« first day (1277 days earlier)      last day (3898 days later) » 

21:00
@JoeWatkins Well, there are things that do need refactoring. Such as the hash table API, just due to the inconsistency
ah yeah, I'm sure there are multiple things like that .... but I'm thinking more along the lines of, lets write the executor, or extension api, or compiler in another language, or another parser, or another anything ... the core parts of the engine I don't think it's sensible to want to change ...
Also, we will probably never update to a newer C standard because compilers (notably Microsoft compilers).
So if we move to a newer standard, ever, it will likely be C++ something or other.
Hasn't been online for 4-5 months.
the compiler could be improved on it's own, that doesn't bar an ast compiler, but it would have to fit into that existing economy as the current one does ... compiler is bad example probably ... engine as a whole is better one ...
@TOOTSKI Averages 180 rep per day doing nothing ^^
21:04
@JoeWatkins Well... the parser / compiler would be easier to extend if it was C++...
@LeviMorrison He won the Stackoverflow game ^^
@JoeWatkins And possibly the executor itself (the VM)... Just by enabling the VM to be polymorphic
@ircmaxell I would love to believe that ... like we both agreed though, spinning wheels isn't it ?? by what avenue would the compiler / parser be improved, and why is that avenue not open to us in C ?? I think for us to change the vm we'd need more than possibly, I'd want to see a proof of concept of that, such a poc would need a vast amount of work to bring it up to scratch ... it's not like any old implementation is faster ...
@JoeWatkins Well, the parser / compiler would be improved because it could be ported to a cleaner AST based structure
you cant have a pure C ast !?
21:10
554
A: What's the best method for sanitizing user input with PHP?

troelsknIt's a common misconception that user input can be filtered. PHP even has a (now deprecated) "feature", called magic-quotes, that builds on this idea. It's nonsense. Forget about filtering (Or cleaning, or whatever people call it). What you should do, to avoid problems is quite simple: Whenever ...

What to do? Outdated and false.
@TOOTSKI Bounty with a notice "outdated answers"?
@JoeWatkins I've never seen one. People always use C++ for this, it seems.
@JoeWatkins you definitely can, but it's much harder
@HamZa Too poor for that,
@LeviMorrison PHP has one
21:11
yes it does ...
@TOOTSKI ask the rich guys lol
295
Q: PHP tutorial that is security-, accuracy- and maintainability-conscious?

bobinceColleagues often ask me: “bobince”, they say*, “I want to learn PHP, but I know you're always ranting on about poor code which is full of errors and security holes. That's why I normally don't like talking to you really. But, I'm looking to learn PHP now and I'd like to be able to write good code...

7 delete votes, help out, plx.
@JoeWatkins lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_ast.c#105 <-- that's the kind of thing you get with C AST though. Rather than polymorphic, you get huge unmaintainable switch statements (note @bwoebi this isn't a knock against your code, but a knock against the tools C gives you for the problem)
yeah my eyes are drawn to it too ...
21:15
@ircmaxell that was dmitrys idea! … I know, but it's the best we can do with C…
still if ast usurped the current compiler wouldn't the generation of that take on the same form as the vm does now ?
@bwoebi Oh, it solves the problem very well, given the constraints of the tools you have at your disposal
@JoeWatkins the end assembler code would look fairly similar (in gross handwavy terms), but the code itself would look much cleaner and more segmented
@ircmaxell lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/… that was my initial version… giving a callback… Was that much worse back then?
so then if the only benefit is at development time, we should consider that if we did have a C++ based anything, how many hands could work on it ... I mean realistically how many hands could really work on it ...
@bwoebi honestly, I like that better. There may be slight performance overhead to it (due to multiple function calls, since it can't be inlined)
21:19
I like it better too ...
@bwoebi hell, it's 1/3 the code. Is that feature complete?
I was not sure about what was really better and just trusted Dmitry…
yeah well you don't really get a choice in the matter if you want your patch to be merged at all ...
@JoeWatkins I think that's a red-herring argument, since if you are able to build a clean abstraction, it will actually open the door to more programmers who are currently getting lost in the macro-hell that is Zend.
