« first day (1713 days earlier)      last day (3464 days later) » 

16:00
Thought I remember something in the RFC about not having headers with the same name... goes to look
@Trowski Share your findings :-)
A recipient MAY combine multiple header fields with the same field
   name into one "field-name: field-value" pair, without changing the
   semantics of the message, by appending each subsequent field value to
   the combined field value in order, separated by a comma.
"A sender MUST NOT generate multiple header fields with the same field
 name in a message unless either the entire field value for that
 header field is defined as a comma-separated list [i.e., #(values)]
 or the header field is a well-known exception (as noted below)."
@DanLugg That caveat is what makes what I want to not particularly rational. Not only do I want to normalise, I want to do it in the most complicated and expensive way possible. HTTP is fairly human-readable, but it doesn't need to be, and making working with it harder and more expensive over casing is... dumb. Yet the anal retentive in me is continually winning.
Ok, so as long as it's a comma-separated list, you can send multiple headers with the same name.
16:02
yes
@bwoebi There are some headers that violate this rule, I forget the specifics, I think Set-Cookie is one
@DaveRandom there are?
Note: In practice, the "Set-Cookie" header field ([RFC6265]) often
      appears multiple times in a response message and does not use the
      list syntax, violating the above requirements on multiple header
      fields with the same name.
Set-Cookie is AFAIK the only one.
Yeh, there are at least two specified headers that use a comma separated list as part of a single value, and therefore cannot be contracted to a single header
@bwoebi That seems to imply that I was correct, that you can't implode Set-Cookie with ','.
I forget what the other one is but I know there is one
Or at least was one, it make have been deprecated by the HTTP sanifying RFCs
Will go re-read and figure it out in a bit, no time right now
It came up early on in Aerys/Artax development, there'll be a record in the transcript somewhere of me discussing it with @rdlowrey
16:05
@Trowski yeah, because Set-Cookie actually allows comma to be used in its field value
Like, a couple of years ago at least
@Trowski it's allowed to join Cookie, but not Set-Cookie… I messed that up.
I blame the protocol. Hard to keep track when it has suggestions rather than rules.
posted on June 25, 2015 by kbironneau

/* by Vooodoo */

but as a Server, you always are allowed to join with comma
as Set-Cookie may never be received by Server (with the semantic meaning being that one of RFC 6265)
16:07
That's good to know, saves some hassle.
Right, Set-Cookie makes no sense server-side.
@Trowski Set-Cookie is a good example of the underlying problem: that a lot of "features" were retro-fitted, based on what people were doing when the made it up as they went along (cookies being a netscape invention, and XHR/AJAX being an IE thing)
SIP has a very similar problem
@DaveRandom SIP means?
As in the VoIP signalling protocol, which not-entirely-coincidentally looks very similar to HTTP
0
A: Login without HTTPS, how to secure?

ESLThe answer is short: Absolute security does not exist. So, if someone says "X is not secure", you should be careful with what he says, because he may imply that something is (which is false). HTTP connections have very low security (compared with HTTPS), but the problem you raise is valid, and ...

this has really bad advice from someone who is hostile towards doing anything correctly
i.e. using HTTPS
They're an RFC822 extended message format, in a kind-of request/response architecture over UDP
user924016
16:20
ScottArciszewski yes that is bad advice
it's a badly designed protocol and almost no-one properly interops with anyone else at the moment, yet it's still very popular. It pisses me off a bit.
I'm not going to edit it or anything
but
is there any way to bump one of the correct answers up? :P
by votes it shouldn't float above them
That answer is not incorrect, but it is biased, incomplete and pretty unhelpful, it's basically berating people for doing it wrong without telling them how to do it right
Nothing in it is factually incorrect though
But no, afaik there is no way to bump an answer above the accepted wrong, acceptance is the absolute measure of "best", and since there has to be some absolute measure I suppose that's as good a metric as any
I hate networks
16:28
@NikiC In what way?
I doubt that you hate the ability to communicate in general ^^
@bwoebi I hate network configuration
I'm supposed to be writing a virtio driver and instead I'm already failing to ssh into a vm because some problem in the network setup
I've already sudo'd all kinds of magic incantations found on the internetz but it's not working ^^
the hardest part is always getting started at all ^^
Are the operators != and <> strictly the same? Or are there some caveats?
@DanLugg they are the same
and I mean same as in ====
@DanLugg nah, it's just the same… they still have different representations.
16:45
hello all I have a simple question
how can I put PHP properly inside HTML in this case:


$form = '<form role="search" method="get" id="searchform" action="' . home_url( '/' ) . '" >

<?php echo "Hello World"; ?>
<label>Type:</label><br>
16:58
The rule of thumb is generally that if you have more HTML than PHP then you only open the PHP tags where needed (i.e. embed PHP in HTML) rather than trying to embed the HTML into your PHP code. So in your example:

<form role="search" method="get" id="searchform" action="<?=home_url('/')?>">
<?="Hello World"?>
<label>Type:</label><br>
@Sherif ... more any HTML ...
;-)
@DanLugg Progress not perfection
Perfect progress.
> Learning is iterative. Specifically, two iterations: fuck it up, do it perfect.
@DanLugg Well, believing that something is perfect usually entails that you can observe no problem, and as such you are unlikely to pursue learning from it any further. In which case where is the iteration? I prefer to look at the learning process as more of a "leave plenty of room for the imagination" type process. Otherwise you tend to grow an attitude of "I know it all" type arrogance.
^^ I was being facetious, and thankfully never think I know it all personally. Rather, the more I learn, the less I feel I know.
17:09
Sure, which is why tend to avoid overreaching statements that cut off one's curiosity before it's even begun the learning cycle.
See, I believe that innovation is a product of applying logic and curiosity to your technical know-how. The problem is, without enough technical knowledge, one has very little room to acquire skill or grow their imagination, but without enough curiosity, one has very little room to become creative and build towards innovation.
So the trick is always to draw the right balance between feeding knowledge and leaving enough room for curiosity to play its catalyst role.
Which is surprisingly hard to do...
Overreaching statements, when you're a novice, tend to be interpreted as absolutes in your mind, because you just don't know enough to argue an alternative view.
... hence you may never seek out an alternative and thusly leading to mediocrity...
♬ Oh, show me a home where the Buffalo roam... and I'll show you house full of cow shit ♬
Show me the way to go home,
I'm tired and I wanna go to bed,
I had a lil' drink about an hour ago,
And it's gone right to my head
17:30
does the hashtag in config files on linux servers means something is commented out?
I FIND IT EXTREMELY FRUSTRATING THAT I CANNOT DEREFERENCE A CLONE EXPRESSION IN THE SAME WAY I CAN A NEW EXPRESSION.
damn
cat takes up too much space
@DanLugg you definitely aren't using PHP 7…
I definitely am not, no.
@DanLugg THEN STOP COMPLAINING, GODDAMMIT.
17:33
UNFORTUNATELY SOME OF US CAN'T DEPLOY APPLICATIONS ON ALPHA LANGUAGE RELEASES.
Some of us actually work with PHP, not just on it ;-)
8
nobody is interested in alpha… I'm just taking whatever is current master :>
Oh well, I'll just $this->copy()->dereference();.
@DanLugg I don't think I'd crowd the interface with another method just for that.
@Trowski protected
Protected methods will be BC breaks if you remove them. Make it private if you can.
17:38
Setters are private but fluent, copy-setters are public and fluent; now the copy-setters read as return $this->copy()->setProperty($value);
@Trowski Meh, inheritance. final protected, not concerned.
@DanLugg Yeah... I know it's a weak BC break. Honestly I wouldn't worry about it, but I've had people jump down my throat about it, so just warning you.
@Trowski Well many thanks to you :-P This'd all be much easier if I could return (clone $this)->setProp($val);
Patience, you will :)
True. It's just one of those things that irk me. The trouble was gone to to make an exception for new expressions, why the fuck not generalize it?
(new C) and (clone $o) are ... um ... very similar.
Constructor dereferencing is pretty stupid in my opinion. If you're using that a lot it's probably a sign you're doing something silly in your code.
If you really feel it's that valuable to instantiate an object just so that you could carry out some operation(s) on it in a single statement and then throw it away, you likely haven't explored better options.
17:44
@Sherif Its not about "constructor dereferencing" specifically. Its about being able to dereference arbitrary expressions.
(/* doesn't matter, returns an object somehow */)->method() should always be valid.
