« first day (1237 days earlier)      last day (3940 days later) » 

00:04
hello any idea how to do a chat with cam, any reference or link will be great. is to make one to talk with my family in cuba, skype, hangout are bloked there
00:17
the videocall in facebook
00:35
@ircmaxell ext/mcrypt has awesome tests
@NikiC I detect sarcasm in that remark
@ircmaxell Yes, you do ^^
It has a huge variety of totally useless error case tests
And no actual test vectors for correct encryption
:-D
really? That's not good
perhaps I should port my RFC parsing code to use the literal RFC test cases...
The best tests it has are of the kind "Is decrypt==encrypt^-1 for this string"
well, that's actually not bad...
wait, do you mean literally xor -1?
00:39
^^
or input == decrypt(encrypt(input))?
yes
ah, that's not bad. Not complete (only tells you something isn't broken, not that it's correct)
@ircmaxell That's not bad. But having actual test vectors would be a lot more meaningful. And it's pitifully bad when considering how many other, totally useless, things are being tested
having both is even better
I use the inverse test as a quick test, and the vectors as longer tests (run at build time)
you could implement a single montecarlo test to get pretty good tests for each algo: security.stackexchange.com/questions/19557/…
00:42
Dunno, I think testing one string for one of the algorithms is pretty bad ;)
the single test specifies a key, a value, and then you loop, encrypting 10,000 times, and check if it matches
remember, the algorithm is provided by a library. Our job is not to make sure the algo is implemented correctly, but that the implementation of the library didn't screw anything up
@ircmaxell That's right
@ircmaxell That sounds nice
@NikiC it caught a bug I had in 3DES... a single run would always produce the correct value for a particular vector. But I had a bug that just wasn't hit until I put enough data through it
@ircmaxell Anyway, my main concern is not with the missing tests (I can live with that), but that the existing ones are massively duplicate. It makes trivial code changes cascade to hours of test changes, for no benefit I can see
yeah, that's most of PHP's tests in my experience
I made a 1 bit change to a PDO driver, and 300 tests blew up
00:48
Yeah, PHP has that a lot
Hello. Is prefix $2y$ for password hashes PHP and Python specific feature?
@sectus yes and no, it's a standard, but not all implementations have implemented the "y" behavior yet
@sectus No, it's just a fixed version of bcrypt (something about high-ascii chars, if I remember correclty)
for those that don't (and are NOT old versions of PHP), replacing y with a should work
@NikiC did you just re-post?
00:50
@ircmaxell huh
It's ... getting late
part of me wants to reply that both Python and Ruby are the same age (or older) than PHP... to this comment: reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/1zo50p/…
@ircmaxell , 'it's a standard' -- cannot find standard itself with "2y"
Well, standard as in there are more than a few implementations \
crypt is the library function which is used to compute a password hash that can be used to store user account passwords while keeping them relatively secure (a passwd file). The output of the function is not simply the hash— it is a text string which also encodes the salt (usually the first two characters are the salt itself and the rest is the hashed result), and identifies the hash algorithm used (defaulting to the "traditional" one explained below). This output string is what is meant for putting in a password record which may be stored in a plain text file. More formally, crypt provi...
The linkead header there has a list of the prefixes and where they're used.
Hmm, it would be nice if there was a more coherent document describing things.
I mean, not the papers describing bcrypt, but who uses what prefixes and where.
@ircmaxell the debian 5.3 doesn't have 2y, right?
01:01
@NikiC nope
redhat 5.3 does though
Hmm. If I'm reading the descriptions correctly, the hashes are hypothetically interchangeable as long as the password is 7-bit ASCII and under 72 chars in length?
Good. Not a problem here. 'Murica.
Ok, I just tried to troll someone on reddit, and OSX kernel panicked on me while typing... That's a sign :-)
@ircmaxell It seems OS X hates you as much as you hate OS X?
01:04
I always find it weird how long simple vulnerabilities survive
@ircmaxell ruby is older than PHP?