@ircmaxell actually it missed a few features, but nothing what 50 lines more couldn't have done I assume…
@bwoebi fair enough
@TOOTSKI done … that was fast these 10 votes
@bwoebi thanks :)))
@bwoebi Well, pedantically, you could have written it to be generated out. So you maintain the first way, and then generate the second. Best of both worlds (clean, maintainable code and optimized runtime)
21:21
@ircmaxell actually we will see when we implement AST in PHP6 for real use…
well just trying to be practical really, we have mostly people that identify as C programmers first and foremost don't we ? but what you say is right, there probably are people standing in the wings that would be happier if the grass was a bit greener :D
@bwoebi Well, 1) will that really happen? 2) Will you not use C++ at all, or will we keep faking C++ features in C instead...?
I see that with the constant scalar operations more like a try about the feasibility of ASTs in php-src :-)
@ircmaxell what do you mean with faking? What sort of preprocessor abuse do you mean?
@JoeWatkins Well, and don't forget, we don't need to use confusing C++ features all over. We can keep it pretty sane and make it quite easy for C devs to keep up
@bwoebi implementing polymorphism via function pointers and switch statements or manual inlining, instead of using a language that gives you those features in the beginning...
@ircmaxell actually function pointers are not really faking C++…
but no, I surely won't use C++.
21:25
I'm gone, night guys.
If we'd switch to C++ we might end up like HHVM (code wise) when we patch the single replacements on top on the others.
@bwoebi @JoeWatkins I'm offended ^
@bwoebi they aren't, using a mix of function pointers, switch statements and manual inlines (not that we done that) to fake polymorphism is ...
Huh? @bwoebi can you explain what "we might end up like HHVM" means?
21:27
@JoeWatkins still… I need to talk with Nikita when the time comes to think about realisation…
@bwoebi try not to be so rigid, I'll use C++ if the need calls for it, best advice is learn it, do something with it, something proper, then decide when you'll use it ...
@ircmaxell I said code wise… I find their core code absolutely unreadable ^^
And I am not suggesting borrowing a single line from HHVM, just using a sane tool for the problem at hand...
This article will help to choose which one to use. If you consider performance this might help you chose. — ravz Nov 28 '12 at 11:48
@ircmaxell me neither…
21:28
Pointing to my article... someone better delete it fast :D
@Gordon ^ Use the force. (if you can)
@bwoebi: to be fair, most people find php-src to be totally unreadable. Don't judge the unknown based on how well you know something else.
someone should write a phpdbg answer for that ...
I love the references in Silicon Valley, the scala-java snark.
@JoeWatkins Either to reopen it, and then you could write it, or... delete it.
I find it pretty unreadable too, and I do read C++ projects and have contributed complex code to them, as complex as the stuff I write for php ...
21:30
@Joe do you think that's because of the language, or how they have implemented it?
how they've implemented it definitely ...
So that makes it a non-argument, right?
I was just agreeing that it's unreadable from my perspective too ... not that it was a reflection of C++ at all, I used the only file bob has read as an example of why arguments on the left are silly ;)
I sometimes just like C just because of its simplicity… A few tools, enough to do everything. And then C++ is sometimes just overkill.
C++ is like using Zend Framework 2 when I have the possibility to just write my own nice PHP code.
Well, we're talking about building the core of a multiple million line of code language, not a hello world app
21:35
@ircmaxell You all know Daniels webserver… it's written in pure PHP. It don't understand everything at the first glance but it is just nice code.
And using C++ in php-src feels for me like using React in that webserver.
umm...
ah okay
so, there are no parts you wouldn't write as C ?
@JoeWatkins Not really.
really ?
yes
21:39
well it's more like that anyway ... react doesn't do anything that php can't ...
C++ does things C cannot
@TOOTSKI got an interview :D
I don't think it's overkill, I see that there are benefits to be had ... but I'm not sure it's enough, and nobody has proved it ... I like the idea of a php-src that can have bits in C++ if that provides some benefit but that keeps everything else the same, keeps extensions working, keeps developers working too ...
@Axel Awesome, congrats :)
@JoeWatkins C++ has a few syntactical features more, but C still can do everything. It maybe just needs another logic to do it as good as in C++.