But in this case it's not arbitrary. It's specifically an instance.
It is arbitrary. The expression clone $o is no different than new C() is no different than 1 + 1 is no different than allTheThings()
They only become different when the deref is invalid for the resulting value, but that's a runtime error, not a parse.
@Sherif It's okay for fluent interfaces when building things.
but usually, you're right.
It's very different actually. clone and new allocate memory for a new instance object. Instantiating an object usually entails that you care about state. Whereas an expression like 1+1 does not. Same goes for functions, since they specifically go after removing state from the equation. There are side effects between the two.
@Sherif While in PHP 1 + 1 cannot result in an object, it's just as valid an expression to dereference from as $object or new C(). My point is that we shouldn't have had ad-hoc exceptions, but rules.
Now, with @NikiC's work, we have that, but why that wasn't something more of a priority in the past is just ludicrous to me.
17:49
@bwoebi Building as in composition? I'd say that's even less of a reason to want to use constructor dereferencing since you're more than likely to want to modify the instance beyond just passing it along.
This is the same case as (1 instanceof Foo). It's not an error, its just always falsey.
@Sherif not sure if we agree about dereferencing? I include (new Foo)->method() under dereferencing?
@Sherif return (new FluentObject)->withProp1()->withProp2(); That sort of object building.
@DanLugg It's not. Specifically because of the side effects that instance objects infer. Which is why I am not disputing the validity of derferencing in general, just that dereferncing from a constructor is typically a sign of poor design.
@Trowski with...? You mean set... ?
17:53
@bwoebi Yes, but there you are dereferencing from a constructor. If you only needed to instantiate the object for the purpose of calling that method on it, in that example, you likely only did it out of laziness and haven't explored better options. That object carries state. If that state is built up and destroyed within a single expression, did you really need the object or did you just need a function?
@Sherif Oh, I'm not talking about design quality. We definitely agree here, that there's a separation. My point is I prefer environments that are more "sandboxy", than "grocery-listy" when it comes to grammars and parsing.
Goes back to the principals of functional programming where state is completely isolated from the behavioral aspects of a function.
If I want to (arbitrary expression)->deref() I should be able to.
stackoverflow.com/questions/2336678/… lol the bad "accepted" answer is < 0 now
@Sherif sure, but at the end you do $foo = (new Foo)->setVar(...)->setVar(...); … for further use
17:54
@DanLugg Fair enough. Still my point remains that in this case I'm actually OK with PHP not having had dereferncing there.
s/having/not having had
@Sherif I'm okay with a lot of things that aren't "right" too ;-)
@bwoebi Further use of the result. Not further use of the instance. You still threw away the state in the same expression you built it in.
@Sherif I imply return $this;
What you have left is the state of a totally different result.
not operating on a clone of $this
17:56
@bwoebi Then why dereference at all in that case?
@bwoebi With a fluent object, yes, set would be better.
There's a feature request: void returns are automatically fluent :-D
Proper initialization and early initialization are good things in an object oriented paradigm.
I get that it's more convenient. I just disagree that convenience is necessarily a good thing in this matter.
@Sherif to not have to specify the object variable on each line
@Sherif As said, I limit that to builders. Generally object methods shouldn't return $this.
@bwoebi Why each line? If you were going to reuse $foo, you're going to reuse it regardless. The only thing you spared yourself was $foo = new Foo; Nothing more.
18:00
@Sherif hmm?
@bwoebi Nothing changed in your example apart from not having done $foo = new Foo; $foo->setVar(...)->setVar(...);
You did it in a single statement instead of two.
That's all.
@Sherif oh, I see… yeah
That's just esthetics, really^^
posted on June 25, 2015 by kbironneau

