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17:00
@ircmaxell Absolutely, good is what it's there for.
@salathe would you be able to turn it into a github pages site? So that others can edit it?
@ircmaxell it already is... github.com/gophp7/gophp7.github.io
@beberlei And, if you want strict by default, I have an extension for that. So with this proposal pretty much everyone can be happy
was talking with Lorna and the like about starting it up now
wow. I keep underestimating you @salathe. Or you just keep over-delivering. You are the man! Thanks!
posted on February 25, 2015 by kbironneau

/* by mihn */

17:08
Been thinking about unserialise
@Leigh you want to remove it from the language?
I have no idea how easy/hard/ridiculous this is, but what if... it built an AST before compiling/executing it. Could that help avoid the security issues?
@Leigh yeah, i just think the file based approach is adding too much complexity, but i keep repeating that opinion, no need to respond to that :-)
right now i prefer none of both rfc and rather stay without STH ;)
@Leigh for unserialize() you mean?
Or is there something we can do with some parser grammar? I can see there's a .re file for it, but I can't even pretend I know what that is actually doing. Would it be possible to write some sort of LALR grammar to parse it?
@NikiC yep
17:14
@Leigh It would it make even slower than it already is...
security > speed
And by slower I mean significantly
@Leigh wrong.
There's a tradeoff. As there always is ;)
Maybe with it being significantly slower (due to it being secure), people will stop using it
@Leigh Also no, an AST would not help with security
The issues don't stem from string processing problems
Alright, I guess I need to read more, I don't fully understand the flaws in the parser that are causing these issues.
or, the flaws in what is done with the parsed data
17:16
@Leigh many of the issues are problems in the unserialization handlers of individual classes
user895378
The unserialize() problems basically boil down to "you shouldn't trust user input," right? Or did I miss something there?
@rdlowrey Yes.
user895378
Because you shouldn't trust user input. You'll never be able to totally prevent people from shooting themselves in the foot.
yah, apparently its widespread to unserialize user input
It's also not re-entrant safe (if that's the right phrase) - bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=69072
user895378
17:19
threads ruin everything ;)
@rdlowrey But there should be a way of detecting user input that is garbage and fail verbosely. I thought maybe an AST approach would enforce things like "hey, this data type isn't allowed here!"
@rdlowrey Not threads - just serialize serializing a class that calls serialize() itself.
@rdlowrey yes. Stas doesn't agree with you though
user895378
@Danack oic
@nikita2206 Stas thinks it's okay for new foo(); to return NULL.
user895378
17:21
^^
@Danack we should just have an ini switch for that
user895378
$var = new Foo;
assert(is_null($var));
@Danack I think that's OK, as long as it also throws an exception..
user895378
@Leigh If it throws an exception, there is no return....
17:22
new Foo returning null is one of the most idiotic things that was ever built into PHP
7
And the stuff in ext/intl doesn't currently throw an exception.
You're so picky!
user895378
@ircmaxell +∞
/me recalling people at my previous company trying to return null from __construct
@ircmaxell I am drafting an RFC to fix it (and a few other exception things) - If I haven't posted it by this Sunday feel free to hassle me massively.
17:23
you the man @Danack
user895378
Returning null from an object instantiation is what happens when people who don't actually understand OOP write object APIs.
I just pass, & I'm thinking, can I find some people here, and hu!
@rdlowrey but it's fluent, look you can do $o->setFoo($foo)->setBar($bar); looks so cool
Hi all :D
Why did I think for some reason Exceptions weren't allowed in constructors... ignore my previous statement.
it's __toString() I'm thinking of isn't it
user895378
17:25
@Leigh yes
(The other thing is that when an exception happens during a callback that is being called by an extension, most of them don't respect that callback and will continue to call other functions, instead of aborting the code).
I'll go to my naughty corner now and put my dunce hat on
@Leigh lol ... I'd venture as far as saying that exceptions were invented precisely for constructors ^^
Room no. 11, have some tea :p
@ircmaxell let's all have a chat about it :)
17:26
speaking of which, what's stopping us from allowing exceptions in __toString???
