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20:01
@Charles you've set the error_log to /dev/null? (and possibly instead have a screwy userland error handler which tries to handle logging for you, but it can't catch those types of errors so you're hosed.)
@PaulCrovella We have an error handler, but it shouldn't be triggered by memory limit, right?
@Charles right, it shouldn't be (I think). I was just suggesting that perhaps you're actually relying on that error handler for logging. Based on what you've said about the codebase I wouldn't put it past whoever set it all up.
@PaulCrovella Our error handler doesn't log, no - it emails. Don't ask.
@rdlowrey If only that applied to "routing"
@Charles Forget I said anything about the error handler, it was just half-joking snark. Do you have error reporting completely disabled? Do (or would) other fatal errors show up in your log?
20:13
@PaulCrovella Other fatals do show up in the log, yes.
hrmm... and you're not getting memory limit errors logged at all, or only some of the times you're expecting to?
user895378
Does anyone have an https:// server running php at hand that can expose a script for me to test a php-src openssl bugfix patch?
@rdlowrey I think so
Ow wait. It means tweaking php right?
user895378
I just need this script to be accessible via https://:
user895378
<? for(;;) sleep(1); ?>
20:25
moment
user895378
(It's supposed to sleep forever)
user895378
I need to test that an encrypted client stream observes the default socket timeout
logging in...
user895378
If it's a problem or more work than you want I can fire up a server myself ... just being lazy.
neh I;'m already in
20:28
@PaulCrovella No memory limit errors at all. The page just WSODs, even if we force on display_errors.
user895378
@PeeHaa thanks. Got what I need :)
user895378
'ppreciate it.
np
Just ping me when you need more warez tests
user895378
Should be finished, but I'll let ya know if I break php again anything happens.
20:35
k :)
@rdlowrey Semi related: you've seen the polarssl vulnerability?
user895378
@PeeHaa I have not.
user895378
Secure code is hard.
Apparently parsing certificates is hard
user895378
php had something similar in openssl_x509_parse() a couple of years ago.
user895378
20:40
/me high-fives everyone because php doesn't use polarssl
@Charles do you have any conditional logging set up in apache or syslog (whatever logging you're using)?
I think the best I have seen is the null byte hack of moxie (I think it was him) where you could get a certificate for google.com\0.yourdomain.com in FF @rdlowrey
user895378
@PeeHaa that one was sweet!
user895378
My first iteration of the SAN name matching code was actually vulnerable to that but I realized it months before 5.6 was released :)
:D
That would have been embarrassing :P
user895378
20:44
Also: how in the hell do these certificate authorities not check for null bytes when people submit CSRs?
If I didn't know you better I would think that is a genuine question
@PaulCrovella Nope - everything should be going into the error_log, but this one isn't. That's why it's so annoying...
I'm failry certain you are able to get infromation out of a CA using XSS attacks
user895378
IMO the whole CA system is one big -_______-
Yeah agreed. No idea what else would work. Use fingerprints all the things and use some central repository with trusted fingerprints!
oh wait
Best way to handle it is be only communicating with a limited part of the web, but that kinda defeats the point of the web :P
20:48
"trust" is a freaky, nebulous thing in the first place
user895378
Yeah ... you basically just have trust the CA system for anything web-related. If you want to feel good about governments not reading your communication you have to deal only with parties you feel good about verifying.
user895378
Which is doable enough.
Hassle but doable
user895378
Okay, next question: is anyone able to setup an encrypted mysql server (or have one running)? Actually, I know someone who can do that.
Don't think I have mysql running on there
Nope just client
Can set it up on a spare machine if needed
user895378
20:54
Nah, I think I've got it covered. Thanks though.
Any time
How do you guys list your skills on your resume? And if someone feels like sharing his, it would be very much appreciated :)
user895378
Did I hear someone mention it at a conference before? It's on the resume then.
user895378
But seriously, I don't have a resume so I wouldn't be any help ;)
@rdlowrey "Experience with" == "I overheard people talking about it", "Practical experience with" == "I watched someone using it"
user895378
21:05
Totally.
user895378
The problem with travis is it skips half of the extension tests that might break when I fiddle with openssl :(
user895378
Need suggestions for a turtle name. Buying one shortly.
user895378
@philsturgeon "Speedbump"
21:29
@philsturgeon mershed perderders. http://t.co/a07OeOvXRi
@rdlowrey ^^
user895378
Nice! Mine may have been a little morbid ...
@rdlowrey Only if put into practice.
Morbid would be "Speedbump #17"
user895378
heheh
@rdlowrey but do the things now work?
user895378
Yup, just passed the necessary mysqli phpt test case
user895378
21:34
\o/
user895378
php-src question ...
user895378
these functions need to not be camelcase, right?
user895378
Should be subtractTimeval() -> subtract_timeval() and compareTimeval() -> compare_timeval() right?