/* by Frank Rice */

Exactly my point.
@bwoebi s/esthetics/bad grammar/
18:03
It adds no real value. Arguably it just means that you're either too lazy to think about how you're initializing these objects in a more succinct manner, or that you're simply throwing away state to cut corners.
((clone (1 + 1))->("bar"))(); <-- valid syntax IMO
how is that valid :P
Because they're all just arbitrary expressions and operators.
aahh, you mean the syntax. yes, i guess
@bwoebi @rasmus Thats why we should keep {} as the only syntax for string offset access imo
not sure if blasphemy…
18:20
@DanLugg You continue to ignore the fact that an object carries state, which entails side effects, and loosely throw around the term "arbitrary expressions" as though it strengthens your argument. The problem there is that an expression is the broadest possible definition and it doesn't really make dereferencing any more or less valid.
For example, you can't dereference a constant value in a language like C any more than you can in a language like PHP or Python. So why is this term "expression" so relevant to your point?
@Sherif Because I feel that you should be able to dereference a constant.
Why?
It's a constant.
What part of a constant requires referencing in order to validate __de__referencing?
Because in my eyes, FOO, (FOO) and (1 + 1) are the same.
I don't understand how that answer my question.
Naively (and incorrectly, though it expresses the point I think) Exp := '(' Exp ')' | Exp Op Exp
Exp can, and should be valid for any expression.
Whether it's fetching a const value, or otherwise.
18:23
That still doesn't mean that you should be able to dereference any expression since many expressions don't reference anything.
@bwoebi Is rasmus trying to understand php code again?
4
@Sherif are you confusing expression and statement?
@PeeHaa hehehe
I'm not.
@Sherif You should be able to grammatically, but at runtime it can fail wildly.
@Sherif Then I don't get your point
18:24
@bwoebi Well, what is the benefit of dereferencing something?
i.e. why do you actually want to be able to dereference things in most languages?
Nothing except expressivity.
@bwoebi That's not true. Indirection is a form of composition. Decomposition is a predicate of optimization.
What are you optimizing by dereferencing a scalar constant value?
In what language is dereferencing an optimization? o_O
C and C++, to name a few.
Being able to pass around a pointer is optimal from having to copy an entire structure.
no?
ah, I see what you mean now.
By the way… you know that constants can be arrays?
18:30
@bwoebi NOW they can, sure.
You use PHP 7 as a baseline for your arguments as though everyone/anyone is actually using it in production.
I'm talking about what people are typically doing now.
@PeeHaa you are so mean :P
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson Some people should stay far away from PHP code. rasmus is definitively one of them
@Sherif yeah, well… I'm not very well connected to the now. I'm usually either writing PHP 5.2 compatible code or 7.0 as baseline ^^
but he invented php! he is in credit, forever :P
@bwoebi Wow, you're like on both ends of the extreme there.
Find a middle ground man
:)
18:33
hehe
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson :-)
@Sherif I'm happy to not have to write PHP/FI code :-P
what FI used to stand for
fucking incredible?
forms interpreter
@bwoebi why is it 5.2 compatible rather than 5.3?
5.3 has register_globals, right?
18:37
@NikiC rather the interesting features like Closures (with use() I believe) don't work properly on that install with APC...
why doesn't it work with apc?
apc should work with 5.3 okayishly right?
@NikiC no idea, I'm getting sigsegvs^^
@bwoebi So how about prepend file extract request upgrade 5.5?
It's from the ubuntu LTS … and yeah… as long as Ubuntu isn't updated, we won't have 5.5…
so update ubuntu
18:39
not my decision :-/
already tried to tell the sysadmin …
18:57
bleh
I think I want typed properties now :(
how about a pony instead?
Why not both?
user924016
@PeeHaa yes.. me too
19:07
> 16:05 <Rasmus> Argh! https://github.com/WordPress/WordPress/blob/master/wp-includes/widgets.php#L757-L762
> 16:05 <Rasmus> How am I suppose to reason about code like that