@salathe will ping you at some point soon :-D
user895378
@ircmaxell Probably all of the internal functions where an object might be coerced to a string and an exception would be problematic.
(Guessing wildly - because __toString is called in the exception handling code?)
@Danack that can happen in other circumstances as well...
So, maybe with exceptions in the engine, this can be lifted
my thoughts
17:30
Some people would say that constructors being unable to indicate an error except by using exceptions is a major design flaw.
trying so hard to think ...
I think I'll, bravely, give up ...
@LeviMorrison do you believe that?
@LeviMorrison Some people say that constructors are just a specialised static method, that languages would be just fine if they weren't present.
In languages that aren't PHP, I'd say that failing to create something should result in a null pointer
@ircmaxell Unsure.
17:33
new is not really a function call, so imho it MUST create an object. if the API were like in ruby Class.New() or something i would agree
Morning again folks o/
@LeviMorrison some people would say that constructors being able to cause side effects is a major design flaw
so lets extrapolate and get this over with... PHP is a design flaw
6
user895378
@PeeHaa o/
@PeeHaa Is that ... a hitler?
17:39
@NikiC It's just a guy waving :(
Germans... :P
@PeeHaa That's a very straight arm to be waving :P
o7 salute, o/ waving. Just so you know how to identify Nazi's on the internet
although I guess that doesn't really work
Hang on, is Zeev now contradicting himself...
> It's an extra element to worry about when determining what your code will
behave like.
user924016
Moornings
Hey @RonniSkansing
user924016
17:47
Hey hey... whats up
Nothing much. Removing crapware from my machine which I apparently installed somehow
No clue how it got on here:|
user1804599
Morning.
Morning @райтфолд
user1804599
I wish I were a PHP programmer.
How do you know you're not?
user1804599
17:51
I program in Python and JavaScript at work, not in PHP.
I'm so sorry (about JavaScript) :(
user1804599
I want to make the entire UI in Clojure with Om.
@PeeHaa windows?
@FlorianMargaine Yes
well, you know what to do.
17:54
I was expecting this kind of response :P
anyway
@ircmaxell what's the difference between Coercive STH and wiki.php.net/rfc/scalar_type_hinting_with_cast ?
@marcio because it's a BC break
and a quite massive one
nothing other than the rules for success get tighetened
@marcio you may want to use GTKGrab ;-)
@Ocramius can you point me to a library that would become unusable? I've been running some random libraries test suites and found none broken yet.
18:07
Oct 9 '14 at 17:24, by NikiC
Official statement: PHP does not make any backwards compatibility guarantees for code written by @Ocramius.
@FlorianMargaine still want to know @Ocramius POV, but ROTFL
@райтфолд I'm sorry about Python, since @Ocramius has already apologized for JS.
18:19
=O 3v4l.org/6OqXM/rfc#tabs we can try the scalar type hints branch on 3v4l now
@marcio that lib is massively used tbh. We can fix the interface, but it would be a major major major bc break there
ok, so the Interface has this method with one declared argument, but where is the broken implementation?
@marcio there are multiple validators that check against the set of submitted fields
(I'll clone and run the test cases anyway)
looking for one
18:27
Ok, so you can't just update the interface because this would break code outside the library implementing custom validators.
Mainly, yes
what are the other reasons?
Many many many projects rely on this second parameter
ok... but you can update the implementations and add the $context argument on then
In general, $context is a SNAFU caused by the fact that some validation is context-aware
one example is validating that a password field was entered twice with the same value (password confirmation)
@marcio the implementations in MY codebase, but not in EVERY codebase. You can't just change an interface like that
18:29
@ircmaxell Find out who owns it? Cause' it ain't me.
Anyway, the validator needs a rewrite, it just isn't possible in 2.x, and this RFC breaks compat with the existing code
@Ocramius you don't have to change the interface, just the implementations. And let people deal with the warning. It's a major PHP release.
it's just a warning, the fix is easy, etc etc... and it brings benefits
@marcio then the interface is totally useless, and anyone implementing it will have broken code in first place
@Ocramius this interface is already partially useless.
