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00:00
They are just labels. When programming you never implement patterns you implements code that works (or at least you try to) and is maintainable.
There's the trick. Maintainable. In my opinion, clear, concise comments go further than any well known pattern to making something maintainable. (And which is why I listed my websockets server as brain damage in my PHP-as-a-drug spoof.)
Anyways... weekend... commute starting now... enjoy.
@Ghedipunk have fun o/
anyone fancy reviewing some proper voodoo? github.com/Ocramius/ProxyManager/pull/281
@Ocramius what's the voodoo about it?
ack. nulls in a string. ok, voodoo, check.
00:12
Yeap
Basically want to smash this thing into doctrine3, and I'm finishing up the last bits (specifically docs and BC breaks docs)
is using nulls really necessary? Why not use a :?
can't use a : in a class name or property name
oh, I see
That's what PHP uses, I didn't want to deviate from "the standard"
I'm not sure I know enough about Doctrine internals to really evaluate this code.
Oh, it's just the docs that I need to get evaluated
as in "can you understand it? or is it confusing the heck out of you?"
The internals... you don't wanna know anyway
heh
ok, so, first sentence: if I don't know what a ghost proxy is (and I don't), I'm already lost.
though maybe I should just keep reading
00:21
Good point :-) Will add (keep 'em coming)
but in general, that's a peeve of mine: using a term without defining it (or linking to its definition)
That is fine: I build this stuff, I'm used to it, this is exactly the kind of review I'd need
also: virtual proxies
that has a separate docs chapter: will add a link on the term
I think I know what that is, just from using Doctrine, but I'm not entirely sure.
00:23
heh, doctrine uses ghost objects, while virtual proxies are a different thing :)
(that's the proxy object you get when you get an object out of the db through a repository, right?)
yes, that would be an actual ghost object
it doesn't help that the class has "Proxy" in the name, then :)
good point as well. Will rename the variables
nit: list leader in "When do I use a ghost object?" section is missing its trailing :
00:27
thx
and list items should have trailing semicolons (except last one should have a period)
since it's prose
that's weird that you use the proxy manager to create a ghost object.
Well, a ghost object is a proxy type
lemme push, I updated few bits at the beginning
yeah, maybe would be less weird if I grokked the types
oh, that's cool, github sends emails when you're mentioned in a commit message
typo: first sentence, "ist"
dang, spellchecker must be set to CERMAN
here, why don't I use the edit button on github and just make the typo/grammar fixes for you? :)
00:33
I just pushed that
Ok, so, is my understanding correct that a ghost is a the object it's representing, while a proxy has a object it's representing?
(That's what I'm getting out of "Ghost objects work similarly to virtual proxies", but I might be overthinking it.)
no, they are both proxies, but one is the actual thing (just a fake version of it) (that would be the ghost object), while the other one (that you call "proxy") contains a reference to the actual thing (virtual proxy)
ghost object => a thing, but no properties
virtual proxy => a thing, but actually contains a reference to the real thing
mostly implementation details, but really important in some edge cases
they are both proxies tho :)
Usage examples: it would be less confusing if the second code block was actually creating a ghost Customer object.
The guts of the initializer reference "ClassName" and foo , bar, and baz properties that aren't in Customer.
likewise, your third block references Agent Smith as output, but there was never Agent Smith as input anywhere in the doc
good point, thanks
The initializer should "usually" be coded like the following: should say when or why you would do something different.
00:45
there's more on it later, but it is indeed unclear, will fix
possibly instead, "An initializer generally follows the following pattern:", and then discussion and/or links to later with alternatives.
@jbafford tempted to merge at this point :D I think we're good, what's your take?
Give me a few minutes to finish grammar correcting your docs :)
no need for you to go that far :O
but thanks if you do!
too late :P
sent
01:01
@jbafford AWESOME, thanks!
in particular, I tightened up some of the wording, tried to make things a little more clear, and removed filler like "simply", "just", etc. Also removed the "weird" characterization of the null-delimited strings. Saying something is weird has the added implication that maybe it's unnecessarily so.
noted. I tend to translate way too much from Italianisms, heh
@Ocramius I suspect my German is very Englishy
I tend to use constructs that map almost directly to English, because my thoughts are still mostly English
@Andrea I still don't grok German either, I'm too Austrian for that
:P
but that means shit like separable verbs, unique German adverbs, "davon" & co. etc. I end up not using
@Ocramius nice
01:07
anyone know if a docs review services exists? e.g. docs go in, volunteers smear on the red ink submit PRs with spelling, grammar, clarity, friendliness improvements
@jbafford I'm working on something for that, tbh
gonna take a bit, but we'll get there by March, I think
need any help?
