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00:00
1420				if ((fetch_type & ZEND_FETCH_CLASS_SILENT) == 0 && !EG(exception)) {
(gdb) step
1421					if ((fetch_type & ZEND_FETCH_CLASS_MASK) == ZEND_FETCH_CLASS_INTERFACE) {
(gdb) print fetch_type
$1 = 0
Uh-oh.
Oh.
@LeviMorrison ZEND_FETCH_CLASS doesn't pass the flags when fetching by name. I wonder if that's the issue.
Yep! That fixes it.
@LeviMorrison In ZEND_FETCH_CLASS in Zend/zend_vm_def.h, change zend_fetch_class_by_name(Z_STR_P(class_name), opline->op2.zv + 1, 0 TSRMLS_CC); to zend_fetch_class_by_name(Z_STR_P(class_name), opline->op2.zv + 1, opline->extended_value TSRMLS_CC);:)
(If you're still there)
@LeviMorrison Fixed in master: github.com/php/php-src/commit/… ^^
00:23
protected $__ajax = FALSE;
protected $__json = FALSE;
aside from stupid name and uppercase, is __ acceptable?
@webarto Isn't __ reserved for PHP?
For methods at least.
@webarto I would say no. As @AndreaFaulds mentioned __ is reserved for PHP methods
And more importantly it doesn't really add any value or clarity to the property names
https://pixel.facebook.com/ajax/nectar.php?asyncSignal=487&__user=1368368917&s=1415060672919
It is just two extra characters I have to parse and wonder about when I read the code
Notice the __ in user, that's just example, many are named like that.
00:25
@webarto it doesn't add anything...PHP has proper visibility flags....that comes from Javascript where you need to define private stuff by 'convention'.
Aha!
@AndreaFaulds @cspray @Danack Much appreciated.
Also, that link is dead for me.
@Danack Python has the _ convention
Also not a real language.
I KEED, I KEED.
00:26
But for JS it makes no sense: With closures, you can have private properties.
@AndreaFaulds It makes sense for JS 'classes'.
@Danack Not... really.
@AndreaFaulds Makes more sense than this
@webarto That's probably a PHP4 artefact, if you are looking at an old codebase
@Danack It was a reasonable decision for Crockford to make, look at the madness in PHP with docblocks :/
00:33
This is similar to that setcookie issue on internals.....the way to fix people doing stupid things is to tell stupid people they're being stupid; rather than trying to make it impossible for stupid people to do stupid things. Not having comments in JSON seriously sucks for any place it's used in anything other than an ephemeral format. e.g. composer.
That fact that I can't comment why a particular version of a library can't be used in an application is just massively dumb.
And yes I hate annotations with the heat of a thousand suns - I still don't want to block idiots from using them though.
Allowing idiots free reign can undermine the success of something
One distinguishing feature of JSON is it is versionless, there is only one JSON
@AndreaFaulds They can only undermine themselves, not other people....
@Danack Not at all
If JSON becomes fragmented, it becomes useless
Also, as Crockford correctly notes, nothing stops you from allowing comments by stripping them yourself
@AndreaFaulds Yea, but that's not very portable is it?
I think the decision made sense when the idea is that JSON is just a payload to share data between two systems. It just makes JSON a subpar configuration option imo
@cspray Which is the point. A normal JSON parser will reject it. Which means processing directives can't go there.
00:41
@AndreaFaulds And I get that but just have the standard not include processing directives
I mean, using the same argument can't you go ahead and do that now?
@cspray That's the problem, though
Comments allow you to stick in processing directives
@cspray No: The parser doesn't ignore anything in the file
There's nowhere to hide things
@AndreaFaulds No....it previously allowed comments....people who didn't want to support annotation could just not use a JSON parser that understood annotations. But now JSON doesn't support comments at all, so even if I want to use comments now, no one else can parse the json I'm using. It changes it from being the stupid people being allowed to use comments for annotations and putting them outside the standard version, to making people
who want to use comments for comments being outside the standard version.
