflow.com/a/15626123/409279
Really, I just don't feel like PHP knows what it wants to be and, seeing as how it is one of the languages I use to make a living, I'd really like for it to know what it wants to be.
Super agree.
I wish it would stick to it's dynamic roots, but support the all of the type-checking facilities of a typically static language.
I'm still not entirely sure why some of the things aren't supported. Granted I don't follow internals all that closely but a lot of the time it feels like some of these arguments are just "i don't use PHP like that"
Basically, all rules are of the table in a code block, but when you travel over invocation boundaries, everything is liable to be checked depending on how strict a given API is.
@cspray I don't follow it particularly closely either, but that does seem to be a common response.
02:59
@DanLugg Exactly. If you don't want to use type hinting just, I don't know, don't use them
^^ The argument against that is "But wahhh, I have to use other APIs and they use them, so wahhh"
And I have heard that argument; pretty much verbatim. In this room.
I've yet to see any other third-party lib that conforms to my every whim
I normally have to make some tradeoff when I use somebody else's code.
Exactly, it's a third party library. Write a fucking adapter and get over yourself.
If your code wasn't loose as a watery stool, you wouldn't have so much trouble conforming to a typed API anyway.
*shrug*
I guess it's a bit depressing that PHP won't ever be what I would hope it would become, but I guess it's "good enough". Maybe that's it's vision.
doing some random goofy hhvm patching...
> Hi. This is PHP, and we're not great. We're good enough. Now install WordPress and complain about it.
03:03
by typing random stuff, I get results :O
uhjsvjheki20ohhf320uhfcwpo2f4hufc2uh432u0hwfgjh0pr3pji34mnpiwmojpn
Hmm, my results are inconclusive.
 
3 hours later…
06:32
Morning
07:05
moooornings!
@Jacta mornin
morning
07:24
How are you today?? :)
07:36
feeling busy -.-
07:46
Meurning! :)
moewfwof439fu43907f 09
headache ><
08:09
y'all going crazy
08:41
Morning
Morning folks
09:00
@igorw Thank you :)
Anyone wanna talk about Threads and ELI5? :P
talk about ELI5?
morning
morning
oh, nvm it's 4am. goonite
@andho No, explain it like I am 5. Threads. :p
Good morning folks and folkettes.
09:13
Happy Birthday @salathe :D
Happy Birthday !! A treat to all PHP folks from @salathe
:)
Gratz @salathe!
09:31
Happy birthday fellow aquarian @salathe
@Fabien threads are like many php processes running together. (For windows land) If you run the same .exe twice and it opens two instances of the same exe, that's two processes running at the same time.
Threads are similar, but instead of you (the user) running the two ( or more threads) it's php that actually starts the threads. Another difference is the parent (the php script that started the threads) have some control over the threads.