No, it's actually my in-house thingy, we'll see if it works
hope to make some $$$ from it, as well as getting some other good OSS folks to do some $$$ with it
I really should move this entire initializer into an interface, but the overhead is massive >.<
wish I had some way to define Closure|Initializer
@Ocramius sounds cool. If you would, lemme know when it's working. I'd be interested in helping out OSS documentation, especially if there's a potential $$$ kickback.
@jbafford that's the idea, or at least I hope it will work
Wes
Wes
01:22
stupid question. why documentation on php.net and other languages' too is annotated like "foo(void)" rather than just "foo()"? is that an actual thing in some language?
C does that
Wes
Wes
oh. both work, right?
is there any difference between the two?
Used to be that void was required. I don't think that's the case anymore.
But, I think having that void that makes it explicit, this function takes no paramters
(that way there's no confusion in intent)
You might especially want that in a language like php where you can throw any number of parameters at any function, and it a) doesn't complain; b) the passed parameters can be retrieved anyway with func_get_args().
Wes
Wes
wait, are we talking of function definition or function call?
so there might be a small semantic difference between foo() and foo(void), but otherwise, no real practical difference.
in PHP, you can pass any number of parameters to a function you want, regardless of how many are in the definition. If it's too few, the function will complain. if it's too many, it's generally ok. Some functions, especially some internal functions, will complain about getting too many parameters. But otherwise, it's not an error (as it would be in C).
Wes
Wes
01:28
sorry i meant in c. foo(void) is the function declaration, not a function call, correct?
yes; you can't pass void as a value.
though note also that in C, all functions have an implicit int return type unless otherwise redefined (or eliminated, with a void return type)
Wes
Wes
yeah makes sense. but i know nothing of c.. just wondering
can you append parameters to c functions without it complaining like it happens in c?
and does void have other uses other than return type?
No. You'll get a compiler error.
void in C has three uses: indicate no parameters; indicate no return value; indicate indeterminate pointer type
e.g. a void* is a pointer to some memory location, the data there being of indeterminate type.
Wes
Wes
i think i saw one when i tried playing with c
usually you use this with callbacks where you need to pass in a context parameter; the function itself doesn't care what the data is; by declaring the type to be void*, you cover all the bases.
Wes
Wes
01:32
pointers are still a mystery for me :P
You get storage large enough to store a pointer, and leave the semantics of what it means up to the caller.
if you can store a pointer, you can by extension store anything you need
a pointer is just a variable whose value is an address in memory (usually belonging to another value of some type or another)
Wes
Wes
it's a placeholder or something
think of it like your street address
Wes
Wes
meh anyway i'll get there once i have the time. i did the first step recently
When you give directions to your house, you don't include your house in the instructions. You include its address - a pointer to where your house actually is.
Wes
Wes
01:36
managed to compile php and kinda read some c code. in a couple of years i will do skynet :B
Wes
Wes
btw, ever happened to you to have a wrong function call which doesnt give you error
and it's due to an additional parameter added which wasn't supposed to be there
would be a good rfc to have fixed parameters
function bar($a, $b, $c, void){}
bar(10,20,30,40); // error
sorry english is ko. hope i've been understandable enough :B
, void represents the end of params, and bar(void) would be a function with no params
would that work?
"and it's due to an additional parameter added which wasn't supposed to be there" - I understood the first bit, I don't think I've ever seen that.
you can do that by func_num_args() and complaining if you get too many
Wes
Wes
happens during refactoring/designing mostly, you get the function silently accepting the unexpected parameter and possibly a wrong result. would be cool to have a native way to make it strict
01:48
could it work? yeah, it could be made to
Wes
Wes
@jbafford correct, but automatic :D
The argument that would likely come up is, don't need that syntax because you can already do that with existing functionality
but since 7.1 adds void return types, there's an argument to be made for consistency
.