> No....it previously allowed comments....people who didn't want to support annotation could just not use a JSON parser that understood annotations.
Ahahaha
Interoperability doesn't work like that
@AndreaFaulds Yes it does....Look at the PHP source situation. I can run code that has annotations - and PHP just ignores those annotations.
@AndreaFaulds I wasn't there, no ^^
00:48
It's only if I choose to parse the annotations that they do anything.
@Danack These aren't annotations that do nothing
The problem was annotations that changed how the JSON was parsed
@LeviMorrison ? EDIT: Oh.
I don't care what they did...I wouldn't have used them in my JSON.
@Danack That's not the problem.
It's not you
It's everyone else, who's an idiot
Who's giving you broken, non-interoperable JSON
That is not a problem that crockford should have been trying to solve. If someone gives me some broken JSON, that is the problem that needs to be fixed by the dumb person giving me broken JSON.
No, it is a problem
00:52
You can't fix stupid......
4
If JSON isn't interoperable, it's useless
Valid JSON is interoperable. If it's got some custom crap in there it's not interoperable....
It's all very well and good to say you can let idiots be idiots, but in the real world, things don't work like that
https://github.com/cocur/nqm/pull/1
00:52
@Danack Which is the problem.
You're allowing custom crap.
"in the real world, things don't work like that" Yes it does....let smart people get on and do smart things....don't bother trying to stop dumb people doing dumb things, if it will also stop people doing dumb things. You'll only end up with a mediocre solution.
@Danack I think you just described the purpose of every security policy at any company I've ever worked at.
@ircmaxell I must get connected to his dealer.
@Danack Smart people can't do smart things if the dumb people killed the format by making it non-interoperable
@AndreaFaulds How would have leaving comments in killed JSON?
00:56
JSON's interoperability has allowed it to succeed
@Danack It would have killed interoperability
21 secs ago, by Danack
@AndreaFaulds How would have leaving comments in killed JSON?
You're just repeating yourself....so I will as then.
"I removed comments from JSON because I saw people were using them to hold parsing directives, a practice which would have destroyed interoperability."
People were using comments to hide parsing directives. Therefore, producing JSON which was "valid", yet parsed differently in different parsers.
Says the guy who refused to license the JSON library in an actually free license.
@AndreaFaulds So someone broke this?
Did you track down the commit or anything?
@LeviMorrison Possibly.
@LeviMorrison I'll have a look.
00:59
btw "destroying interoperability" can also be pronounced "enhancing with new features"...
Again, thanks.
@Danack "non-standard features"*
@LeviMorrison To begin with, yes absolutely.
And if they remain a small and not widely used 'feature' then so be it. But blocking people doing 'stuff' just because you don't agree with it, is not a good way to evolve a technology.
@Danack And breaking compatibility... that's a problem.
Extensibility is a core feature of any protocol.
If extending breaks compatibility, the core format was flawed in the first place.
@AndreaFaulds No.....A force BC break is bad. i.e. not being able to upgrade to PHP 7 because you're existing code just won't work is bad. But having new features in PHP 7 that won't work in PHP 5 is good.
01:02
@ircmaxell There's no reasonable way to make something like JSON extensible forwards-compatibly
You don't try to make it forward compatible.
JSON is successful in part because there is only one JSON. There's no JSON 1, JSON 2, JSON 3. Just JSON.
You include a version identifier in the format to tell the parser which one to use.
It is unlike many other formats in this respect.
@ircmaxell Thus causing interoperability problems as you have to worry about lowest-common-denominators
Because you couldn't introduce a 2 without breaking everything
So the greatest advantage is its biggest limitation
01:03
@Danack ...and why can't you do this in comments?
@ircmaxell It's not a limitation. JSON doesn't need to be extensible, nor would it be better if it were.