I never saw ruby before 2004-5
I know python is older
@SuhosinPony same age
@Charles well, it just doesn't want me to troll :-)
@ircmaxell Kernel panic? Such things still happen nowadays?
I don't think my Windows ever crashed in the few years I've been using it
@NikiC aparently...
@NikiC Not with a blue screen at least
Wikipedia says Ruby came about in 1993, PHP in 1994, Python in 1991.
Coulda sworn that Ruby was way, way newer than that...
01:06
I thought I read 1995
Ruby is a dynamic, reflective, object-oriented, general-purpose programming language. It was designed and developed in the mid-1990s by Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto in Japan. According to its authors, Ruby was influenced by Perl, Smalltalk, Eiffel, Ada, and Lisp. It supports multiple programming paradigms, including functional, object-oriented, and imperative. It also has a dynamic type system and automatic memory management. History Early concept Ruby was conceived on February 24, 1993. In a 1999 post to the ruby-talk mailing list, Ruby author Yukihiro Matsumoto describes some of h...
yeah, 1995
ah, conception vs release
@Charles Probably people started using it only recently.
And the time before it's used doesn't really count as released :P
@NikiC Yay, my first assigned bug ;-)
Thought python was older than that
@Jack I had to throw a coin to decide whether I should assign it to you or to @bwoebi ;)
01:10
It's fixed already, just waiting for Ferenc to give me temp karma :)
Ah, so I did assign the right person: Moar karma is always good :)
^.^
So, time to sleep, I think
later!
01:49
At @RoaveTeam, we take graceful degradation seriously! https://github.com/Roave/roave.com/issues/14
hrhr
02:11
Some idiots robbed a perfume shop 10 minutes ago, police still not arriving... I really have a home office with the view.
Oh well... good night again.
Is it just I or does PHP take a long time to fix issues?
Depends on the issue, but yes.
Shouldn't the issues be fixed quicker? I am sure people would be willing to help out if they didn't have crazy politics.
@user3148596 Probably - but there's really not that many people who are paid to work on PHP core.
02:56
Hey guys. I'm having a small issue here. pastebin.com/FW6GyuWT
just wondering what am i doing wrong
"Doesn't work" apparently your code sits around the house all day watching TV?
5
> $time_test = $steam_stats->players->player->timecreated;
depends on what's in that
@Danack. By doesn't work, it just prints nothing. Blank.
@andho, that line gives "1353709737"
@dana
@Danack, they would get a lot of more free help without the crazy politics.
@user1667191 what if you put that number into $time_test
$time_test = 1353709737;
at the top
does it still not work
03:07
that actually does work..
what if...
$steam_stats->players->player->timecreated != 1353709737
@user3148596 i) It's not politics, it's sociology aka 'group dynamics' aka people being dicks and ii) probably not. Most of the bugs that stay open for a long time aren't blocked by internals being a shit show, they're just sat there because debugging c code sucks.
@Danack, I'd be happy to debug the C code if I knew the patches would be applied and not have arguments over why the bug should stay in the program...
@user3148596 If you have something you want PR'd there are people in here who can accept them.
@Danack, cool. Glad to know where to go.
03:16
@HamZa wanna add those to the canonical links file?
user895378
03:37
@user3148596 Bug fixes don't have politics.
user895378
But like @Danack said: if you have a legitimate bug report + a legitimate PR there will be people in this room who can fast-track its inclusion.
Apart from when it's scary - github.com/php/php-src/pull/588/files
user895378
Well ... problems can arise when the people here don't have any familiarity with the extension you're PRing against :)
user895378
I have a memory leak bug in ext/phar to report myself. Just haven't gotten around to it.
@rdlowrey And all the people who do have familiarity (and who wrote re2c) no longer do PHP.
user895378
03:44
@Danack The PR is against master. Is this something you were hoping to get into 5.6?