Wes
Wes
yes, it has similar reasoning
function bar():void{}
function foo(void):void{}
function qux($a, void):void{}
bar(10); // ok
foo(10); // error
qux(10); // ok
qux(10, 20); // error
also useful for static analysis
I don't really like the ($a, void) syntax. it strongly feels very weird to me.
because you have a parameter list, and one of the list elements is "absence of value"
Wes
Wes
it's kinda consistent with foo(void) though
02:01
eh, barely. foo(void)'s parameter list is: "does not take parameters."
Wes
Wes
foo([$var,]* void)
i read it "void trailing parameters"
but syntax isn't really important
yeah, but that's a misnomer, because you can't have void parameters
void is the absence of value
Wes
Wes
isn't that null? :P
it could be, if null wasn't a value
@jbafford null is also a type - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_type
02:08
yes. (In PHP, null is a type whose only value is null)
and the null value represents a variable with no value
except that in many languages, null itself is a value
@Wes "why documentation.... is annotated like "foo(void)" rather than just "foo()", because people didn't think ahead.
in php, null is the value of type null; in C, NULL is the value 0L.
Wes
Wes
depends how you see it... in php null is used more as "absent reference" placeholder (like undefined in js)
02:11
@Danack no, I think because it's a) explicit; b) a Cism leaking through
If they hadn't done that.....the stupidity of the void 'return type' RFC would have have been way less like to pass....
stupid in what way?
the void return type RFC adds semantic sugar: an explicit way to indicate "this function has no return value"
Wes
Wes
@Danack sad if they voted yes because of that...
(this is distinct from, has a return value, which is null)
@jbafford and do any functions have no return value in PHP? Or do they always have a usable return value of null?
as in $x = foo(); - does that ever give a "void cannot be assigned error" like in C ?
02:14
In PHP < 7.1, all functions have a return value, which is null unless otherwise set.
@jbafford they still do with 'void' return type.
v.c:7:6: error: initializing 'int' with an expression of incompatible type 'void'
so, yes, you get a compile error
oh, you meant in php
in PHP ? - yes php.
Wes
Wes
@jbafford simply: when i create an interface and i implement it, why should i care of how a function return value will be used (especially considered that void == null anyway)?
in php "void" is simply a long-running typo for "null"
02:16
Typo driven language development.
leaking the isms of other languages has always been more important than internal consistency
As I said, if it hadn't been used extensively in the manual, I don't think the void return type RFC would have passed, and we wouldn't have (from elsewhere) people arguing that we should change the language so that:
@Wes When you create an interface, you are defining a contract by which implementations must abide. The return value is part of that contract.
function foo() : void {}
$x = foo();
becomes a runtime error.
Or even more clearly var_dump(foo())
Wes
Wes
@jbafford how the return of a function i write is used is out of my api responsibilities
02:18
Some people have said that should be an error.....which drives me nuts.
@Wes true; but what you return is your api's responsibility.
Wes
Wes
also void is incompatible with union types

class A{ function x(): void{} }
class B extends A{ function x(): void|Foo{} } // wat

class A{ function x(): null{} }
class B extends A{ function x(): null|Foo{} } // null or Foo
ehhhh. I could make the argument either way with void|Foo
But any function that could return void|Foo almost by nature is going to be fairly weird. The implication would be that the output type would depend on the input type, because otherwise, you could write code that fails at the call site through no error on part of the call site.
of course you can write code that fails through no error on part of the caller - e.g. any IO
Wes
Wes
void|Foo doesn't make sense. it's "has no return value or returns Foo" [???] should be instead "returns Foo or null"
it does no harm but i don't know. it's like the latest feature php needed and i really hope people didn't vote it to adapt php to its documentation :|
02:27
well, here's a contrived example: function doThing(Thing $onThing = null) : void|Thing { if($onThing) return $onThing->doThing(); } // else void }
I'm having difficulty thinking of an actual practical example, but the general pattern would be, "if you give it a thing, then it could return something. If you don't, then it can't return anything"
but it's still really weird, and I wouldn't recommend it.
Wes
Wes
yes but how do you check if it returned Thing ?
if(doThing($thing)) doesn't that give an error with :void ?
well, the implication would be you check what you're passing in
Wes
Wes
... you know it's not always possible, right? :B
@jbafford searching for a key by primary key. If it exists in the DB then an object would be returned. If it isn't the object doesn't exist, and some people would want to return 'nothing'......which wouldn't have been a problem if that was represented by a null return type.