@rdlowrey cats are better
also, you can always name your cat "Roadkill #4"
@tereško And if you own multiple cats, "Roadkill #TBD"
And then just fill in the numbers post-mortem
user895378
21:47
Roadkill #%d
user895378
printf()-style pet naming. Doesn't get cooler than that.
^^ I'm buying a dog, and I think I've been inspired.
user895378
Actually, Roman numerals are more fun.
user895378
Speedbump IV
ok, I need to get some sleep
tomorrow I will be extremely annoyed again
21:50
@rdlowrey snake case is the convention, yes.
user895378
haha, enjoy the bday annoyance hiatus! :)
naah, it's the "current project" annoyance
I actually have no felings about bday whatsoeve
@rdlowrey Depends on how many turtles/cats one goes through, "Speedbump MMDCCLXVII" is kinda annoying
do modern live chat systems use web sockets?
user895378
Someone call the authorities. I think I just found that serial turtle murderer we've been looking for.
21:52
printf-formatting should support roman numerals natively.
user895378
@jskidd3 Generally, yes.
@DanLugg emm ... you seem to be confusing fruit flies and turtles
@tereško I live on a busy street. I've confused nothing.
@rdlowrey Cheers, so I'm right in thinking the old PHP/MySQL database way of doing live chat is dated?
ok, that's it
I am going to take a nap
21:53
Do it naked, spend some time in your birthday suit.
user895378
Well the logic behind using websockets for a chat is ...
user895378
The PHP web SAPI needs to hold open a dedicated process (or thread) for the full lifetime of a client socket connection. In the chat use-case your connections are going to be very long-lived.
user895378
So because each connection is relatively expensive in this setup using a traditional php web sapi approach isn't feasible. You don't want hundreds of processes or threads sitting open -- it's horribly inefficient for that use case. HTTP request-response is by contrast a very short-lived operation, so the processes/threads are likewise short-lived.
@rdlowrey Ok that makes sense, thanks. Sorry for the nooby questions but I'm fairly new to this, does node.js or PHP make a better server when it comes to live chat?
user895378
So the standard approach for something like a chat is a server technology where you can maintain many simultaneous client connections inside each thread or process.
21:57
Ok I see
user895378
node.js is a very mature non-blocking technology that works well for chats.
user895378
That said, PHP is capable of doing thing like this, but it hasn't been the focus of very much development until recently.
I thought as much. I do like the look of trying out node.js
Oh, how come until recently?
user895378
Well, because PHP was always intended for it's primary use-case: isolated http request-response. Once node came to prominence some people started saying, "hey, I'd like to be able to do things like that and still write PHP"
user895378
But the tools to do this in PHP are still relatively immature.
user895378
22:00
So while they work well they are subject to the usual pitfalls of new technologies:
user895378
You don't get a ton of support in the form of blog posts/articles. If you run into bugs in the tools there's a non-zero chance you'll have to fix them yourself. APIs are still evolving.
user895378
You can't go wrong learning node.js.
So in conclusion would you recommend node?
ThW
ThW
The concepts are not that different. Learn them, you will be able to use them with node.js, io.js and PHP
user895378
Yes. But just by way of example, here's an example chat @kelunik and @bwoebi have been working on that runs entirely on PHP.
user895378
22:03
Like @ThW said: the same concepts apply in any non-blocking server environment. Only the language and exact APIs differ.
Ok that's really good advice, thanks very much
@rdlowrey I believe that's correct, camelCase for methods, snake_case for procedural stuff.
How the hell do you check if a closure is static?
Only ReflectionMethod has ::isStatic
And doing (new ReflectionMethod(static function () {}, '__invoke')->isStatic() returns false
ThW
ThW
never tried,but the var_dump() is different, maybe check for the properties?
22:16
@ThW Different how? 3v4l.org/kgZU2
@DanLugg 3v4l.org/aDoCI - what are you trying to do?
@Danack Test between function () {} and static function () {}
@ThW Yea, but $this is only bound if the closure is defined within the scope of an instance method
if (callable_is_static($f)) { /* here be magic and unicorns */ }
ThW
ThW
but all ohter function are static by default, arn"t they?
22:20
^^ Nope.
ThW
ThW
weird
ThW
ThW
I thought the difference whould be the object instance
The whole $this binding is horribly fucky IMO.
It should be that all functions are bindable, whether they're global, static, instance, closures, bound already or unbound
The only difference really is, if you're rebinding a static method, it should not have made use of $this in it's body, er go, it should have no side effects
Likewise for global functions (which aren't actually "static" as far as PHP is concerned), etc.