I also don't see why a warning is needed, as this sort of API requires proper test mocking tbh
the interface is very very useful in 90% of cases tbh
the other 10% uses the $context
18:32
@marcio It's not invalid code - you're just deciding to prevent people from being able to do that because you think you know better.
The fact is that this PHP-ism has been actually VERY useful to us
@Ocramius that means the interface is not good enough
it prevented a massive BC break and provided a "good enough" interface for us
it is "good enough" for us
Some of the time extra params are done just by mistake - but it's not a bug to deliberately use them.
80/20 is good enough
anyway, off :)
18:34
@Ocramius Beer tomorrow?
@Ocramius Ok, I really like to know your use case, I'll update the RFC and warn about it of course, but I really think this is something that should be fixed on PHP7.
@Danack why not? :)
Cool.
@marcio I think we just missed variadics before, but you can't break BC like that
this interface can be rewritten with variadics, but we CANNOT rewrite an interface now
so yeah, the idea is kinda ok-ish, but it's a no-go atm
you'd have to delay it until after every codebase has a minimum of 5.6 req
@Ocramius variadics aren't good enough... they don't cover all the cases for typehints of variables....which I will bore you with tomorrow.
18:36
@Danack they don't? :|
WTF, they don't :(
not in HHVM at least :(
@Ocramius I get the BC break concern and I'll be explicit about it on the RFC, but I've been mapping many open source libraries and this is the first one that had a BC, it won't be all that hassle IMMO.
Good luck with that and that then.
because this is a massive BC break.
and it's also hard to introspect
As said, major release, library maintainers will have ~8 months to fix a warning because of a method signature and release minor or major versions as necessary. We've had BC breaks 100 times worst in the past. Besides that, a warning won't make a library unusable on production, unless you are running your application with display errors ON.
@marcio "Besides that, a warning won't make a library unusable on production" yes it does. Most sane people remove all warnings from their code or suppress them, and then convert any unknown warnings into errors/exceptions.
@marcio @Ocramius glad you two found your way here. Like hell was I going to try and talk about that on twitter earlier
18:46
Otherwise you can't tell the difference between 'known' warnings and 'unknown' warnings.
Also, tell me please that __invoke() is not affected
@Ocramius magic methods are ignored (or should be, if a specific one isn't, consider it a patch bug that must be fixed)
@PhilSturgeon eh, walking back to Philton atm j/k
Also all callbacks?
[$foo, 'isValid']?
user924016
Yeah...overflows are bad, m'kay.
18:54
@Danack I'd say most sane people don't pass extra arguments to method calls unless they are variadic in some way.
@ircmaxell is this known/expected? declare(strict_types=1); array_map(function(int $i) { return $i; }, ["1"]);
(doesn't throw, even though the closure is called in a scope where strict is enabled)
@Danack but we discussed this already, let's not get circular on this topic, I'll update the RFC and warn about the BC breaks, how to fix etc, and people will do their best judgments.
user895378
@marcio I have a lot of callbacks where I don't necessarily need the data passed to the callback by the library. Does that make me insane? :)
@rdlowrey No, the effects of long term exposure to the streams 'api' did that.
@rdlowrey humm, not sure, I'm not a good example of sanity since I'm on this chat room xD
user895378
18:59
Well I'm just saying that's a perfectly good reason to not specify parameters in a function signature that may receive them at runtime.
user895378
And enforcing the strictness there makes my life more difficult without much benefit ...
But you might have a point here, do anonymous functions have a signature?
user895378
Not just anon functions, any functions.
user895378
Like in my event-driven code I'll often just bind a parameter to the closure scope with use() and don't actually need any of the params passed in by the library invoking the callback at some point in the future.
for instance, if you use strlen as a callback, what do you expect if wrong number of args are passed?
user895378
19:01
I see the value of erroring when dealing with internal functions but with userland functions it can be a real PITA.
