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22:02
static void zend_enum_free(zend_object *object) /* {{{ */
{
        zend_enum *obj = (zend_enum*) object;
        zend_string_release(obj->name);
        efree(obj);
}
/* }}} */

static void zend_enum_dtor(zend_object *object) /* {{{ */
{
}
/* }}} */
So I think the free method is right. I'm just not sure what the dtor does.
(not sure it needs to do anything)
dtor calls destructors (like __destruct on userland objects)
so, you can set the dtor to NULL
I don't need to decrement the string ref?
(the name?)
it's correct
just you can set the dtor_obj to NULL in the list of handlers
you don't need an empty function for that
Anonymous
@MarcelBurkhard auryn may be overkill for small projects
@sam_io It's useful to inject db connection etc.
even in small projects
22:07
@bwoebi I do, actually.
I segfault without it.
where is the segfault with a NULL handler?
Anonymous
@bwoebi yes, I know what it does, but I wanted to know if there was a design pattern alternative to the singleton. Preferably, one that uses that uses lazy-loading.
Anonymous
And no reflection :)
#0  0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
#1  0x00000000008a9969 in zend_objects_store_call_destructors (objects=0x1056c70) at /home/levijm/Projects/php-src/Zend/zend_objects_API.c:54
#2  0x000000000083dbb4 in shutdown_destructors () at /home/levijm/Projects/php-src/Zend/zend_execute_API.c:226
#3  0x00000000008593ef in zend_call_destructors () at /home/levijm/Projects/php-src/Zend/zend.c:932
#4  0x00000000007a05ff in php_request_shutdown (dummy=0x0) at /home/levijm/Projects/php-src/main/main.c:1750
#5  0x0000000000925c30 in do_cli (argc=2, argv=0x1052fe0) at /home/levijm/Projects/php-src/sapi/cli/php
okay, seems like a bug there
22:11
ZEND_API void zend_objects_store_call_destructors(zend_objects_store *objects)
{
        uint32_t i;

        for (i = 1; i < objects->top ; i++) {
                zend_object *obj = objects->object_buckets[i];

                if (IS_OBJ_VALID(obj)) {
                        if (!(GC_FLAGS(obj) & IS_OBJ_DESTRUCTOR_CALLED)) {
                                GC_FLAGS(obj) |= IS_OBJ_DESTRUCTOR_CALLED;
                                GC_REFCOUNT(obj)++;
                                obj->handlers->dtor_obj(obj);
yeah, there's an if(obj->handlers->dtor_obj) missing
user image
2
Okay, I've updated the enum branch: github.com/morrisonlevi/php-src/tree/enum
I still need to figure out the proper implementations for some of the handlers.
I still need to add values(), ordinal() and name() as well.
I still think we don't need name().
It's deja-vu all over again.
@bwoebi I haven't given it any more thought.
values() only needs to access the zend_class_entry and ordinal() just needs the zend_enum.
So I can have all enum classes use the same exact methods for them.
22:21
yup
Unless you can think of a reason not to do that?
No, I cannot
I'm thinking the next step is to create PHP_METHOD(enum, ordinal), but I'm not sure how to hook it up in this case.
As said, I'd consider making an (userland final) Enum superclass which holds the methods
I really just need an array somewhere and just copy them into the new class entry, don't I?
22:27
@LeviMorrison how will you access enum fields? (I don't see any test with it). Is it Enum->Field or Enum::Field ?
RenewalAction::Approve
They are constants not properties.
@LeviMorrison no, not really… function table HashTable is not a pointer but inlined in zend_class_entry struct
(or you recreate the array each time… yes…)
but that's not that clean^^
@LeviMorrison ok, I have a small suggestion FY. Why not RenewalAction->Approve ? One reason: there is no way to know if it's a class constant or enum just by looking at it. With Enum->Field you immediately know it.
That's not really any better in my opinion.
I think constants and constant syntax are the way to go; do you agree @bwoebi?
@LeviMorrison I agree.
22:31
I think it's beneficial to have it disambiguated syntactically from class constants :)
@marcio that looks like some sort of a magic static property… which are mutable.
@marcio why? They are constant...
@bwoebi Do we have any macro that is similar to this? RETURN_HT(ce->constants_table)
@Danack but the things you do with enums are not the same things you do with class constants right?
@LeviMorrison RETURN_ARR() exists
22:33
@marcio They're similar to constants than they are to variables.
/more similar/
What do I need to do to get copy-on-write behavior out of it?
a SEPERATE or something?
@Danack agree, this was just a nit anyway, it's not really that important, but having a distinction could be a good thing.
@LeviMorrison you just need to increment refcount?
I think it's actually in the wrong format.
++GC_REFCOUNT(ht);
@LeviMorrison hmm?
22:36
the constants table is a map of name => enum value.
I want a numeric array instead.
oh, yeah…
then create and cache one if needed
I'm not sure how to do that. I need to take a break for a moment anyway.
set to NULL at compile time and check if exists , if it doesn't create it, then, increment refcount and return it
It needs to exist per zend_class_entry
Can't use a static variable in the method, which I think is what you are suggesting?
@LeviMorrison oh, oops
you're right
I wasn't thinking of static method…
22:50
*ce = Z_OBJCE_P(obj_zv);

array_init_size(return_value, zend_hash_num_elements(ce->constants_table));
zend_hash_real_init(ht, 1);