@rdlowrey I probably ought to get on IRC and hassle people about it. To be honest - I kind of no longer care. That fix is required to allow composer to archive packages that have utf-8 filenames in a package.
user895378
However for various reasons, I'm not using composer to generate the packages. But it probably ought to be done.
user895378
I assume you only want to merge those last few commits? The ones you did, right?
user895378
(my recent work has made me hyper OCD about PR commit/branch accuracy)
03:47
@rdlowrey yes - I think that's just github being rubbish. Looking at the files changed doesn't show those other commmits.
also the only source code change is:
+MB2 = ([\xC0-\xDF][\x80-\xBF]);
+MB3 = ([\xE0-\xEF][\x80-\xBF]{2});
+MB4 = ([\xF0-\xF7][\x80-\xBF]{3});
everything else is either a test, or generated code from re2c.
I'll jump on IRC tomorrow to try to find people who are brave enough to pull it.
user895378
I don't mind helping -- that's why I'm asking questions :)
@rdlowrey nah - it needs someone who knows what was going on with unicode during the phar development. Half of the phar unit tests have a 'skip if not php 6' line in them, and the code is written as if:
.* will match unicode chars.
user895378
> skip if not php 6
user895378
sigh
Also, I spoke to david shavik at the phpuk conference, he's the guy who did the original userland phar implementation. He couldn't see anything wrong with it, but still didn't want to commit to saying it was ok.
user895378
03:51
@Danack To improve your chances I would consider starting a new branch against the current PHP-5.6 and cherry-pick only those commits of yours into it and do a new PR.
user895378
Little things like that matter when trying to convince people to work on things.
user895378
@Danack Problems like the one you're fixing are why it's extremely important for people to add good tests for their functionality. If you're confident that you've fully exercised the code in tests then people don't have to know everything about the extension to refactor or fix bugs -- they can simply rely on tests passing to know they haven't broken something.
user895378
It's frustrating that these don't always exist.
user895378
None of the existing TLS stream stuff had tests when I started working on it :(
@rdlowrey Not sure what's going on with github. It looks like it's applying other people's commits over mine, even though those commits aren't in my fork, and so shouldn't possibly be in the PR - github.com/Danack/php-src/commits/multiBytePhar
user895378
03:58
Yeah, like I said ... I'd just do a clean branch against php-src's current 5.6 and git cherry-pick the specific commits from your branch into that then PR the new branch.
user895378
Merge commit weirdness can cause problems.
Yeah - I'll try to grab someone on IRC.
@rdlowrey Also - if I'm not on SO for a week or so, I think it will be worth it: stackoverflow.com/questions/22197236/…
user895378
lol
\o/
user895378
definitely worth it.
04:09
 
2 hours later…
06:23
folks, I need some help. stackoverflow.com/questions/4595964/who-needs-singletons is closed and was deleted yesterday. I spoke to my fellow mods and they undeleted it now. But we should clean it up to make it less open ended. Anyone can help with that?
@Gordon what do you mean "to make it less open ended" ?
@AlmaDo make it somehow more fit to your question rules
while at the same time make it fit the answers
morning room
@Gordon hm. if about my questions - it's simple. 3 parts. "The problem"- full description of use-case, circumstances and entire context. "My approach" - my attempts to resolve the problem. "The question" - short question and description of what I need and where I'm stuck
hi, @JoeWatkins
06:33
@NikiC Oh, no, I lost! Which bug were we talking about?
Ah that bug… okay, your decision was right^^
07:32
@bwoebi ;-)
morning
Morning.
Hi guys, I need to know which is the exact page that renders wordpress posts on homepage. Don't feel like this is a "QUESTION" that should be posted.
THANKS!
Mroignn
@Gordon Well, question is too broad. Also new answers won't give too much value. So why is it a problem if question stays closed?
08:06
@phpdbg
1 tweets, 0 followers, following 1 users
who dat
lol
he/she only follows rasmus ... hmm
Hmm, what does Unicode really mean :)
inorite, they registered months ago, but I can't find out who it is ... we got this email, from php-debugger.com/dbg when we first started the project asking us to change the name because lots of people own it and have done for 15 years
this is obviously a stupid request, so I promptly ignored it, and figured it was actually them ...
but now they retweeted my last tweet about phpdbg
lots of people own it ... own what?
the name php dbg
srsly
08:10
but that software has about ten names, and none of them are phpdbg ... so fuck 'em ...
yeah apparently nusphere own it ...
phpEd? What's that? Lol
I 'uno
Gooood morning
It's the day before rebacca's day. Remember that!
moin :)
Rebacca? Is that Chewbacca's sister?