@marcio I will try to avoid getting circular, but as I said before, you do seem to ignore arguments when you don't like the implication - we've already discussed the anon functions:
yesterday, by Danack
$funcs[] = function ($a){...};
$funcs[] = function ($a, Logger $log){}

$function = $funcs[rand(0,1)]

$function(5, new Logger()); //works for either function
$function(5, new StdClass()); //Caught by type safety for the one function it doesn't satisfy
@Danack we've talked about this one. When I wrote the Bob example, you asked: why Bob is not using an interface? So why aren't you applying the same concepts on this example and avoiding using incompatible functions interchangeably?
"why Bob is not using an interface" Because not everything has to be an interface to do OO programming.
@Leigh no, that's neither known nor expected
Hooray, I broke everything!
19:05
@DanLugg yeah, I did, thanks
And they are compatible functions one way round in the LSP sense, they're just not identical.
@rdlowrey hence why I asked if anonymous functions should be treated as having no signatures. About "formally" userland functions, no dice for me, they should have the same behavior as internal functions because medium.com/@marcioalmada/… (discard if you already read it, if not go to the use case).
user895378
@marcio Possibly. But it's not just anon functions, though. I can just as easily use a callback that isn't a closure that also has no need for the params it's passed.
@Leigh not sure what the behavior there should be
user895378
@marcio Basically, I understand the usefulness, but I also have a lot of times in real code where this restriction would be a serious nuisance without providing me any benefit.
19:08
I guess technically the scope has changed, as we've gone from userland to internals
user895378
Passing extra params has never once caused a bug for me personally AFAIK.
user895378
But being forced to declare the exact expected params in callbacks would be a real PITA.
@ircmaxell Even if you extract the closure to it's own variable, it doesn't inherit the strict check, but if you call it directly from the top scope, not as a callback, it does.
@rdlowrey why do you think that internal functions used as callback should have strict arg count and yet think userland functions should swallow extra arguments when used as callback on the exact same situation? On the topic about scalar type hints you made your entire opinion in "internal and userland should have the same behavior"... and you just gave me an idea xD
Not sure how intuitive it is for users to think "internals doesn't have strict_types=1, so the call to this callback will be weak"
19:10
@Leigh exactly, strictness is determined where they are called, not defined
Because internal functions are poop-ish, @marcio
@Leigh right, perhaps functions like that should inherit the caller's strict mode?
user895378
@marcio I still think all functions should behave the same way. I see the usefulness, but I'm likely to vote against this proposal because of this. All should behave the same way and enforcing this rule on userland functions is a big negative without commensurate benefit to justify it IMO.
Perhaps, or perhaps not, I'm not sure what the correct behaviour is either. I would expect it to inherit at first glance, but after thinking about it, I know why it doesn't
I'm tempted to just leave the behavior as is
19:13
Good (UGT) Morning!
@rdlowrey I don't know, I still do not see it as too much hassle compared with the benefits but perhaps you could show me an example on one of your libraries?
user895378
@marcio Basically everything I do has this problem. All of my code executes inside callbacks that receive parameters for which they rarely have any use.
ok, but "everything you do" is too abstract for this debate.
user895378
Well, your proposal has massive negative consequences for me without proving any benefit.
user895378
19:15
I doubt that allowing extra parameters actually causes many real bugs in real programs.
user895378
The callee knows whether or not it needs the parameters.
hence why I'm trying to listen to everybody, until now I've been receiving a ~90% positive feedback.
user895378
You shouldn't force callees to accept parameters they know they don't need.
user895378
This isn't like the strict typehints IMO because here the callee actually knows best.
@rdlowrey or more specifically, the callee knows what they need
where the caller knows what they have
user895378
19:17
Right.
user895378
Forcing the callee to do things it doesn't need or care about seems pedantic for the sake of pedantry.
I think that makes a lot of sense, until you say "seems pedantic for the sake of pedantry", but ok
user895378
There are lots of times where it's not pedantic. But there are lots of times where it slows down development without any benefit whatsoever.
user895378
The difference between strictness here and strictness in typehints is I can't simply avoid the strictness of function param counts because there's no typehint to omit.
user895378
I see the ability to call a function that doesn't care about extra params as far more of a feature that makes my life as a developer easier than I see it as a potential source of bugs.
