@NikiC Communicating how? So the VMs have their own private network as well as a "public" adapter? i.e. you want each VM to see its own eth0 and eth1 (where eth1 behaves as if it were on a physically private network with just the VMs on?
You might have a problem with two layer of virtualisation like that, I've a feeling the MAC spoofing that's effectively going on underneath wouldn't work properly at the second layer - Windows will ignore those MACs because they aren't spoofed properly. Even though no traffic ever leaves the NIC, it will still likely be bounced through the NIC hardware to deal with TCP checksums etc without bothering the CPU
There may be some setting to force it not to do that in the Ubuntu host, which would avoid that problem
Somewhat yes; the point is that through extension, more handlers can be created to produce different outputs (which all must adhere to an interface in the actual implementation)
Practically, it's for creating a list of asserting rules; the library provides a few "common" rules, but through extension library consumers can enhance what the rules handle.
@DanLugg but why guess? It's your application, just create a mapping between entities and their factories. Simple implementation is just array. Or some routing component that will be injected to main factory.
Yeh @NikiC I can't really find any docs on this because I imagine people don't really do it, but I wouldn't be surprised if the root of your problems is because you are trying to use a VM as a host. I'll have a play around with it on Mon if you're still having issues, seems like an interesting thing to know
The link-layer topology will look pretty weird
Maybe if you NAT at every layer you might have more luck, because the physical network will only ever see one MAC
Here's the thing, the consumer can create the derived types directly; if they so choose. The problem with that though, is that usage of the API becomes verbose. I'm providing a simpler interface, which takes simpler representations (scalars) of the derived types, which are then parsed and built into the types; like deserialization (sorta). I wish to provide the ability to add new types to be handled by the parser/builder (factory). Wat do?
In short, I'm trying to define an extensible micro-grammar (rather, the framework to support one)
@bwoebi Not to comment on that precise issue, but I'm thinking about making an RFC to deprecate and eventually remove context sensitive names from being supported by call_user_func/is_callable. Instead people should be using specific class names. e.g. parent::class or self::class which would be resolved at compile time.
Because having the result of is_callable($someCallable) vary depending on where you call it from is nuts...
Having some way to "cast" to callable would also solve the problem, btw, i.e. if you could convert it to a function pointer at the correct place in the code
@Danack It would have to be everywhere, you can't just stop call_user_func etc from working, direct invocation would have to be nuked too
@DaveRandom I think it would be everywhere - I was going to start by fixing it for is_callable (which is the use case which is most important), and that will involve changing it in the function zend_is_callable_check_class - which is almost certainly going to break 1000 tests.
@bwoebi yes - that's going to be the focus of the RFC. That something that returns true for is_callable() should be consistently be callable, not dependent on where you are calling it from.
What about a (callable) cast that converts the subject to a closure that forwards the call to the call to the original subject with the correct scoping?
(class_name) casting! And a __castTo($type) magic method! And Closure could implement it such as to return a Closure from a callable! So we could do $closure = (Closure) $callable;! DO IT!!
Yeah, I don't like it either. Just making it so that people can create the variable as something that is a valid callable regardless of location would be the best and simplest thing.
Seriously though, I'd love that to be a thing. And it'd have to be __castFrom($type, $value)
class Point {
private $x, $y;
public function __castTo($value) {
if (is_array($value)) {
list($x, $y) = $value;
return new Point($x, $y);
}
}
}
$point = (Point) [42, 24];
It just feels fraught with horribleness to me. The trivial stuff like that would be simple enough, but when you start having people want to do things like casting to intefaces and stuff (which they will, because they'll think they can, because Java etc) wtf do you do then?
The issue I'm seeing here is that people will want to be able to do it with classes from libs they are consuming, the libs won't know about the consumer type that's been requested, so it will be kinda useless in modular applications
@bwoebi I was just playing around, and I found that (['Class', 'method'])() produces opcode INIT_DYNAMIC_CALL, but ('Class::method')() produces opcode INIT_FCALL_BY_NAME, so it fails.
If the second resulted in the same opcode as the first, it would work in all cases.
i have a database in local computer contains 5 tables, i have updates that database every 1 or 2 days and after a week, i exports this database to my server, in this update process i have to export it to new database and deletes the old database from the server and changes the config file of database. but i want to export to old database just newly update data only with out deleting old database
@bwoebi Ah, so you parse the string at compile time. That makes sense as a literal. Not sure why anyone would write code like that... but at least it's consistent.
With something like video, you'd jiust fire a steady stream of udp. So you'd have to wait an hour for it to /start/, but it should flow pretty normally once it did.
Yeah, ftl comms is a thing, currently at the "a few centimeters" level, but that proves the concept is sound, it's a matter of scaling from there, right?
For the record, it irks the hell out of me that FB's permissions dialogs do the same thing. Make it WAY too easy for an app to over-request permissions, and no option to deny some of them a la carte.
@DaveRandom words such as "the ultimate" or "the standard" or "the definitive" are precursors of all epic failures. if it was called "The Timidly Nice PHP Library" (TTNPL) it would have had more succes
@Anton_Sh You should write your question before trying to get someone to agree to help you. If you write it in notepad, and then copy + paste it in here, even if no-one can help you now, you will have the question written down and you will be able to re-use it elsewhere aka sol.gfxile.net/dontask.html
I have next problem with Unit Test. I am trying to mock some classes but I see error "Expectation failed for method name is equal to <string:isValid> when invoked 1 time(s). Method was expected to be called 1 times, actually called 0 times. " the unit test is:
public function testLoginActionRedirectsAfterValidPost() { $postData = [ 'username' => '[email protected]', 'password' => '123456', ];
@Sara It depends… I mean, when the app asks for more permissions than it needs, just give it the needed permissions… Meaning, when the app is only using oauth and it asks for everything… restrict it to just mail and it should still work. Otherwise something's fishy with that app.
I would say that if your controllers are small integration layers between your domain logic and your framework, and you have some other level of testing (functional/acceptance) happening it is perfectly ok not to unit test your controllers
As soon as you have some complex logic happening in the controller you probably want to unit test it
@CiaranMcNulty "it is perfectly ok not to unit test your controllers" you are wrong. The cost of testing them may be too high to be feasible, but it is definitely not perfectly fine.
@ircmaxell i didn't use some kind of token user can edit the post request using firefox and send it back to server and it will add those data to database
@ircmaxell looks like a great idea, But I think you should be able to also individually enable some protocols upon loading (e.g. depending if the XML to be processed is trusted or not) (not only ini)