^^
Decided to start a new OS project tonight :-)
@Jimbo woot w00t 1337
What's it about?
@Jimbo OS as in open-source or operating-system?
@PeeHaa This in PHP. Selenium tests, web sockets, free
@NikiC Open source, I'm not clever enough for the latter ;-)
@Jimbo cooool
19:09
Thought about calling it TestEase
:'D
lol
@PeeHaa that would spoil you
user924016
@Jimbo cool
@NikiC I read Operating System, too and started choking because "another" ;) /cc @Jimbo
But I promise to take them outside every day and take good care of them myself!
19:13
TestEase, TestTacular. Come on guy, I need ideas :-)
I always name things either namey or nameify so don't look at me :)
user924016
Confidence
user924016
wiki Confidence is generally described as a state of being certain either that a hypothesis or prediction is correct or that a chosen course of action is the best or most effective.
@Jimbo TestIcle?
@Gordon CamelCasing the testicles always helps
19:20
@Jimbo Testarossa
@Jimbo testosterone
... and the page will have multiple sperms coded entirely in CSS
@marcio gave me cancer after two lines of code
omfg
i fixed my network issue
it only took five hours or so
is that the amount of time it took until you gave up and tried turning it off and on again?
19:27
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson the moment you discover parse_str is a core api thing, not some crappy function from wordpress.
@marcio parse_str is useful sometimes :P although i don't like it without the second param, if that's what you mean
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson yes, without the second param
btw, why is the pass by ref required here? php.net/manual/en/function.extract.php
ah, it's not actually required anymore 3v4l.org/WesBI
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson It's an optional pass by ref
19:47
Hi guys!
What was the reason again for hash_equals to bail on strings with different lengths?
Very simple question:
I have 7 classes in 'A' namespace. Now I make some client-code .php file (which will use those classes).
What is the common way to do this? Should I call 7 'use' operators in the top of file? Of should I just call the classes \A\classname?
Or should I just add 'namespace A;' at the top of file?
I understand that all ways do work. But which way is the most reasonable? or practical maybe
20:04
@Evghenii personally, i prefer having FS\FileReader.php rather than FS\File\Reader.php, because in my code i want to read new FileReader() rather than new Reader() (reader of what? what is it?) also that helps having less name collisions. also i always use use, even with root classes, but just because i don't like reading \ new \stdClass() :) and most likely the code that uses those classes should be in a different namespace (so no namespace A)
@Evghenii how about adding a proper boundary? Create one class encapsulating all the usecases, e.g. a facade, you want to do on that A package and then just use that one class instead of all of them. less coupling.
@DanLugg actually 1+1 is 2, not FOO.
BaDumTishMonkey.gif
@PeeHaa It bails? I thought the entire point of hash_equals was for constant-time string comparison.
If it bailed it wouldn't be constant, now would it.
@Sherif It is... as long as the strings are of equal length :P
20:19
@PeeHaa because it makes no sense
@PeeHaa That defeats the point.
Yes it does
We can't reliably hide the string length
because it leaks at so many other places
(for example when creating the string)
The comparison of "foo" to "a" or "abc" should take the same amount of time regardless of the length of either string.
Otherwise, that's how you exploit timing attack vectors.
no, it isn't.
20:20
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson, @Gordon, thank you. I've heard what I wanted
@bwoebi Uhhhh, yes it is.
@bwoebi Well that kinda means the entire function is a lie?
Or am I missing something?
@Sherif you exploit that by having two strings like "fooo" and "foae". When you have two matching chars and it then aborts, you get a leak
@bwoebi Same abort applies to "foo" and "f"
no
you immediately compare the lengths
20:21
Sure, think of permutative attacks
hi, i know wrong room.. but is anyone familiar with GPG and can possibly help me realquick?
@FlorianSchneider @FlorianMargaine pinged you with an answer IIRC
If you're a bot, you likely have no idea what the length of the other string is. So you try to exploit that length by testing varying lengths against the end point.
@FlorianSchneider Not if you don't say what your problem is...
heh
20:22
@Sherif sure. And what can you now do with the length info?
Narrow down your brute force attack
@Sherif by which margin?
By the margins of orders of magnitude
Which is very significant
It's that a small margin that it isn't even worth speaking of.
o.0
You call orders of magnitude small?
OK....
20:24
no, it's not orders of magnitude
it's not even 10% less.