19:21
With Joe's RFC, dev-time zero-cost strict typehinting... assert(is_type($arg)) ... \o/
@Leigh So long as your code doesn't have bugs...
user895378
^ acknowledges the value of strict types without actually providing the functionality though.
user895378
That can't be an argument for why we don't need scalar types. It's an argument on the opposite side lol :)
user895378
It says, "there is value in this"
@rdlowrey yeah, but the pattern I see is that 90% of the cases this happens only with anon functions. You have a nice case, I'll give some thought on it. The RFC is on draft yet, perhaps I could find an alternative.
19:23
@Leigh DbC is not the same use-cases as typing
user895378
@marcio true ... fwiw treating anonymous functions differently would eliminate most of my complaints. But then if you do that you have this weird situation where the rules are different for different types of functions.
Everything I say here is completely serious. Always.
@PeeHaa don't do ebanking on that system though...
@rdlowrey I don't see a problem with that... for instance, if we add short lambdas, they will have to inherit the context automatically instead of explicitly with:
But yes, I am going to abuse the shit out of every new feature and make sure I find completely obscene uses for all of them
19:26
($a, $b) use ($c) ==> /*some logic*/;
because having to use "use" in this case would be a hassle and remove the benefits from short lambdas.
Same rule can apply to anon functions and arg count.
user895378
Maybe. I'm not a big fan of inconsistency in general ...
user895378
Special cases are what make programming hard.
user895378
When everything behaves the same way I don't have to remember everything.
user895378
When it doesn't I have to hit the manual on php.net every two minutes (basically the status quo now).
19:28
@rdlowrey Would still be the same issue with [$this, "onReadable"].
anyone made an rfc for this stuff yet?
user895378
@kelunik right.
@MarcelBurkhard Those are fixed by having an IDE....
I know, major bc break
user895378
@MarcelBurkhard won't ever happen for that exact reason.
19:29
@Danack IDE is not a valid reason to have flaws in a language
@rdlowrey It wouldn't be inconsistent, see the lambda syntax example. Or we design it this way on purpose or we don't have it. Same principle could apply to anon func and arg count check.
@rdlowrey which is a pity
user895378
anon functions are functions, though. That's why it's inconsistent. The anon function behaves differently from other functions that aren't anonymous.
Not exactly that, but changing the signatures is not possible.
possible != viable.. it would be possible and migration would be as easy using regex
but I know the bc break is huge
19:33
@rdlowrey but they are called "short" lambdas because by design they don't need to import context and are declared "shortly". If you are using a anon callback, and didn't bothered to explicitly declare a function with a signature, then you don't want to have a strict arg count check on it. That's the same principle, we could have it.
user895378
@marcio I might be able to get on board with that. In any case, thanks for listening to my concerns -- I appreciate it :)
user895378
I gotta get back to work for now ... I'm right in the middle of some code craziness at the moment.
@rdlowrey of course, I will never move an RFC from draft to discussion without listening to as much diverse opinions as possible ;)
k see ya
@MarcelBurkhard I think I have uncrappified it. It even took over my browser and stupid chrome didn't even show the extension that did it.
@PeeHaa websearches.com by any chance?
19:40
linkswift
ok too bad
my grandfather's pc is infected.
Can someone do me a favour and click youtube.com/channel/UCvqRdlKsE5Q8mf8YXbdIJLw and see if there is actually a live event occuring? It says 'live' but won't display 'live'.
@Danack don't see anything live
Nope only some intro video
k - thanks. Must be a bug.
19:43
@Danack If i search for it the 1st entry is "LoL esports upcoming event"
when I click on it I get the intro video on the channel though..
I think it may have just finished - na.lolesports.com/schedule/2015-02-25
I've heard that it's confusing to have $array in $haystack equal to $result = true; foreach ($array as $val) $result = $result && $val in $haystack; … So what would be a better syntax? Two suggestions list(...$array, ...$array2) in $haystack; list("a", "b") in $haystack or maybe just ...$array in $haystack; ...["a", "b"] in $haystack; ?