Wes
Wes
anyway meh
^ what danack said
02:31
well, that's a slightly different problem, I think
(throwing an exception is the correct behaviour in most cases.....but that is overkill for some things, and so is another story.)
null|ObjectType is different from void|ObjectType
in that in the former, you always have a return value
you do understand we're talking about php here, right?
Yes, one of them is useful, the other one is copying what C does because herp derp.
> you always have a return value
some people would make the case that the function should return ObjectType, and throw if it fails to find anything
that way the call site has to explicitly handle the failure to retrieve, or die if it does not
02:34
...which is a valid argument, but people do want 'nullable' return types....
And if/when that passes we're going to have two separate ways of saying 'this function may not return a usable value'.
One of which reflects what the language actually does, and the other describes C.
separate topic - fuck people who ask questions on statckoverflow, and then don't even have the common courtesy of giving the man a re an upvote.
84 answers, for total upvotes of 109.
you have that backward
ok, yeah, that is pretty weird
people will comment "this solved my problem" and then not upvote or mark as answered.
Or they'll mark as answered, and still not upvote.
I agree that some answers could be so low quality that they qualify as an answer that doesn't deserve an upvote, but that should not be the norm.
02:41
@PaulCrovella no? Mario has 1 answer....we more upvotes than me in total.
I'm totally not jelly...
Wes
Wes
lol
@Danack right, you have 109 answers for total upvotes of 84
doh....I thought I'd typed that.
I've basically given up on SO. The reward mechanism doesn't support quality content.
thanks...but revert probably incoming...
02:46
A thought: when I think about what I want from modules, it's basically just what a class is
so for me a module would just be a class with only static members which share a namespace rather than needing self:: everywhere
and which exports its public members to the current namespace
...heck, you could make a userland function that takes an anonymous class and exports everything for you, couldn't you?
modules?
@PaulCrovella yes, modules, they're something people occasionally want
oh and another thing: I want to add a special optimisation some day for getter/setter methods, where the Zend engine never actually executes user code for them
such that $foo->getBar() would be closer to $foo->bar in perf than it is now
@Andrea it's hard to see how that could work in the generic case with subclassing (and possibly nontrivial accessors)
at the least it'd require some more bookkeeping during compilation, and an extra test at runtime
because, unless you have typehints, you don't know that $foo->getBar() is actually a trivial accessor
(without reading the object and determining that at execution time)
I bet you're right, though, there probably is a way to make it better, though
@jbafford there's probably edgecases
If something like that could work with e.g. Doctrine, where pulling out a row from the DB results in a proxy object that wraps your accessors with function getFoo(){if(! inited) init(); return parent::getFoo()}, then that could at least remove one level of function calls
02:57
current perf diff: 3v4l.org/akNAj
so the performance penalty would be a little less
anyway, actually sleeps
Wes
Wes
\o
04:30
internet just paid its way this month.. my tach/speedo weren't working and I found a video of a magic incantation of key turning + button pressing that invoked a reset procedure which fixed it
\o/
Wes
Wes
i have the konami code for disabling trc on my car :B
found on the internet. thank god for the internet
can drift in snow now
04:45
@Wes these things should come in old gamefaq style text files, complete with ascii art
Wes
Wes
lol
 
1 hour later…
06:04
moin
Morning @JoeWatkins
06:32
Threading in PHP... that's just wrong. I'm not against threads in any way, but for a language like PHP, they're off-limits because: A) There's no need for them in PHP. If you need threads, you're probably tackling something that requires more than PHP. B) A lot of PHP dev's would create horrible code if you give them threading. Protect the world from awful code, and protect bad devs from hurting their own sanity. C) I prefer threading in Go (but that's just me) — Elias Van Ootegem 13 hours ago
like it didn't already happen ... years ago ...
they don't need threading for that, just a text editor
I think that's a bad way to look at PHP.
Why shouldn't php be able to do multithreaded tasks?
it's a bad way to look at any language ... if all languages followed the principle that stuff that might me misused should be omitted, we would have no good languages to write with today
s/good //
yeah
I've argued with so many people about this ... I've managed to change a couple of minds, but overall it's a waste of time to try to change the mind of anyone who sees php as it was 5 - 10 years ago, if they wanted to have their mind changed it would have happened already ....