@LeviMorrison Because JSON doesn't support comments, because Mr Crockford removed them from the standard.
Tautological reasoning is tautological
If anything, it would make it worse. One of JSON's strengths is that it's an incredibly simple format. It does no more, and no less, than it needs to.
It'd be better with comments....
31 mins ago, by Danack
That fact that I can't comment why a particular version of a library can't be used in an application is just massively dumb.
01:05
That's the fault of composer, not of JSON
Uh huh
Perhaps JSON is the wrong format.
Yup. Should have used yaml. So much better :-X
Or JSON with comments.
Actually plain old php arrays would have been good....
01:06
@Danack Security.
@AndreaFaulds huh?
Except for code execution vulnerabilities...
Lol
Just use a protobuff, its like the perfect format.
;-)
@ircmaxell was that now serious?
01:14
Nah - he was trying to summon Jimbo aka Mr Yaml Lover.
okay, great :-)
01:25
@LeviMorrison github.com/TazeTSchnitzel/php-src/compare/return_types :) - Gonna open voting yet? :D
@Danack I meant in PHP.
@AndreaFaulds Did you update the RFC too?
@LeviMorrison No, I'll do so now if you want, though.
Also, I can't do a merge from that link; can you do a PR against my branch?
It wouldn't work, I rebased it against master.
(To avoid a merge commit)
@LeviMorrison Should I make a pull request anyway?
Hmm...
I don't know how this stuff works.
I've never had to merge a PR from another source which did a rebase against another branch.
Not sure the best way to do that...
01:32
@LeviMorrison I avoid merging it, rather I pull down the branch and force push it to origin
Well, if the RFC is updated I can open voting and promise that within 1 day the changes will be committed to the source to match.
Updated the RFC.
@LeviMorrison Wanna open voting now? ;)
Shortly ^^
open a vote in the middle of the night!? well...
01:37
@bwoebi I always open votes around about now ;)
hehe
Any last-minute but not too late complaints about it?
@LeviMorrison Lemme re-read the RFC one last time.
user895378
VOTE! ALL OF THE RFCs!
@LeviMorrison Hmm, I don't like this syntax, why is it after the function? (jk)
01:38
@AndreaFaulds Definitely inconsistent, let me fix that really quick.
@LeviMorrison :D
@LeviMorrison yay!
;-D
@LeviMorrison Looks good! VOTE! ALL THE RFC!
Func(foo)tion
01:41
Also, since I know you guys are here:
What do you think about : void vs : null? @bwoebi @AndreaFaulds @Danack @rdlowrey
user895378
as a return hint?
null is fine. No point in changing that…
user895378
I prefer null as well.
null is the alias of void in PHP, except that it is a value which means essentially undefined
I think that's too consistent and we should introduce something different
01:43
Valid point.
void it is.
@LeviMorrison I'd prefer void.
null makes it sound like it's what function foobar() { return NULL; } returns
@AndreaFaulds Well... it is.
While void sounds like not returning anything (empty return;)
user895378
@AndreaFaulds insta-star.
user895378
01:45
I have no problem with either void or null for the record. Just tell me what to use and I'll use it :)
hello brothers
i have some sort of stuff thats bugging me
Would you recommend PostgreSQL over MySQL?
user895378
Yes. 100 times out of 100.
@LeviMorrison I'm not sure if it's still the case in ng, but in 5.x there was a distinction between return and return NULL
@AndreaFaulds You can determine it internally, but in PHP land they are the same.
@boyee Almost anything is saner than MySQL
01:46
@rdlowrey (that was clear … ;-) … but still not an excuse to not write an amphp/mysql lib)
For example, this is done in generators.
@LeviMorrison Is that still the case in ng though? Wasn't the distinction due to zval**?
user895378
s/ng/"7"/
You can say return; to exit a generator early, but not return null;
user895378
@bwoebi I'm not doing it, man. If you want mysql you're going to have to do it :)
user895378
01:47
Or coerce someone else into doing it.