Some of the control available is shared memory and ability to stop the child threads.
btw I also know threads LI5
10:11
@salathe happy birthday folk.. =p
the pinning area is full now. we need to ask for a bigger one. haha
@salathe Happy birthday :-) #beer
@andho So from a web perspective a user sends a request and for Apache a thread is started by PHP to handle the read/write? or of PHP...
@Fabien think of Apache and PHP as one person ;)
this person is you
when I ask you "how are you?", instead of replying, you go to the doctor, and reply only when you receive the results for your full body checkup.
And I'm thinking "what an asshole"
but if you use threads,
When I ask you "how are you?", you tell your doctor to do a full body check of you and reply to me that you'll get back to me via email when you get the results.
the doctor is a child thread
10:30
I see.
So the differences between nginx and apache when doing this?
that analogy is broken though but i think the main idea is there.
@Fabien I have no knowledge regarding threads in PHP and nginx/apache.
or in any concrete application of it
Threading and evented IO is similar but different concepts
I see
I was thinking it had something to do with concurrency... eg, I ask you "how are you?", the you go to the hospital and get the doctor, dentist and psychiatrist do a check up at the same time and then depending on who finishes 1st... I'll get responses like "I'm ok in the mouth", "I'm mentally sound", etc
10:55
@iroegbu you were thinking right. I was illustrating one practical purpose of threads in a web application. And as I said, I couldn't really get the analogy right.
the purpose being: not making your client waiting until a huge process is done.
sometimes you can even tell the client you've inserted the row before your mysql query returns a success response. You know, if you're confident.
THREADS handle with care
Can anyone please help me out?
Doesn't that entirely depend on what you need help with?
I need a bottle of Coke
No you don't. A nice green tea should suffice. :)
@Fabien is it that the "green" should be nice, or the "green tea". Kind of ambiguous there. :P
11:08
lol. It's a leading suggestion.
@PHPLover If it's within Pact you don't need to ask if someone will help.
11:39
@PeeHaa I bit the bullet and ordered a purple elephpant
12:11
I am moving to an other VPS
And they are going to do the migration for me:
I received following message:
We went through the network configurations on both your old and new servers where we could see two IP's in your old one. The new server has got only one IP address and it will be good if another IP address is added to it in order to match with the Name server configuration as it is in the old server. Please let us know if you would like to purchase another IP address for this purpose.
I don't know what to do with it.
Good morning
Good morning @ircmaxell
what's going on?
Where?
12:26
lol
When was the + == array_merge() introduced into PHP?
Is it available in 5.3? 5.2?
@MadaraUchiha at earliest 4.3: 3v4l.org/cGA36
Laravel, where the troll account follows more people than follow it: twitter.com/robboclancy
How was work @ircmaxell? :)
12:35
so far so awesome
Aye, we/I didn't even see you yesterday.
Day 3 today.
yup :-D
They give you a mac or pc? :P
mac laptop and linux desktop
Nice. Wonder if they'll offer you a chromebook too.
12:45
they did, it was a choice between a Macbook Air and a Chromebook Pixel. I chose the air, due to needing to write code on it in the field...
Makes sense. My first days are always dull. I think the most exciting one was getting to build my own chair.
This is pretty exciting
I'm off, later!
Food good too?
Take care :)
If I had an image where I wanted to outline items inside that image for hover events. How should I do it? For example a picture of a room with a lamp. Roll over lamp and I can fire an event in JS. Any suggestions?
Might be flamed for this but..
Then add an event when mouseover an areaaaa
Problem is I need non-square.
12:54
Aye, so you can define coordinates e.g. (stackoverflow.com/questions/19558794/…)
There's probably different ways with canvas etc too so, nevermind =)
Would SVG be a good way?
Maaaaybe yea, I think a little less cross browser supported mind
eh, caniuse.com/svg Nevermind - just <= IE9!
IE8 is the min I need to go. There's some JS solutions for it.
Ugh creating a room svg sounds like it could be painful
Anybody know java here?
Reason: comments on accepted answer.
@Vartox Depends on a question. :)
I'm trying to find an equivalent function in php, there is a funtion called remove in Java using arraylist
i dont know if "unset" function is equivalent to "remove" in Java
simply put, remove an element in array in php
array in php is not the same as arraylist in java. So you can't really say it's equivalent .
13:19
unset will remove item from php array.
hello my servers httpd.conf file is publicly accessible,how to change it??
that should be similar right?
@Vartox Yes, behavior will be similar: ideone.com/i87LAN
hello my servers httpd.conf file is publicly accessible,how to change it??
@Leri thx man
13:23
@Vartox However, unset can also be used on variable: ideone.com/H9a9eK
I don't recommend that though. ^
@Leri i frequently see unset on session though.. is that bad?
@Leri ok, good to know
@reikyoushin session_destroy is proper way to destroy session.
gotcha
user895378
@salathe happy birthday to the newest member of the old-guy club ;)
13:31
@Fabien It sure would be, it's very... verbose.
@rdlowrey threads from a web perspective. I'm looking at nginx and apache and how they handle things differently. Know any good analogies?
user895378
You mean for the difference between nginx and apache?
user895378
As far as PHP is concerned the differences are nonexistent because PHP needs a thread/process per request either way.
does any one know how to restrict the httpd.conf file from public access??
a thread uses 1 core? Maybe I am off the mark.
user895378
13:38
Nginx is non-blocking event-driven server. This means that the server itself can keep tens of thousands of client connections open at once using a single CPU core. Apache, on the other hand, always uses a worker thread (or process, depending on your configuration) per connected client. This means that you'll run into system resource limitations much faster with Apache than you will for nginx.
user895378
This is why you have to set the MaxClients directive with apache to limit the number of simultaneous clients and have low keep-alive timeouts to kick off idle clients. Spawning tens of thousands of worker threads at the same time is just not an option.
It makes apache sound wank.
@rdlowrey I see you are conflating "single thread" and "single core" into one. Can't a single core have multiple threads?
user895378
@andho yes, but if two threads need to work at the same time and you only have one core then obviously it doesn't do any good to have two threads.
user895378
But like I said, you lose the event-driven advantage as soon as you hook up a PHP web SAPI to the Nginx server because PHP uses a separate process for each individual request anyway.
13:42
@rdlowrey with that logic, even a quad core is useless if you have 100 threads. But I agree with you that event-driven is much better.
@rdlowrey what about fpm
user895378
@andho It's not useless. I'm just saying that you run into system resource limitations at a far lower number of simultaneous client connections using a thread-per-client approach than with the non-blocking approach because it's not feasible to constantly spawn and kill thousands upon thousands of simultaneous threads.
user895378
@andho It helps a little, but you still tie up a full process for the life of the request.
> it doesn't do any good to have two threads.
nevermind though
user895378
@andho that has nothing to do with fpm
So... if a request comes in (not PHP) on apache it would start a new process, then close it once done. On nginx it would already have a process open and a listener would handle it and the process never really stops?
initiation dispatcher is it?
13:47
hmmm...I thought FPM had some kind of single process architecture.
user895378
@andho the PHP web SAPI still needs a single thread/process for each individual request. You run into the same resource limits because PHP.
@rdlowrey I explained to @Fabien how threads could be helpful to do a background tasks which the user doesn't need immediate feedback on. How ever, I couldn't say anything about PHP + Apache/Nginx
user895378
@andho yes, they are helpful. But that doesn't scale well because if you have 1,000 clients requesting the same resource you're now spawning an additional 1,000 background threads at the same time.
The pin board is full of fuck :/
user895378
Any time you associate a dedicated thread with a request you immediately cap how many requests you can service at the same time on a single machine.
user895378
13:50
@Fabien No, any modern apache version uses an elastic pool of threads or processes (depending on your configuration) to try to avoid having to actually create a new thread/process at the time. Nginx does everything inside a single process event loop.
What an example process?
user895378
@Fabien But apache still has to tie up one dedicated thread/process for each client where nginx never does (until it hands off the request to something like PHP)
user895378
@Fabien I don't understand what you're asking.
@Fabien Nginx uses an event loop. nginx would receive your request, send it to php, and create a callback which will send the response back to the client. But the callback is called on after the php script is finished. While the php script is running in this other process, nginx can handle another request. This is called an event loop.
user895378
^ That.
13:53
@rdlowrey thanks (to everyone else too), time to unwrap that pipe and slippers :)
user895378
pipe and slippers giant bottle of scotch
Eh.. I barely knew there was really any alteratives to Apache.. :|
/junior.
the best fastest web server in the world is G-WAN
Good morning folks!
@rdlowrey pipe and slippers and giant bottle of scotch.
13:56
@andho I'd imagine lighterweight builds like that doesn't come with the vast array of options and flags etc etc that something Apache has 'matured' to have over the years ;o
user895378
@DanLugg \o/
Now that's what I call a Wednesday afternoon
@MackieeE you have a boring (too realistic) imagination then :P
@rdlowrey @andho Ah okay I see thanks :)
@andho Hahah :D too true :(
user895378
13:58
@andho Yes, G-WAN is crazy. Of course it has the exact same limitations regarding the PHP process-per-request as the others so it doesn't make much difference for our purposes. Also, IIRC you have to output your HTTP message directly so things like header and setcookie don't work.
On the apache version of that same example it wouldn't be able to handle another request till the callback is back?
@DanLugg `i`d bd pla `d s
I don't get it
What, the actual fuck, are you talking about?
the pipes or threads?
nginx use an event loop in a **single thread** and handles concurrent operations using this construct. While apache uses multiple threads to run each request.