06:42
Yeah. I've lost track of how many times I've argued that PHP is perfectly fine to use for long-running cli processes in freenode ##php
they're silly arguments, I can give you the date that PHP became suitable for multi-threading (22nd may 2000), I don't know it, but I could give you the date that it got a GC too ... but it doesn't matter if you read once that X is bad because Y ...
30 June 2009.. 5.3
that release kinda saved my ass, as I'd been working on a thing that turned out to really need that gc
I remember before that release ... /etc/rc.d/restart-apache-because-php and the endless cron
another one of my favourite stupid arguments is that fpm magically makes PHP faster ... because they read somewhere that nginx+fpm > apache + mod_php ... totally missing the point of both fpm and nginx ... both bits of their new stack ... because they read somewhere ...
well, 502 Bad Gateway errors are usually pretty quick
hehe
fpm is so crappy
07:04
@PeeHaa it does… as long as you don't have zend.assertions=-1 … or do you mean like raw request data? well, we could make Aerys\Options::$debug a bitmask instead to show detailed data depending on the flag?
07:40
@bwoebi did you see adam is doing a phpdbg talk ?
nice that someone is ... maybe next cfp to come up I'll submit an abstract for that ...
@JoeWatkins wow :o)
yeah, pretty kind words ...
@SahilManchal don't invite randomers to rooms, annoying ... if you have a question ask it in the open, if someone wants to reply, they will ;)
Though, sometimes I'm using phpdbg, it just doesn't work, … I'm annoyed that I get so few bug reports about it :x
i just want to know can i get the system ip address of client
I'm just usually too busy with something else to immediately track the issue down… and then I forget about it.
07:50
@JoeWatkins I've been thinking that a good data structures talk might be in the works, maybe phpconfnz 2016 or something, depending on reception etc.
@bwoebi hard to spot what is bug in code or debugger if you're not very clued up about how the debugger is meant to work I guess
Not necessarily project specific though.
@JoeWatkins sometimes it's just simple things like next acting like a continue
(I mean, it fails to halt…)
similar for finish…
we should review the core of it sometime, maybe we can think of better ways to do things ...
perf is emerging as an important thing to people using phpdbg
I haven't been able to spot many perf issues - it barely halves real execution speed.
07:53
lots of talk about running unit tests with it, cc too ... we can maybe make it better ... and make it work :)
yeah but we never really focused on it as a goal, everything is a ht, it's like normal php stuff ...
I think we can do better ...
why should it half execution speed ?
I mean it's not so bad that it'd be critical
we don't have to accept that as normal ... since speed is emerging as something important, even though that's pretty odd for a debugger, it's worth some attention, I think
@JoeWatkins well, phpdbg executor is doing a lot of work, especially when needing to do lookups.
was rhetorical :)
ah
thought you were surprised it were so much^^
but usually it's far less.
depends on how many ops are actually executed…
07:56
nah, not surprised ... it looks pretty much as I first wrote it still, I didn't make effort to make it fast, simple as possible, but not fast ... everything being a hashtable is costing us dear I think ... it didn't matter when we didn't care ...
Also, I've been finding myself abusing oplog to do some reverse debugging… like, I run it and search a certain place and go back from there.
@JoeWatkins Actually, hashtables are pretty nice there…
Or what data structure is better for string lookups?
does everything need to be a string lookup ?
I think that a product of the fact we are using hashtables everywhere ...
well, we use many string lookups and some integer lookups
it does fit for a lot of it ...
still sure there is room for improvement ...
sure, but it won't be that significant, I guess.
It's a lot of work for minimal improvement.
There are more important things, like make all the bugs go away
08:00
yeah that's true ...
I'm not saying we should tear out the ht and write custom structures for all the things, I'm saying there's probably a better way to do things if we are giving priority to performance ... it might be that our use of hashtables themselves could be optimized in some way ...
performance is an important factor, but there's nothing such critical in current hot paths that it would be needed
just at a glance
zend_hash_str_
78 times
in general not really making full use of zend strings, I'm not so confident that will be insignificant, a lot of it is in bp stuff
a lot of it is in bp creation stuff.
but uhm
well, yes
08:06
oh yeah only one in file routine I think
we've been looking for about 90 seconds though, right ?
it's probably worth a review, maybe that's the only thing we'll find ...
sorry @rtheunissen, distracted ... it's phpdbg's fault ... it is cursed ...
probably ...
@JoeWatkins I guess hunting bugs would be worth more though.