@LeviMorrison Ooh.
Oh, but that's different. That's the return opcode itself, right?
I mean now in ng, you can't tell, once a function has executed, whether it returned NULL or nothing, right?
Guys, what is your choice? msqli or PDO?
The former if you want advanced features; latter otherwise.
I wish PHP had something like LINQ
If only to avoid repeating myself so much in prepared statements.
Hmm...
01:49
@AndreaFaulds Uhm, not exactly sure what you mean by that.
@AndreaFaulds @LeviMorrison the information about whether return had NULL or nothing at all is discarded at compile time when the AST is being resolved.
does the Mysql has a limit on submission?
like
20million
it would gave up?
Meaning return; and return null; are the same after compile time.
@boyee gave up?
my project involves social networking system like facebook
01:50
@LeviMorrison yes
@HendryTanaka yes
prepare('SELECT foo, bar FROM foobar WHERE foo = :foo AND bar = :bar), execute([':foo" => $foo, ':bar' => $bar]);` is annoying
Yeah, of course. Not sure how else it'd be...
Could you tell before?
@LeviMorrison Yep!
That seems error prone o.O
01:51
@HendryTanaka i was wondering that our site would have huge usage everyminute
I might be wrong, but I believe you could return nothing vs returning NULL.
i was bugging if our mysql will work as expected?
@boyee sounds synchronous web ha? Are you using web socket too?
@AndreaFaulds hmm?
or it will crash sends the data are too many in the future
01:51
Anyway, with : void or : null you could disallow anything aside from return; and return null; and only do stuff at compile-time; no runtime check needed for that one.
I'm probably wrong though and getting confused with parameters.
@LeviMorrison For me, void should enforce no return statement, or plain return;, it shouldn't allow return NULL;
Sure, but void spelled null should allow the latter so noobs don't get confused.
(imo)
please leave that off the scope for this RFC now.
building a social networking sites would be definitely no of using MYSQL ?
Oh, it is out of scope.
01:53
I don't like that either. null is a useless type.
I just thought I'd ping you all since you are all here.
oh kay
Those with voting karma may now vote[1] on the RFC to add return types[2]. Note that the implementation needs a bit of cleaning up before merging should the RFC be accepted; Dmitry has already volunteered to help with that, but more eyes are welcome.

A few minor things have changed in reflection[3].

The implementation is slightly out of date with the RFC, but soon it will be updated to match.

[1]: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/returntypehinting#vote
[2]: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/returntypehinting
^ Look okay?
@LeviMorrison eventually remove the explicit reference to voting karma
user895378
01:54
/me hovers over the "yes" button, index finger poised for great return type justice.
2
Actually
Just say a couple minor things
Otherwise, go for it, @LeviMorrison!
user895378
/LeviMorrison puts on his robe and wizard hat
@rdlowrey What the f*ck, I told you not to message me again.
I swear if you do it one more time I'm gonna report your ISP and say you were sending me kiddie porn you f*ck up.
user895378
@AndreaFaulds lol \o/
I am pleased to announce that the return type RFC is now open for voting[1]. Note that the implementation needs a bit of cleaning up before merging should the RFC be accepted; Dmitry has already volunteered to help with that, but more eyes are welcome.

A couple of things have changed in reflection[2] since the last iteration, but is otherwise the same.

The implementation is slightly out of date with the RFC, but soon it will be updated to match.

[1]: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/returntypehinting#vote
01:56
send it!
@LeviMorrison SEND IT!
Gotta actually open the vote first ^^
user895378
Be sure to update the main /rfc page as well.
Logging in is taking a while... zzz...
wow php 7 cool
01:57
Ich kann kaum warten! (Und ich kann auch nicht wirklich warten, es ist fast 2 Uhr...)
@AndreaFaulds Hier ist es fast drei, na und!