ThW
ThW
Anything outside an object instance should be static
22:24
^^ fair enough, but that shouldn't make them unbindable
ThW
ThW
true
AFAIC, $this is really just a "magic" variable that can be modified externally of the scope(s) it's available in.
ThW
ThW
in Delphi you could declare a "procedure of object"
@DanLugg That returns you a closure.....so why would that be inspectable with ReflectionMethod? Shouldn't it be 3v4l.org/5ic5D
/possibly not the best named method there...
@Danack Well, because Closure::__invoke, but that was just an attempt at a workaround
ThW
ThW
22:26
I am working on my pcre talk - any suggestions?
Basically, my gripe is: why is anything unbindable? If I bind something that doesn't use $this because static or whatever, it should have no observable side-effects, since the method defined doesn't reference $this
And, on the practical side, how the shit do I differentiate between a static and non-static closure, and to avoid the warning that's emit when you try to bind a static one?
Closure::bind(function () {}, new stdClass()) is fine
Closure::bind(static function () {}, new stdClass()) emits a warning, as is also the case when trying to bind a closure created from a static method
If there were bool is_callable_static(callable $callable), I'd be pissing rainbows
ThW
ThW
because bind only changes the context, not the type of the closure
@Danack Fair, but global functions are not static, however they are unbound by default of course.
So the getClosureThis would return null, despite the closure being bindable.
ThW
ThW
22:30
they should be static
@ThW Nope. Not "static"
@DanLugg I understood every word in that sentence, but the end result is not intelligible to me.
@Danack Hmm, perhaps I put the words in the wrong order. I have a tendency toward doing that.
@ThW what do you have so far? (what's the scope of the talk?)
… woops wrong window
ThW
ThW
22:31
advanced pcre, I will talk about delimiters, modifiers, assertions, templates, ifthen
named subpatterns of course
@ThW backtracking control (verbs)
"unrolling the loop"
@ThW $c2 is a closure created from reflecting a static method, and it carries the static modifier, and fails to rebind the closure (with a warning) 3v4l.org/FRvmb#v540 whereas $c1 is a closure created from a global function which carries no modifier and is rebindable.
^^ Had them backward, so edited.
maybe a^n b^n c^n
unicode handling
@Danack any idea on this? I'm seeing a brick wall.
ThW
ThW
@NikiC yeah unicode is already in, have a slide about (*SKIP)(F)
22:37
@DanLugg $c2 = $r2->getClosure(); is missing a param...
@Danack null default IIRC
ThW
ThW
Should add a section about recursion and recursion levels
@Danack Also, even if I pass an instance of MyClass in that example, it doesn't matter because the method is still static, the closure carries that modifier, and can't be rebound
But not being able to rebind them is not so much an issue I'm concerned with; I just want to be able to test somehow if a given closure is in fact "static"
As to not rebind them.
ThW
ThW
@DanLugg really strange, but makes sense if you think about PHP
@ThW No. I refuse to accept that :-P
ThW
ThW
22:40
:-)
"Because PHP" is an answer I'm fast becoming furious with.
I can't see any reason to prevent a static, non-static, global, foreign, glowing, humming, flying, or otherwise functions from being bound/rebound. If it uses $this in scope, the $this reference points at something else. If it doesn't then it doesn't matter anyway.
ThW
ThW
That's not what I mean. I am looking with my Delphi glasses, you used the type definitions (outside of a class declaration) to define the object handle - not type definition in PHP so it has to depend on context and keywords.
@DanLugg Go argue with @LeviMorrison. He loves static closures and forbidding rebinding ;)
@LeviMorrison I DEMAND BLOOD AND TEARS! AND PANCAKES!
Hey that's not fair!
ThW
ThW
22:43
lol
@LeviMorrison I might be slightly embellishing the facts ;)
I STILL WANT PANCAKES
Why people want to rebind stuff all over the place isn't obvious to me.
For the record, I am working on black magic, but I should be allowed to.
ThW
ThW
debug and testing, aop?
22:46
Functor generalization
@DanLugg Burn the witch!!!
/me takes off the pointy hat
ThW
ThW
@DanLugg Has it WIZARD stitched on it?
No, it was my girlfriends. I lost my hat.
Ultimately, I'd love to be able to distill any and all "procedures", down to non-static closures
That doesn't seem possible, so the next best thing would be differentiating them.
I'm trying to follow what you did @Danack
ThW
ThW
"Here will be dragons"
22:49
You need to use reflection on the closure that you've generated, not the class.
@Danack Okay... but how does that gain me more information? The closure'll still be static, or unbound, or both, or neither.
Sorry, multiping
You can tell whether calling Closure::bindTo with a non-Null param is safe or not.
How? It'll emit if its static...
I think I'm being stupid, but I'm not sure where.
Sorry I'm really having difficultly following you - what do you want to do that isn't in 3v4l.org/t7cVF ?