@bwoebi multitasking is a thing ...
@JoeWatkins oh well. Feel free then :-P
it's the same thing anyway, while looking for stuff that is bad, you will spot stuff that is wrong ...
09:02
@PeeHaa I didn't get any ping. :P
09:28
mornings
user924016
09:46
mornings
@kelunik what do you think about github.com/amphp/artax/compare/export_socket ?
or do you have a better suggestion API wise… note that we can't really expose it only in Response as this would delay socket checkin indefinitely (worst case: only until after cycle collector destroys the Response object)
 
1 hour later…
11:04
@bwoebi How do things work in a H2 context?
@kelunik hmm?
How do websockets work in H2 with multiplexing?
websockets require http/1.1
11:17
@kelunik but that's not quite related here?
If you have a H2 socket and should not export it, it's related?
Looks good: deployer.org
websockets in any case require that websocket stream starts immediately after headers… so if that ever comes, we still need it that way @kelunik
@kelunik the current idea is to include a special frame type for multiplexing websockets on a same connection. It's really an issue we should solve when there is something more concrete than a complete draft.
in general, I'd now just make a reverse proxy transforming http/1+2 into pure http/1
we always can add it later, but not needed currently
We can't really be forward compatible to something we have no idea how it'll be shaped.
so, is that patch from before fine or not? @kelunik
@bwoebi Can't say that, really.
@bwoebi For reverse proxying it's fine.
12:23
@kelunik ping :P
I needed both to fix selinux and pass through the port
@bwoebi Maybe it's just me, but yesterday I would have loved to be able to run -d so that is showed my a proper access / error log. Like the host:port + path of the requests.
12:36
@PeeHaa well, as long as you have zend.assertions ≠ -1 and -d, it should log your requests
@kelunik It's the best I came up with… so, if you have no actual objections, I merge it?
> warning zend.assertions may be completely enabled or disabled only in php.ini
...
@PeeHaa and on command line if using cli
so ./sapi/cli/php -d zend.assertions=1 bin/aerys -d -c configfile.php is fine
> PHP_INI_ALL
Lies!
@PeeHaa it's PHP_INI_ALL, just can't be set to and away from -1. But change between 0 and 1 works everywhere
PHP should really stop calling things all
12:42
^^
PHP_INI_KINDA
That would be more appropiate. E_KINDA
FWIW that still doesn't spit out messages to stdout
Anyway... /me goes implementing some authentication scheme
Websockets all the way down
Bobs-MacBook-Pro-2:Aerys bob$ ~/php-src-X/sapi/cli/php bin/aerys -d -c test.php
[12:45:43] info Using config file found at /Users/Bob/Aerys/test.php
[12:45:43] debug starting
[12:45:43] debug started
[12:45:43] info Listening on tcp://0.0.0.0:1337
[12:45:43] info Listening on tcp://[::]:1337
[12:45:49] debug accept 127.0.0.1:62414
[12:45:49] debug GET / HTTP/1.1 @ 127.0.0.1:62414
[12:45:49] debug accept 127.0.0.1:62415
[12:45:49] debug GET /ws HTTP/1.1 @ 127.0.0.1:62415
[12:45:49] debug export 127.0.0.1:62415
@PeeHaa that's what I get…
Odd on my machine I only get the standard:
@bwoebi -d should automatically enable assertions. Is that possible? The required files are parsed after it's set, so it should work, no?
12:48
[12:44:26] info Using config file found at D:\Web\Platter\cli\run.php
[12:44:26] info Listening on tcp://0.0.0.0:8080
[12:44:26] info Listening on tcp://[::]:8080
@kelunik no, it isn't. At least not in case of -1.
@PeeHaa Does --log debug change anything?
Nope
Hold on...
> PHP 7.0.0RC5
@PeeHaa Can you please just try to dump your zend.assertions level to be sure?
O.o
It's using an old binary. Let me fix that first
12:50
shouldn't matter though
k. Let me dump the level
@bwoebi I think we should spit out a warning if assertions are disabled, but debug mode is enabled.
@kelunik good idea…
When I dump it in my config file I correctly get string(1) "1"
Okay… then let's debug…
Is Logger::debug() called at all?
12:57
nope
... wtf? zend.assertions set to 1 but Logger::debug() not called?!
your PHP binary is trolling us.
Let me point it to the correct one.

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