@bwoebi :p
@AndreaFaulds Ich kann kaum warten! is probably not something a German would say in that way. More probable is e.g. Ich kann mich nicht mehr (zurück)halten! or similar
I voted yes! :D
@bwoebi Ah, OK.
That was a quick 4 votes ^^
02:02
@bwoebi Is that like "I can't hold on any more"?
I voted f* YES.
Er, so, hypothetically @rdlowrey, how often do you check github for issues? ;-)
user895378
@Danack Not in the last 12 hours :)
@AndreaFaulds not sure. I can't tell you if that's the English equivalent because I'm not sure what that means in English ^^
user895378
@Danack If you run into a problem it's usually best to ping me here to alert me to its presence. Anymore gmail filters everything so much the email notifications are pretty useless.
02:05
@bwoebi Actually, Google translate says it's "I can't hold myself back any more". So that's what Ich kann mich nicht mehr zurückhalten means
@AndreaFaulds yep… probably that
@rdlowrey I think that issue has been there for a while... I just wasn't able to see it due to the other issues occurring.
@AndreaFaulds I thinks mich is surplus.
user895378
@Danack Well it's not a bug ... I will explain why that happens in the issue.
02:06
@bwoebi It matches the English almost word-for-word :p
@AndreaFaulds another way to say it: Es drängt aus mir!
user895378
@Danack FWIW You're not the first person to expect that behavior.
It used to do that didn't it?
Blast, I didn't use my php.net address to announce the RFC vote. Curse you guys for rushing me ^^
@LeviMorrison Is that an issue?
02:07
Booo, you don't have an integrity now.
By the way @LeviMorrison, you should tweet on Twitter about the vote being open. That way you can get lots of retweets!
Btw, I didn't unpin yours Andrea because I wanted it to be my message, but because I don't want to use 'hint' any more than is necessary.
^^
@AndreaFaulds Yeah, sure.
In b4 @morrisonlevi https://wiki.php.net/rfc/returntypehinting#vote
Probably should announce Stas' unserialize vote too.
user895378
@Danack No ... the thing is this: Reactor::run() will only exit if it has nothing else to do. But because the artax client keeps connections alive the reactor still has things to do, namely to watch for a connection close on that socket.
02:09
F*, it's Nov 4th :\
user895378
@Danack Now, if you use a request object and set a Connection: close header then the loop should break after the request completes.
@LeviMorrison hmm… I'd prefer it to be hint as a strong reference to it being optional…
@rdlowrey But the client in the issue has connection close set to 3 seconds? I would have expected it to close then and have nothing to do?
@webarto What's today?
wow you guys are awesome
02:11
@bwoebi Nothing, but I thought Oct 31 was yesterday.
i feel like i'm an alien on this topic lol
user895378
@Danack Oh, once again I didn't read closely enough. Then yes, in that case it appears the close timeout option is apparently not being passed through to the socket pool. I will investigate.
@boyee Probably every sane soul does.
@boyee well yes… some not so unconstructive php internals people discussing and doing… :-)
user895378
@Danack Sorry, each of the last two nights you've caught me when I was in the midst of something. ADHD is a real bitch. I no so good at reading comprehension, apparently.
02:12
@rdlowrey hehe… seems you won't finish websocket stuff today ^^
@rdlowrey tbh I usually leave github issues open for a week before responding to them, to allow them to mature nicely...
user895378
@bwoebi too late, already finished and pushed!
@rdlowrey dammit! (no, not seriously)
@webarto lol
Voting on my #php RFC for return types is now open! \o/ https://wiki.php.net/rfc/returntypehinting#vote
user895378
02:14
@bwoebi so any feedback you have will be valid now. I believe I accounted for all of the issues you brought up yesterday.