But as @rdlowrey says, when the request reaches php, the single threaded event loop doesn't matter because php will be spawning it's own process.

Problem, threads are limited.
14:01
@DanLugg 'pipe and slippers' & 'giant bottle of scotch'
@Fabien also, multiple threads can run at the same time, so no, apache doesn't wait for one request to finish before another can run.
@rdlowrey (Y)
so php cant handle the multiple request that would come in from nginx as it's busy processing one of the ones that came before...?
user895378
@Fabien correct.
Cheers guys, big help :)
I feel alot more wiser after sitting in here for 10 minutes.
user895378
14:03
@Fabien The takeaway is that if you're running the PHP web SAPI it's not really going to matter too much (unless your PHP code is highly optimized) if you're using apache or nginx because the number of connections the server can handle is no longer the bottleneck.
.. :|
@rdlowrey doesn't it run a separate php process for each request?
Is this a common issue language wise, if not what other languages don't have this issue?
What kind of projects/products do you even work on to even worry about such things?
Especially with PHP Anyway
is running a php process particularly heavy?
user895378
14:04
@andho Yes.
@Fabien not for it's intended use
@rdlowrey Mitigating the client-initiated renegotiation DoS vector in TLS servers - didn't we already do that?
I could swear blind we already did that, in fact.
user895378
@DaveRandom I PR'd it but it hasn't been merged and I know a lot more about the internal streams/openssl implementation now than I did then. I just want to revisit it and maybe clean up any rough edges (I haven't looked at it in months).
I remember there was a segfault issue surrounding fclose() but I thought that got fixed
user895378
Actually, I could probably do that in the coming week and just merge it myself so it's available in 5.6
user895378
14:07
Since it's the kind of thing that would be called a "security fix"
Indeed, it seems odd not to include it with all the upgrades that are coming since the bulk of the work is already done
pthreads looks confusing.
# Super Primitive Router #
$request_uri = $_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"];
$methodPath = $_SERVER["REQUEST_METHOD"] == "GET" ? "/pages/" : "/processing/";