08:34
@crypticăƒ„ wooot totally forgot about it ...
-1
A: MVC Framework for PHP

user3004356I would suggest Yii framework.

o.0" ... I reject your reality.
for opencart, in admin/config.php, i've changed DB_DRIVER from mysql to mysqli but it didnt work, how to switch from mysql to mysqli?
Unicode really means another thing to disagree on.
@Jack That sounds rather not thoughtful.
tell me about it.
08:44
@TheLuckyGoof There is no "mysqli" driver.
since mysqli is an extension and not a DB type
@HamZa thanks how can i switch it mysql to mysqli I'm caught by this error.. Deprecated: mysql_connect(): The mysql extension is deprecated and will be removed in the future: use mysqli or PDO instead in C:\xampp\htdocs\open_cart_1\system\database\mysql.php on line 6
@TheLuckyGoof Check if opencart supports mysqli otherwise you have to change a lot of things
they have given mysql, mysqli, pdo, mmsql, postgre in system\database
@HamZa they support i believe
a quick search but you should know better since i've never worked with opencart
@HamZa it has worked thanks i was trying same by changing mysql to mysqli instead of mysql_i
08:56
Morning
hihi
@TheLuckyGoof just ignore the error, PHP wont remove the extension any time soon
but opencart will update eventually
error_reporting(E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED);
@Petah yeah its always an option :P but to update myself to the standards set :)
but you don't control opencart
so anything you do will be in vain
just wait, they will update it
ignore it until they do
nothing will stop working
any way you are not gaining anything from a straight switch, opencart should really implement a db abstraction layer
09:19
I am getting this below line in email and email reached to spam box .....
2.4 BAD_CREDIT BODY: Eliminate Bad Credit
what does this mean?
you have been hacked?
though the email body I sent didn't have this wording are these words from any spam checker ?
it sounds like your server is compromised
what is the URL?
Does anybody use sass?
Morning, btw
i use scss exclusively
and compass/susy too
09:26
And what's your experience so far?
@Leri I use SASS
I don't like how it sounds
@Fabien Ho well is it supported?
@AlmaDo -.-
Quite well I would imagine. But there's not really much to it. It's only there to compile everything in to one css file
:Ь
09:35
I use FireShell's setup for it.
@Fabien Well, I want option to avoid writing javascript (and by avoiding I mean not using at all) for visual manipulations. Is SASS an option for that?
What do you mean by visual manipulations?
> When employing this encryption function [author talks about sha1], PHP will convert a supplied string value to a 40- character hexadecimal number. This is known as one-way encryption because there is really no way to reverse the encryption once it is done (but of course that is the whole point).
How correct is terminology used here? ^ /me looks @ircmaxell
@Leri sass is just a css precompiler
@Fabien All that animation stuff.
09:39
@Leri wrong its called hashing, not encryption
@Leri as @Petah mentioned it's just for CSS. So not really what you're after i am guessing.
unless you only want to support modern browsers with css animations
In which case its good for helping you organise and quickly write css.
@Petah I won't care anything below IE 10.
which yes
very good
if not the best
09:41
If it's just CSS3 animations then there's nothing SASS will do additional but still using it is beneficial.
$ sass --watch scss:css
@Leri there is a few plugins for sass that make animations easier, including compass compass-style.org and the animation plugin rubygems.org/gems/animation
Thanks @Fabien, @Petah. I really suck at writing css, so I guess, I go with sass to get it done easier. That's what I wanted to know before getting started.
you still need to know css to write sass
I suck != I can't. :D
you just need to know less about browser inconsistencies
but yea, i dont write anything in css anymore
09:45
yo
gurt
@Leri SASS will make working with CSS feel a little less boring/crappy. Well worth it. Checkout that FireShell thing I linked.