ZEND_HASH_FILL_PACKED(Z_ARRVAL_P(return_value)) {
        ZEND_HASH_FOREACH_VAL(ce->constants_table, entry) {
                Z_ADDREF_P(entry);
                ZEND_HASH_FILL_ADD(entry);
        } ZEND_HASH_FOREACH_END();
} ZEND_HASH_FILL_END();
Does that look correct? I haven't used the packed macros before
C looks scary :P
@LeviMorrison I have no idea. Try it.
@Worf Bleh, that's mostly macros. It should be scary.
@LeviMorrison would it really be less scary if it were fcalls?
@bwoebi It would be less scary if it used the C++ iterator API.
(okay maybe not :)
22:54
i don't even get what's that. a function declaration or a function call? xD
@Worf neither.
lol :D
macros just are code expansion…
i think i got it
I think I just need to set the internal.builtin_functions property on the new ce?
lol
23:04
I have no idea what that thing does.
@bwoebi lol I honestly expected there would be macros to simplify this. Not that I can find, anyway.
is there a way to use phpunit tests for profiling code?
Ah, maybe zend_register_functions?
i already use xdebug and cachegrind
@Worf You don't want to. PHPUnit doesn't run things efficiently.
23:16
dunno if it's the best option nowadays
@Danack suggestions, then?
@Worf I think people are using - php.net/manual/en/book.xhprof.php
checking it, thanks
however.......profiling is more an art than a science, and I am really unsure that is actually a great tool to use. I think there are better things - most of the time it's not 'code' that is slow, it's all the I/O involved in running the code, and strace is a good way of finding out where the issues are. But it's not easy to use.
@NikiC Any idea how I would attach these methods to a user-land declared class?
const zend_function_entry enum_methods[] = {
        ZEND_ME(enum, ordinal, arginfo_void, ZEND_ACC_PUBLIC)
        ZEND_ME(enum, values, arginfo_void, ZEND_ACC_PUBLIC | ZEND_ACC_STATIC)
        ZEND_FE_END
};
Or am I just approaching that totally wrong?
@LeviMorrison you rarely need very special things like that enum thingy ;-)
23:19
@Worf Some people have also mentioned blackfire.io but I couldn't get it to work on Centos.
fyi, don't expect to be able to contact any Australians in the next few days. There's going to be an 3 days of official drinking mourning. bbc.co.uk/sport/0/cricket/32182999
@Danack did you check out blackfire?
oh.
@FlorianMargaine I think possible they only release packages against the versions of PHP released for a linux distribution, aka PHP 5.3 for Centos.
@bwoebi So assuming there was a superclass of enum, how would you do this? Just call some extends function somewhere?
Can we have traits in internals?
Like, internally defined traits?
Then we can have it use the trait instead of extension.
@LeviMorrison not that easy because static method…
@LeviMorrison you need to manually add to ce->function_table because it's an userland class after all
23:34
@Danack profiling with xdebug and cachegrind gave me several hints. i know it's not an important achievement (for internals guys like you :D) but "exit subroutines asap" was gold for me :D

function a(bool $x){
    if($x){
        // long code
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}
should be:
function a(bool $x){
    if(!$x) return false;
    // long code
    return true;
}
@Worf ...... I would be surprised if that actually made much of a difference. Aka I suspect either the tool is reporting it wrong, or you might be reading it wrong. An extra jump would be almost nothing in PHP.
And with OPCache enabled, it might go away entirely.
no matter how long the code is, if the function gets executed a lot of times that kind of optimization increased perfs a lot in my experience
@LeviMorrison I just can tell you that marking the class as internal will have some problems. That zend_function_entry approach won't work.
iirc xdebug uses ticks for profiling
@Worf beware that xdebug will stretch time diffs a lot
and by a lot I mean A LOT
23:41
XDebug is like a swiss knife, but each functionality is just useful in half of the cases one might need them.
could be
i should try profiling production sites. not a good idea, right?
You'd profile everything, but not PHP there.
you better profile the internal I/O
how?
@Worf ok, I saw your example. If you are getting any diff with this it's probably because of xdebug hogging and collecting information
measuring backend query reaction time?
23:46
@Worf you shouldn't have xdebug enabled on production sites. It does affect stability.
i suck with DB :( also, i should switch to postgresql first
anyway... in one of my classes i have
const TRUE = 1;
const FALSE = 2;
const UNDETERMINED = 3;
this will not work anymore in php7 right? surprisingly Foo::TRUE and Foo::FALSE worked
as class const it should still work AFAIK?
/me falls in love with trampoline
Not that trampoline…

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