ok, problem is: I generated a new subkey ("e" -> encryption) for testing purposes. unfortunately i uploaded it to a keyserver. i instantly revoked and uploaded again. now if you search for my gpg key on a key server you see an revoked key. does this look unprofessional (having a revoked key)?
no.
maybe.
@bwoebi How is it not orders of magnitude. If the string length is 2 and I narrow it down from potentially 3 characters to 2 characters in length, then I've removed an order of magnitude.
It's classified.
@Sherif when you have a 17 chars password… then you know that you don't have to search the other 16- char passwords? yeah… do the calculation ;-)
20:25
o.0
just do the calculation
with realistic numbers… like > 6
Are you sure I should be the one doing math here?
yes.
Have you considering doing the math yourself first and then continuing your point?
to realize what you're doing wrong.
@Sherif hehe… I already did^^
20:26
Did you?
...
Oh, you're actually being serious.
yes, all the time.
Not sure if you were trolling me now or not^^
You honestly believe that the difference in permutations between 17 characters and 16 characters is not at least one order of magnitude in difference.
@Sherif I not only believe that, I know it.
20:29
btw this has been discussed on internals sufficiently hasn't it?
@bwoebi Very well, math it is. Assuming the password is only made up of upper case and lower case letters, for simplicity, the number of permutations for a 3 character password is 52^3, which is 140,608 total permutations. For a 2 character password of the same key-space it's 52^2, which is 2,704 total permutations. So the difference between having to permutate 2 vs 3 characters is exactly 2 orders of magnitude less.
you're doing that the wrong way.
That's assuming passwords aren't hashed though
Am I?
Please, tell me more about what I'm doing wrong :)
When you brute force, then you anyway start with 1, then 2 chars
20:32
Oh, I'm loving all this accurate math. Go on...
now, when the password is 3 chars… to not have to search 1 and 2 chars passwords is just like 2% difference.
Ahhh, and how did we arrive at this 2%?
2,756/140,608 ?
just approximating obviously.
o.0
I was told there would be no math.jpg
20:33
uhhhhh..... WAT?
52 ^ 2 = 2,704. 52 ^ 3 = 140,608.
I'm sorry, I'm really trying to take you seriously here, but so far you've said nothing of logic. Whether you attempt both 2 and 3 character guesses or not, you are still permutating over a space of 52^3 to get to 3 possible characters.
The fact that you've narrowed down the keyspace to identify that you only need to correctly guess 52^2 possible permutations, just means you don't even need to bother guessing 3 characters.
Am I speaking Martian here or what?
@Sherif I anyway only ever would bother guessing 3 chars after having tried 2 chars?
Can we just have generics already? I hate using arrays as untyped tuples. And I don't want to define XYPair types.
20:37
Why on the world you first try the larger keyspace than the smaller?
That's not even the point. You've eliminated the possibility that it spans a 3 character string.
facepalm
We're talking about two different things.
sigh… I defer you to Anthony…
or anyone who has a small idea of maths…
lol, you're saying I don't understand the math?
I have no idea what to say
I'm simply stating that hash_equals abandoning if the strings aren't of equal length makes it possible for me to exploit the string length.
20:40
@PeeHaa it bails out because you're supposed to compare hashes of the same size, not strings of any size.
And I'm telling you that it's not ann issue when string length leaks
Sure, I understand if you reduce only the lesser permutations you haven't changed much, but you at least know the size of the string. The brute force itself becomes deterministic and potentially opens you up to further exploits aside from guessing.
What hash_equals tries to achieve is not leaking the length of the common prefix of the string.
not leaking the correct prefix, indeed.
@bwoebi OK, not for the brute force attack, but it could be. Perhaps not one hash_equals tries to solve for.
20:43
@Sherif how would you exploit hash_equals while still using it in the correct manner?
Hmm… I think I now realize why crypto functions need to be safe against pre-image attacks…
@Ja͢ck Honestly, I wasn't thinking about its specific use cases. I was just discussing the notion of constant time string comparison in general, but I realize that is a bit outside the scope now.
because if they aren't, you actually can start a timing attack on an unsalted password…
@Ja͢ck The only real exploit there I can think of is trying to determine the hashing algorithm based on length.
But that assumes the programmer made a stupid mistake.
:)
hmm, can't seem to find kalle or ab in irc
20:51
@Ja͢ck remember that he's named weltling on irc…
kalle == weltling? argh
no, Anatol.
not kalle.
oh okay
darn schizos
Is there a specific name for query/form serialization? As in, foo=bar&qux=zip
I'm having a brainfart.

« first day (1713 days earlier)      last day (3464 days later) »