It's a good start if you're building something new
also if you want to know how to write good css, look up bem bem.info
(block element modifier)
@Fabien Cool, I have not tried anything really new for a while. Thanks.
@NikiC Thanks for the crypto links.
09:51
@Petah Looks interesting read.
@Leri was it you that said if pthreads wasn't so fussy with references you'd use it ??
it was you, or someone else, but I forgot who ...
you'll probably remember, right ?
@JoeWatkins I was saying, if pthreads did not have problems caused by php's gc, I'd actively use it.
If you talk about that, then yes, it was me.
gist: Pooling, 2014-03-06 07:50:05Z
4
Gawd, Lester uses too many question marks.
oooh, fancy gist links
09:55
mornings
@JoeWatkins They finally fixed it!
That's been an outstanding "bug" for f*cking ages
I like ...
I'd probably like it more if single file gists were embedded in the page ....
@JoeWatkins You have just called me an idiot. :p
Seriously, sounds great. I'll play around once I am home.
09:58
@Leri :)
moin @Jimbo
mornign @Jimbo
Was php6 supposed to work in a way whereby strlen($s) would work differently depending on how you initialized the string?
Sorry, work in the same way but how each character is determined would be diff.
@JoeWatkins They were, and that was the problem. Well actually the problem is that they tended to fill the page, they weren't pegged back to a sane size like e.g. questions oneboxes are
@JoeWatkins gist.github.com/krakjoe/9384409#destruction unsetting seems bad practice suggestion.
@Leri I'm not really suggesting it, just documenting __destruct ...
10:04
@Jack That whole thread is making me question the general idea of native unicode support
It just doesn't seem like there is an even theoretically possible implementation that will actually make sense and be useful to everyone
will change wording, ta
It's definitely a complex matter.
I think that bringing mbstring (or a similar API) and/or intl (or similar API) into ext/standard would be sufficient
@JoeWatkins :)
In terms of api I don't like the fragmentation of simple string functions into two camps.
10:06
Of course, all of this would be much simpler if we had a String object...
A bit simpler.
Can just make your own String object with validation in setters :P
I think the proposal before was a difference between b'binary' and u'unicode' as string initialisers.
$foo = "A unicode string";
$foo->setCharset('utf-8');
$graphemes = $foo->getNumberOfGraphemes();
$codePoints = $foo->getNumberOfCodePoints();
$bytes = $foo->getNumberOfBytes();
var_dump($bytes === strlen($foo)); // bool(true)
i.e. all existing string functions work on bytes, all unicode shiz is methods on the string
@DaveRandom and all of /Zend and /main and /SAPI .... and then any extensions that use system string functions ...
(where setCharset() defines what the engine thinks it already is and toCharset() does conversions)
we don't want this, I don't know why it's being discussed like it's a good idea, it is not a good idea ...
name for me an insurmountable problem that relates to unicode character sets, that isn't completely stupid, and I'll agree that we should introduce unicode at the level of the engine, until then, we shouldn't, and cannot afford too ...
@JoeWatkins This. Also, as someone who frequently deals with binary data, I don't want that nagging fear that the engine is going to do something stupid and suddenly think my string is an invalid text string
@JoeWatkins Setting flags, options, passing additional parameters, etc, creates really big clutter at the end. :)
your code is cluttered ?