21:40
I dont see that there is anything prohibiting bits being C++ now
other than some silly unwritten rule somewhere, technically you can have c++ now I think ...
C relies on the programmer doing everything would be more precise
We could also have done c++ in 1995
this is the cause of a hella lot of bugs, programmers not taking care of their own shit ...
eih
@bwoebi C can do everything that C++ can do, in the same way that brainfuck can do everything that C++ can do. That doesn't make it efficient, clean or the right choice
@JoeWatkins portability. Some of the embedded platform PHP currently "supports" don't have a C++ compiler...
I've never managed to compile on an embedded platform without modifying the makefile ...
next ...
if we support embedded platforms we do it terribly
21:43
@JoeWatkins I'm not arguing. Just throwing out one reason people always bring up
I wasn't aware we did, thought it was normal to have to modify the makefile ...
wonder if any of those people ever actually tried :D
@ircmaxell please do file I/O with brainfuck :-D || … || Actually I'd use the easiest way… which I see in using C. C++ makes thinking more complicated… it just has the ability to hide much more side effects you don't notice via destructors etc…
@bwoebi Brainfuck is turing complete.
@ircmaxell People deploying on embedded software are often in the practice of compiling on another machine anyway.
@bwoebi talk to @NikiC about that. He'll most definitely disagree strongly
21:45
@ircmaxell That's like always a subjective thing…
@LeviMorrison No, meaning that the target build platform doesn't have a C++ compiler for it.
These are just things where one has to agree to disagree…
@bwoebi unfortunately, no, we cannot agree to disagree, because a decision has to be made about which language to write the bloody thing in. So no, passivism won't win...
boolean world ... always ...
@ircmaxell just use C, it's compatible to C++. (mostly)
21:47
And while this discussion is ultimately pointless in this context and time, the ultimate one is not
every time this discussion happens I move closer to doing something ... code or stfu drives me ... if we could see any aspect of this in action we would be getting somewhere ...
> Description on booking.com is not fair...not true !!
Sorry, but had to share.
those people on those embedded platforms can shut their whining mouths and get a proper cpu and build environment ...
I wonder how much effort it would be to come up with a poc vm ...
@JoeWatkins that's a dangerous line to flirt with. We've seen time and time again, all code and no planning causes a ton of people a ton of pain (look at the quality of internals now). All planning and no code is just as problematic (or worse, as you literally never get anywhere). The best course of action is a mix thereof...
@JoeWatkins I'm not sure if I'd start with the VM... I think I'd rather start with the parser and compiler (outputting in the end the same opcode array)
it would be rude to stop a conversation before it starts ... I would never do that ... but erect code or stfu as a barrier to stop the story telling monkey inside me running amock ...
my drive to do anything for the compiler depends upon the executor having the same kind of extensibility such that the only reason that I am considering this - extension of the language externally - could be an actual reality in every way ...
21:53
@JoeWatkins eih, I've seen "Code or STFU" go wrong so many times, that it really feels like a pretty major problem to me. Every time I see it, I see it as a failure in the outer community, and a band-aid on a gunshot wound
@JoeWatkins fair enough...
but the executor is basically already extensible like that (although in a more hacky way)
@ircmaxell the userdefined opcodes?
no it's not, the only time a vm opcode can be assigned an id is during generation of zend_vm_execute.h ... so ... never ...
@bwoebi well, user defined opcode handler
@JoeWatkins users can't add new opcodes. But without a polymorphic compiler, you could never actually generate a new opcode in the first place...
that's true
but just one extension can use that at the same time…
21:55
so the starting place is ... everything...
great ...
@bwoebi different extensions can override different core opcodes
@JoeWatkins No, I think enabling the compiling from AST would be HUGE
We have learned in the last few years that the people who come up with great APIs and the people who can code them well are not usually the same people.
I don't like code or stfu at all, especially since I'm usually on the code side at work and I see other coders ignoring users' opinions.
as extensions could then at least do AST transformations (inline code, etc). They could almost act like a pre-processor if you will...
@ircmaxell core opcodes yes, and introducing new ones? manipulating the oparray (erealloc+memmove())?
