@LeviMorrison That's a separate argument, the point here is that it's easier to screw something pretty badly in C++ unless you really know what you're doing. Hence, harder to find good C++ guys.
I find the notion that you're going to take a 20 year old language, and rewrite the entire thing from C to C++, and expect that this will help improve the language somehow, to be rather amusing.
To be honest, I think C++ as a language provides many things that would be useful to implementing a dynamic language and could be quite helpful to write a PHP engine.
Alright, let's put away our egos now. I wasn't even talking to you. That was a very general statement.
Talk of moving PHP to C++ is much older than this discussion.
And quite frankly, writing a new implementation of PHP from scratch in C++ is much easier than rewriting PHP in C++.
So that isn't even a good supporting argument.
But, sure, C++ has some benefits. I can't disagree with that. Just whether or not those benefits outweigh the technical debt incurred, is open to speculation.
imagine a debian setup, in which several independent php web applications share postgresql and apache, and each is served from its own web subdirectory. now they all run as user www-data, but they have different DB user/pass, which I would want to keep private. putting them into the environment via httpd config is not nice, for obvious reasons, and config files don't separate enough
so I basically want per-subdirectory php preset variables
@NikiC He has a likely chance of knowing more than us ^^. However, I wonder if he meant that practically speaking it's not good enough yet (meaning that the latest developer preview supports it, but that's not worth depending on)
hm ok. so the canonical answer is "if they run as the same user anyway, you have worse problems than them being able to read each others' db config file"?
I can live with that.
asking with the debian package maintainer hat on, mostly
Of the major compilers I use, the one with the worst C++ support is Intel's.
The biggest issue is that they don't ship a C++ library; they just support the language features. This means you are reliant on the system's version or you need to provide your own (such as libcxx from the LLVM group).
I haven't had any issues with their 2015 release that I can think of, though.
hy guys how to surround link_to title within a span tag in laravel?? I have attempted something this but that's not working {{link_to('views/inbox.blade.php','Folk<span>Mail</span>') }} Is it possible to sorrund it within span tag??
cat sleeping, and weights 2x what she did when she came in this morning ... I would be a monster if I hadn't given her a massive meaty meal and a toy mouse to play with ... not interested in mouse, but ate the whole lot ... she will probably sleep until tomorrow ...
why do they package toys so that no child can open them, stupid rubber bands around everything ...
the odd band you can cope with, but but, the boxes are moulded plastic so for display purposes not required, they use those sandwich bag things too ... and yeah, screws ... little bit of plastic washer type thing and just to hold to cardboard, not a transit screw of any kind ...
I just want to know how to add and set 2 different username and admin for the login process. I don't know how to write the code after the shown step.
<?php
include ("connection.php")
$username = $_GET ['username']
$password = $_GET ['password']
if (empty ($username)) || (empty ($passw...
Once again I think I have reached the point I need to support different RDBMS for a project. Anybody tried using a class containing sql standard queries and overwriting when needed for a specific rdbms? Is that sane? Stupid?
That doesn't sound so insane to me. Presumably you have GenericSqlUserModel (implements User) and then subclasses MySqlUserModel, SqliteUserModel etc.?
Either you have some loop, including a file multiple times, running code code multiple times in some other way, whatever. It is not mysql that is doing this
Unless you have logic in your database in which case you deserve everthing you got
That caused a serious XSS vulnerability in my webapp when I didn't escape profile picture URLs. It was safe because they were always from a fixed set. But then I allowed custom URLs. Boom, XSS.
Does this piece of code mean the code may only ran from a directory defined in restrict_api? @AndreaFaulds
I think I am not sure what SG(request_info).path_translated refers to. Is that the path of the request as in http://exmaple.com/my/awesome/path or the path of the file in the filesystem
So if I am understanding that correctly in the context of a script it translates to the actual FS location of the script and for "static" resources it doesn't
Also apparently there is just no way at all to search for an equals sign on github:
> You can't use the following wildcard characters as part of your search query: . , : ; / \ ` ' " = * ! ? # $ & + ^ | ~ < > ( ) { } [ ]. The search will simply ignore these symbols.
@Danack Yeah agreed. Sadly I cannot force people who use my project to set it up like that :(
@RonniSkansing Actually yes. Today has been very productive. I had a nice discussion with the people over at security.se and I kinda understand what what opcache.restrict_api does. \o/