Simply put, given any callable, I wish to reflect it and produce a closure which will be rebound. If the callable is static because it's derived from a static method, or is a static closure, or whatever, the rebinding will fail. I wish to test whether the closure is static before I attempt to rebind it.
I can't test with ReflectionMethod::isStatic because that doesn't work.
I can't test with getClosureThis because it could be an unbound closure derived from an instance method (corner case, I know, but that's a problem)
I just need to know if it's bindable.
Basically, we need a ReflectionFunctionAbstract::isBindable
Or similar.
22:59
Can you give an example of "an unbound closure derived from an instance method" that you'd like to rebind ?
$f from Foo::bar unbound.
Presumably there's a sensible reason why you're binding to null in the first place?
@Danack That'll all happen outside in consumer-land, so I have to presume everyone is crazy.
As stated,
5 mins ago, by Dan Lugg
Basically, we need a ReflectionFunctionAbstract::isBindable
Or, better, move ::isStatic up to ReflectionFunctionAbstract, because if static implies unbindable then that's fine too.
bindTo(null); - that should throw an exception.
Disagree, you should be able to destroy the $this reference.
ThW
ThW
23:06
@Danack a specific one?
Much in the same way I can bind it to an stdClass, the reference integrity is whacked anyway. You get missing methods either way.
That is, if I were to $this->doSomethingIForgotHowToDo()
@ThW I guess ReflectionException if nothing else - but this code 3v4l.org/prZnp is just stupid.
and shouldn't be allowed...
Baw... much disagree. But I'm glad I piqued someones curiosity with this. It's been making me batty.
Why should it be allowed? It's nuts.
Yes, but the rules surrounding it's forbiddance are far more complicated than just allowing it.
$this should be valid everywhere, and rebindable for everything.
That's like saying:
function myGlobalFunction() {
    var_dump($this); // should throw an exception or explode or something
}
I'm proposing a simple set of rules: 1) everything is bindable/rebindable 2) the thing that is bound/rebound is $this so references to $this in a bound/rebound scope then reference the "thing" to which its bound.
23:11
I don't know who decided rebindable closures were a good thing. Or that static closures were a good thing. Or that late static binding was a good thing.
ThW
ThW
that would be more like PHP 4 I think
But more than any one of those, it's stupid hard to know how they all should interact.
@LeviMorrison You're always complaining about LSB ;-)
You betcha; any chance I get I'll complain about it.
ThW
ThW
you could call classname::function() and it would transfer the current this
23:12
@DanLugg For good reason.
Rebindable closures are fine IMO, but static closures don't make sense. LSB is a different beast IMO.
@DanLugg Late static binding inside closures currently requires static closures.
Not saying it is a good design but that's what I had to work with, alright?
@LeviMorrison Ah, good point.
The only feature LSB provides is making it easier to write bad code...
ThW
ThW
@DanLugg a lot of closure don't need $this, so why keep it?
23:13
@NikiC It makes interactions with other features harder too :(
LSB is only ever good for me for one thing: static::class
And that's because I hate calling get_called_class()
Yeah, LSB actually has quite a lot of overhead on the implementational side of things. For no use whatsoever.
ThW
ThW
@NikiC inheritance for singletons :->
Anyway, I'm out for the day; someone carry my torch and scream REBIND ALL THE THINGS in my absence.
Later gators.
@ThW Which is what I said.
hum, we're one vote behind on wiki.php.net/rfc/default_ctor
23:16
jesus.. how does that have so much support
@NikiC Technically it needs 1/3 of a vote more to pass, right?
@Danack it passes right now. we need an extra no vote for it to fail
Maths - how does that work.
also, where the hell did the "2/3+1 vote majority" come from? it's either 50%+1 or 2/3..
@Danack I know ... it took me quite a while to realize that to check a 2/3 majority you only need to multiply the no result by two and check which is greater.
crap, now it needs two no votes :D
23:22
Someone ought to write an stronger email against it - even if that repeats stuff said before. It's one of those things that looks attractive on the surface.
ThW
ThW
17:9 :o)
@Danack I've just scrolled through the discussion ... looks like at least half of it is about whether new Foo($args) not evaluating $args if there is no ctor is a bug or a feature...
So basically, that discussion is about as useful as any other internals discussion :)
it's not nearly as entertaining as the Remove PHP 4 Constructors "discussion"
ThW
ThW
entertaining?
watching people lose their minds counts as entertainment, right?
23:33
We just need to make 2/3 vote for all RFCs.
I'm just too busy and have other priorities, such as constructors and return types ^^
@Danack TIL, thanks
23:45
@NikiC It's at 17:10 right now, which is less than 2/3 ^^
hi
to all: what's the difference between zend_string_free and zend_string_release? (I saw the source, but still can't explain the diff with total confidence)

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