@bwoebi you can do that today. It's not clean, but it's possible. Manipulating the op-array between parse and compile is not possible today, because they are not separate steps
21:58
no, but between compile and VM
@bwoebi which cuts out a ton of interesting opportunities. As by the time it's compiled, a lot of stuff becomes enormously more difficult
ah ya, pass_two… actually zend_extensions can intercept the op_array just before pass_two
fair enough, however the parser actually does a significant amount of compiling (via direct compiler calls from the parser file)...
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm very aware that driven in the right way, I can write as much code in an hour as a lot of programmers would write in a few days, and it'll work perfectly well ... so, I like to talk about this stuff to a point, but then there comes a point that if I get into this discussion in a months time, I'll have spent longer discussing it than it would take me to see the facts of the matter ...
We need a clean split between front end and back end.
22:01
@LeviMorrison ++
@ircmaxell well… that the ast can solve…
@bwoebi which is exactly my point. There's a significant thing that you just can't do today with the current parser. But you can do with a refactored one. And you can't say that about the VM (refactoring makes the VM easier to extend, but it's still possible to do most of it anyway already)
@bwoebi this is actually extremely awkward, not least of all not enough ZEND_API exists to actually manipulate an op array from an extension ...
also: your patch to support keywords would have been much easier to implement at an AST level... (possibly at least)
/me is out ... lata chaps ...
22:04
I dunno. To me, the AST is the more interesting conversion with the least unknowns. The VM migration is interesting, but IMHO less useful (without AST first)
peace, me too actually. Later
@JoeWatkins goodnight, take rest, some smoke too :P
@ircmaxell yes and I'll have that one in my head when discussing about the implementation of the AST
@ircmaxell I totally agree.
@JoeWatkins jup, we actually have it to write our own functions…
22:21
I'm learning PHP, and was wondering if mysqli_connect was safe to use? I think you can also do it via PDO and just using mysql
PDO is the best solution for connections
When I do this $conn = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test', $username, $password); I get Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'PDOException' with message 'could not find driver' Any ideas?
@Colourity Install the pdo_mysql driver or upgrade to postgres
I can't seem to find the pdo_mysql driver online. Any where I can find it?
How did you install php?
22:28
@Colourity You don't find it online, you find it as part of your PHP installation. How did you install... aaand PeeHaa snipes me.
I have it pre-installed on my Mac. I just use sudo php -S localhost:80 -t
I think I used MacPorts to update to php 5.5
@Colourity Do you have pdo_mysql.so wherever that mac thing puts the extensions?
So a brief poke at the macports site suggests that you just need to install the 'php55-mysql' package, as that also bundles the PDO driver.
Alright. I can't seem to find the file, so I used phpinfo() and PDO drivers have no value. So I probably don't have it installed.
Hold on. Is this supposed to be coming from PHP or MySQL?
22:35
I just used binary notation in PHP. This was my first time doing that. I wasn't even sure if PHP had binary notation when I wrote it but it ran as expected, so yay!
Yay!
Bugs are hard.
22:54
@TOOTSKI what the.. why the name change? lol
23:17
What I'd love to see is some kind of front end that uses an AST that can export it to PHP-land in a good way. This could enable people to write some pretty powerful tools with good accuracy. @JoeWatkins @ircmaxell @bwoebi @BenjaminGruenbaum
Specifically I'm think of code quality tools at the moment.
@LeviMorrison you mean something like token_get_all, just fit together into an AST?
hello :)
@bwoebi Well, as you can imagine something much better than token_get_all but yeah ^^
@LeviMorrison yes, reaching a certain state in the process and then abort and export the actual state… that's it…
but to do this it'd be easier to just first implement the whole AST thingy and add that n top of it.
@LeviMorrison yeah, basically build-in nikic's parser to the core... Well... actually, no, I don't like that
the only problem there, is that it's not future proof. Nikic's parser can parse PHP 5.5 syntax on 5.3, but that sort of system wouldn't be able to...
unless PHP provides the array, and user-land parsers provide a polyfill to generate the same tree for other code...

« first day (1277 days earlier)      last day (3898 days later) »