@bwoebi none of them
user895378
@bwoebi I'm a little confused
19:54
@NikiC you have a better suggestion for multiple in?
@bwoebi yes, don't implement it in syntax.
"in" != "subset"
@NikiC Well, for list() I was thinking is this list of ... in $array?
@rdlowrey hmm?
user895378
@bwoebi I can't read inline code like that. I need curly braces and multiple lines to make sense of things :)
list(...$array, ...$array2) in $haystack;
list("a", "b") in $haystack;
// vs.
...$array in $haystack;
...["a", "b"] in $haystack;
^ @rdlowrey
user895378
Honestly I'm not sure any of them are great options. They all seem unwieldy and confusing.
user895378
19:59
But that might just be my small brain talking.
I just mean… all the alternatives to check if something is a subset of an array (like empty(array_diff($array, $haystack))) all construct a new array… there's nothing cheap…
LOL, I tried to clone && composer update on [email protected]:zendframework/Component_ZendValidator.git to be sure about patch BC breaks but:
Your requirements could not be resolved to an installable set of packages.

  Problem 1
    - zendframework/zend-uri 2.3.x-dev requires zendframework/zend-escaper == 2.3.9999999.9999999-dev -> no matching package found.
    - zendframework/zend-uri 2.3.x-dev requires zendframework/zend-escaper == 2.3.9999999.9999999-dev -> no matching package found.
    - Installation request for zendframework/zend-uri == 2.3.9999999.9999999-dev -> satisfiable by zendframework/zend-uri[2.3.x-dev].
I guess we don't need to worry about BC breaks for this one. Next.
20:15
@bwoebi why do we need that functionality?
@ircmaxell hmm good question… ask @kelunik
If you want to test multiple values against the same array. But we can also drop this for now and see if there's need for it. ...$values in $array would be backwards compatible.
I think the idea for that came from @rdlowrey ;-P
user895378
Then it was definitely my small brain talking.
@kelunik I'd do if ($value in $array && $value2 in $array)
because otherwise you're going to get confusion "is it and? or or? I can never remember"
20:21
Yeah, probably. I'll drop that tomorrow from the proposal.
@ircmaxell well… we'd just mirror isset() behavior which is and
I think someone on Reddit proposed something like this:
any [...] in $array
each [...] in $array
Of course, that would require two new keywords which is not going to happen.
@bwoebi yes, but I think that's weird. to me ["a", "b"] in $array means that the literal array is contained as one of the values of the array.
@ircmaxell that's why we were suggesting something like ...["a", "b"] in $array or list("a", "b") in $array
@bwoebi phpunit has an assertion to check if an array is subset of another and it's recursive
20:25
recursive? :o
and it has no major costs :P
@bwoebi even still, I'm not sure the use case is significant enough to warrant special syntax... I can be convinced otherwise, but that's my gut instinct
@ircmaxell Yeah, it's just sugar… can be added later…
we're on the same page it sounds like :-)
20:27
Yeah. :-)
yep
20:51
The voting for "Group Use Declarations" is now closed. It passed with 39:19 :D wiki.php.net/rfc/group_use_declarations#votes
user895378
@marcio nice! I'm glad the initial baseless objections were finally overcome.
tomorrow, the big one goes up
The authors of an RFC are wrongly arguing about a "possible" BC break in a rival RFC, while their own RFC *deliberately* breaks BC. #php
@marcio shit I forgot to no-vote =P … nah, congrats ;-) See my vote wasn't needed.
@ircmaxell can't wait for that one. I'll be sure to have an email describing my user experience with the proposed patch (no BC breaks for weeks and lots of advantages) to publish on the mailing list, especially because I was doing constructive opposition to it at first before endorsing it.
20:56
yay group use declarations
@ircmaxell the big one? You mean the vote on your RFC?
@bwoebi glad you received no reminder about the voting end :P
@marcio +1
@bwoebi yup
@ircmaxell I don't really like to vote until Ze'ev's RFC is finished… I hope that both voting periods will intersect by at least a few days
@bwoebi I was told that the final version will be live by 12:00 CET tomorrow

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