$includePath = APP_ROOT . $methodPath . $request_uri;
if (is_dir($includePath)) $includePath .= "index";
$includePath .= ".php";
if (file_exists($includePath)) {
    require_once $includePath;
}
else {
    header("HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found");
    require_once APP_ROOT . "/pages/404.php";
}
I am ashamed. I am very very ashamed.
Super-primitive Router
Super primitive-router
BANANA!
14:21
@MadaraUchiha that perfectly php
14:35
@DanLugg ᴳᵘᵃᵛᵃˀ
14:45
E_UNICODE
good morning room 11
15:03
SPOILERS!!!!
although I'll probably forget by the time i "watch" it
11 messages moved to bin
@andho Forget what?
How can I install more locales on a linux system?
@andho I think I'll forget my name before I "watch" it.
If have some shrug-code that uses strftime and my de locale seems missing.
At the rate these spoilers are going
15:05
I used dpkg-reconfigure locales but it only generates the locales, it does not allow me to add more :/
@andho The manga is infinitely better than the anime.
@MadaraUchiha forget the spoilers
@Fabien I can't deal with black and white :/
@andho What spoilers?
@MadaraUchiha :D
@andho simply color it in your mind
15:06
@hakre not sure if it has anything to do with it, but what about sudo locale-gen de_DE?
@Ocramius Thx, I'll try that. Just learned it's ubuntu, but was looking for debian. That might be my prob.
@hakre should be the same stuff
1 000 000 rows in a mysql table is that a lot? (with 15 rows ) and only textual data
@andho I can't deal with fillers :P
@Duikboot Not in my opinion
15:08
@Duikboot Not really
When are we talking about 'a large database' then? d
( Im just calculating if my application is running for a yaer how many data their will be in the database )
I've killed tables with more rows than that
murderer
indexed through phpmyadmin too
the man likes to live life on the edge
15:10
@Duikboot Our biggest tables have about 300,000,000 records
@DaveRandom without knowing it too
Anything older than 1 year is archived monthly
Is PHPmyadmin not a good tool for working
on such large tables? ;)
15:11
@Duikboot no
Also... no
We're using Oracle 11g anyway
@Duikboot use something like MySQL workbench over an ssh tunnel
MySQL workbench is foul
Use the CLI
:/
+1
Well.. not used workbench but CLI is +1
15:11
@Suhosin haha, yeeah, sure :)
CLI is fine, but you can't really use it to develop without going crazy
I am yet to find a nice GUI in Linux
What about Sequel Pro ?
for SQL
@Ocramius I use Oracle CLI for developing all the time
@Suhosin you really love BDSM?
5
@Ocramius No, thats why I dont use workbench :P
15:13
@Suhosin you here yet?
haha
Open up an Oracle GUI tool and load a table with 200 million rows, @Ocramius
See you tomorrow when it loads :/
@Suhosin that's exactly why I moved from something like PHPMyAdmin to MySQL workbench around 7 years ago
@Fabien I fly on Thursday next week :P
15:14
I was just calculating my application in the future
when its full of records
CLI is fine, but you can't expect to manage a system like that forever
@Duikboot Premature optimization is the root of all evil
Oh for some reason I thought it was this weekend. @JoeWatkins is still going right?
55
Q: Is premature optimization really the root of all evil?

Craig DayA colleague of mine today committed a class called ThreadLocalFormat, which basically moved instances of Java Format classes into a thread local, since they are not thread safe and "relatively expensive" to create. I wrote a quick test and calculated that I could create 200,000 instances a second...

Any internals people can explain what is going on here It seems to be 'pre-compiled C' from here ?
15:28
Cache rules everything around me. :(
@Danack exactly. Via re2c tool.
@Ocramius you are my hero. :)
@bwoebi I can probably find it with a little googling - but do you know of the top of your head if re2c gets invoked during a make, or do you have to run it yourself before calling make?
@Danack just run if the tool is available; so if you've re2c installed, it's run via make.
@bwoebi cheers
user1596138
0
A: GET JSON provides two values, I want to add these two togther using php, and then return to callback

Maionchange this if ($_GET['numberofwelds'] != '' && $_GET['numberofconwelds'] != '') { $numberofwelds + $numberofconwelds = $sum_total; echo json_encode($sumtotal); } else { exit() } to this if ($numberofwelds && $numberofconwelds ) { $sum_total = array( '...

user1596138
What is this answer haha
user1596138
"Hey he's trying to do it right... I'll just tell him how someone does it the first day they write PHP."
00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

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