10:14
No, but I've seen/refactored lots of them at my prev job.
yay :D
yeah this is the place .. what u need idiot alma — Soombina kundi 36 secs ago
we cannot offset what this will cost us, it is as simple as that, tidy your shit together, don't make the rest of us pay for it ... and I don't mean you personally, I mean anyone that's in the group of people thinking theres some sensible way for this to happen, there is not ... I thought there was ... there's a possibility that we could have taken one of these tiny base implementations that exist in the wild and moulded into something so tightly integrated with zend that we would have a
fighting chance of offsetting the cost of the added complexity ...
but the idea was immediately snubbed, there is no grafting something like ICU onto your application without it costing you a considerable overhead, and we cannot afford it ...
that guy has another brilliant answer stackoverflow.com/a/22221091/2637490 :D
@JoeWatkins Indeed. I've been reading the ICU docs recently and it's such a huge swiss-army-knife that it just doesn't make sense in the core. It's great, but it's not a base for anything, it already is a thing
10:20
@JoeWatkins Honestly, I don't care much where unicode is handled. However, imho, supporting one at engine level will reduce bad code that would make php community look better..
you interface with it, you do it well, you do it like every other extension we have ...
I feel really proud when I see people up-vote this. I have saved one more soul. :)
we have a perfectly good OO layer, so does it, every other extension just interfaces with the library they require, there's no compelling reason to be different for this, but plenty to resist ...
@Leri I find the same for this:
17
A: Can someone explain the /e regex modifier?

Suhosin PonyThe e Regex Modifier in PHP with example vulnerability & alternatives What e does, with an example... The e modifier is a deprecated regex modifier which allows you to use PHP code within your regular expression. This means that whatever you parse in will be evaluated as a part of your program....

Already upvoted that one ages ago stop spamming for moar :P
10:24
@SuhosinPony +1 Awesome answer.
Thanks @Leri
Yours too
So many examples
@JoeWatkins The thing is, the "string object" would make all this nice and sensible and clean for the people who never use it, because until you actually do something to it that is explicitly text-driven, it's nothing more than a char *
you mean a UnicodeString or UString object ... if we have a String object it should be a normal string ...
10:40
UString extends String ... :)
/**
 * Magic setter
 *
 * All the defined properties are read-only and expando properties are bad design.
 * If you provoked this exception, either fix your code or extend this class.
 * If you were thinking of altering this class to do what you want, go read about
 * SOLID and pay particular attention to the Open/Closed principle
 *
 * @throws IdiotException
 */
/**
 * Magic unsetter
 *
 * See docblock for __set(), and also know that unsetting object properties is *terrible*
 * design and grounds for people doing nasty things to you.
 *
 * @throws IdiotException
 */
finally! someone gets it!
@JoeWatkins That's a better object model. Kludging it all into one class lets you create one silently from string literals/user input though...
ext/string makes sense ...
however I'm not so worried ...
most of that, is crazy talk ...
yeah, that's plain scary ... horrifying even.
how many core devs actually have the time for that?
I can hardly keep up with the T_POW bugs ... haha
@JoeWatkins Lacks what I want the most.. Expression trees in userland...
facebook took multiple years to write a usable JIT and they have what amounts to unlimited resources, we do not ...
I have no idea why you would need I/O threads, talk of a threaded vm is nonsense, difficult to realise and I'm not doing it because I'm not allowed to expose it to userland, so it would also be next to pointless (talk of a gc thread is just ... no words, unbelievably stupid)
I don't know what BC() is, the engine doesn't actually retain BC with anything, why would it, it doesn't need to be compatible with a past version of itself, there's like 2 places where we do weird stuff t
I'm all up for making big, important changes ... but I literally can't make sense out of those ideas ...
10:55
Optimising and tweaking AST takes time, I suppose.
Not sure how many optimisations have been made to the current parser.
you don't optimize parsing, you optimize compilation, I'm up for integration of opcache, but it kind of works because it happens after parsing and so the initial compilation, we're not really talking about integration of opcache but taking it apart and squeezing it's component parts where they don't belong ... it's existed for a very very long time, I see no good reason to change how it works really ...
it's difficult to optimize what doesn't exist, we first need a look at it before we can optimize anything, opcache does a perfectly good job as far as I'm concerned ...
Felipe spends a lot of time on things like AST and parsers, he tells me that it cannot reasonably be done, we cannot make a soley AST based parser as fast as the one we have now ...
Oh right, sorry, wrong term . I did mean compilation heh
A slow compiler must come together with a great optimizer ;-)

« first day (1237 days earlier)      last day (3940 days later) »