@rdlowrey good, will have to re-read then
user895378
@bwoebi I may start documenting in markdown form all of the functionality available to websocket endpoints tonight instead of working on uv static file things.
user895378
(since it's all fresh in my mind right now)
@rdlowrey btw I also failed to work youtube.com/watch?v=pURJDToKA0k into the issue for which I apologise.
s/rock/reactor
@rdlowrey probably a good idea. Then we'll see if anything's missing too.
user895378
02:16
@Danack ProTip: ninja injecting GIFs, memes and youtube clips will exponentially increase the chances of your issue being addressed in a timely fashion.
user895378
I'm going to have to create a websocket client add-on for artax so I can adequately test this stuff ...
@rdlowrey True ^
@rdlowrey rc phase is not the right time to introduce that…
user895378
@bwoebi Oh, don't worry: I'm not doing that anytime soon :)
user895378
That's a "I have nothing better to do" sort of thing.
02:20
@rdlowrey that means after Aerys release?^^
@LeviMorrison 10-day voting?
user895378
the (mythical) aerys release?
hehe
user895378
Did somebody say, "vaporware?" I could swear I heard someone say "vaporware."
just as mythical as Artax v1 is
02:22
aerys?
That sounds like auryn
@rdlowrey learned a new term ;-)
@DanLugg Do you still have the Auryn/@rdlowrey leaked pics?
user895378
lol we can only hope
@AndreaFaulds yeah, just @rdlowrey's legendary http+websocket server written in PHP being under the works since nearly 2 years…
user895378
It's a made-up thing unicorn that shoots laser beams out of its eyes. Don't listen to Bob.
02:24
:-)
@AndreaFaulds Yep.
All my RFCs are at least 10 days of voting.
^^
:)
Imma sleep.
Good/Gute Night/Nacht y'all/alle
Good night.
Laku noć
02:45
Good night
Good night
user895378
@AndreaFaulds night
user895378
@Danack Yeah I'm duplicating the read stream watcher issue locally. Good find. Depending on how tired I get and how soon I'll either troubleshoot it tonight or it'll be number one on the list when I sit down in the morning.
No rush...you seem to be awake before I am most days anyway, somehow...possibly due to the fact it seems to be 3am here....
user895378
@Danack Actually, from my preliminary debugging it appears that the stream that's held in the reactor is coming from the dns lib. Should be a fairly simple matter of disabling the read watcher on the udp socket used for dns requests if there are no outstanding DNS requests awaiting fulfillment.
user895378
02:59
I'll work on it later or in the morning. Always easy to fix a problem once you actually know where its originating :)
03:57
@AndreaFaulds Sorry, which one was that, I'll have to peruse the archives of @rdlowrey foibles.
user895378
04:56
One of the boy band things, no doubt.
user895378
@Danack I updated amp/dns, tagged a new release and closed your artax issue. A composer update should now cause your reproduce script to break out of the run loop as expected.
05:11
@andex Hi are you there
05:25
I really need some advice it's not scripting related but legal related
Then get legal consultation.
Le what?
someone know about URL canonicalization?
In an user license (end-user license) you're allowed to
Make restrictions related to software/modification redistribution/creation/sharing.
Right?
05:39
can I do URL normalisation from htaccess file?
which framwork is ok for eCommerce ?
Morning
05:58
Aug 21 at 20:10, by Dan Lugg
user image
^^ /cc @rdlowrey
Also, goodnight.
06:13
@bwoebi I feel like I, and everyone else, was mislead about what phpstorm wanted. I've told you I wanted that stuff reverted and you argued with @Tyrael about it for hours, you haven't removed it. If you want to work together then you have to listen, you cannot just decide what is best on your own and argue the case, no matter what.
06:41
woot
Good morning
that's great
return types would be awesome
indeed, forever is long enough to wait :)
06:57
morning @Joe, @SergeyTelshevsky
@Leri good morning!
damn, I'm happy, google music is finally available in my country
couldn't get used to spotify
07:14
shit
07:27
Good m0rning
@Duikboot good mng...... :)
good mornings
07:59
mornings
/me has just handed in my notice at my job

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