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16:01
@NorthbornDesign You know like when you get a song stuck in you head and you have to listen to it to get rid of it? I think you need to put the wig and shoes on and get over there.
@DaveRandom I just need a mirror, I already have the wig and shoes.
Let it go from Frozen anyone?
If only I could
Now I can't unsee Elsa... Um... Hmm.
16:02
lol, all that and you forgot to enable thread safety?
#turboFail
hehe
nah... i couldn't build php and i installed php5.5.9 from apt repo.... they dont goddam enable zts in their PHP build
No, *nix generally doesn't
They might have a php-ts package or something though
dotdeb at least does
mint is also coming from debian right?
the error which i faced while building php was configure: error: pcntl: fork() not supported by this platform
16:05
Yeh, you could start by just using a sane OS that gives a crap about stuff working and all that jazz
well i use linux mint.. (just upgraded to it today)
bad move
I had it downloaded before 20th February tho
That thread is 12 years old...
@DaveRandom lol
@Saitama turns out that was only a symptom of how bad they are at running a distro
mhm...
Hi guys
Is it possible to storing multiple values in single cookie?
Yes, you could JSON encode them or URL encode them or whatever
In fact, this is quite common practice if you look round the web
Can PHP do that?
16:13
yeah... just use a specific format for like value 1 | value 2 | value n
Hey folks
and then when you fetch that cookie
Hey folk
set_cookie('foo', json_encode([1, 2, 3]));
just explode it with |
16:14
what about PHP?
var_dump(json_decode($_COOKIE['foo']));
like var_dump(explode("|", $_COOKIE["data"]));
Whether it's good practice is highly debatable, and very use-case specific
just visiting, did PHP really got that performance update everyone was talking about? And did it met the expectations?
Depends
16:15
that almost made sense
It seem to work very well for shitty projects
Which covers 90% of the php projects
What if I want to storing cookie from $_POST value like: First submit storing A in a cookie
what are the cons?
The only question that matters is "does it deliver the performance you need", and the answer to that is "Yes, unless you are Facebook"
Are you Facebook?
No, I'm Facebook.
16:16
Check on me in a couple of years
@someFolk Legacy apps with crap code will break
and then I submit with B again
Hint: if you are Facebook, you can afford to employ a team of people to write HHVM
How do I storing those values in cookie?
16:18
Since PHP 7 performance is (reportedly) getting comparable to HHVM, even if you're Facebook the answer might be Yes =D
@PeeHaa syntax has changed alot? if any
setcookie("name", mixed value)
I can't be bothered mixing my values
I just kind of throw them in the oven as they are
Help me un-stupid myself this morning. I have a form with inputs for an address (e.g. street, city, state, zip) the user can add as many addresses as the want via javascript adding another line with the address inputs. There are two types of addresses, pickup and dropoff. how should I name these inputs to tie them together for the post array?
Right, that's my cue to leave
@someFolk No
I was searching for a "good morning ichigo" gif to make my entrance
@someFolk Some broken ambiguous syntax no longer works. Some extensions got removed (notably ext/mysql) and PHP 4 constructors got removed.
iirc
php open tags
who knew php could have done that, good for php
16:20
@AllenJB While performance is on par depending on the test one thing that is clear is HHVM will get that same performance with a lower CPU load, which means less power consumption and therefore less cooling.
@bwoebi pain is good, because it drives pressure to remove it
it was my very first language to learn
GO PHP! i love you but i won't visit you anytime soon
@SuperNoob <input name="addresses[0][street1]"><input name="addresses[0][street2]"> etc for the first address, change 0 to 1 for the second address and so on. On the server side foreach ($_POST['addresses'] as $address) var_dump($address);
a little pain never hurt anybody
/actually leaves
16:21
later guys thanks for the info
@DaveRandom, that's what I was headed to do, but it just seems...inelegant
oh well, just do it I guess
@PaulCrovella yeah baby it hurts so good
@SuperNoob It is, but unless you are going to JSON encode it on the client side or something (equally inelegant in a different way) then it's the way to do it
Well it's comforting to know that I'm have company in my thoughts of methods to pursue. Thanks
@bwoebi First time I've read it. No idea how that got started, I certainly never claimed any responsibility.
16:24
It's a limitation of the way browsers work more than anything else, PHP can decode the data however you like but the browser needs to send it in a sane format in the first place. And anyway, it's not that bad...
@FélixGagnon-Grenier don't make it weird
I'm really just starting. You have been warned.
not exactly sure what I'll back this up with though
I just didn't want to seem hacky when .js adds a new field by manually incrementing the array index in the name field
It's JS. It's supposed to be hacky
4
16:33
@SuperNoob You don't necessarily have to do that. You could count the number of containers on the page at the point where you add a new one and use that as the next index instead if you wanted.
well are the error outputs at all supposed to be helpful ?? pastebin.com/ZPDND8Eb
libtool: link: ext/date/php_date.lo is not a valid libtool object seems pretty useful?
Your paths are wrong, probably
Check your --prefix (and related settings)
@Trowski I've already read that about three times^^
@ircmaxell sure, it is good to feel pain if something is bad… but it's bad that something is bad at all and thus causes pain ;-)
@bwoebi which is why the pain is a good thing, and we shouldn't try to hide it
16:39
I'm still sure your wording is a bit off :-)
But maybe it isn't…
@bwoebi @ircmaxell just has masochistic tendencies :P
2
that explains it :-D
How do I storing form value in cookie after submit? like: First I submit A then A is stored in cookie after 10 mins I submit B again How do I keep A and B in the same cookie?
People complained when I started singing that under my breath in the office.
16:44
Are there any differences between (string) fread($h, 1) and (string) fgetc($h)?
In other words, could one replace the other without introducing bugs?
@NorthbornDesign If any files are opened in text mode, I wouldn't place money on it being identical.
@Danack Interesting, I'll have to test for that.
Assuming an unmodified binary stream, however, what would you say?
@NikiC :-P
@NorthbornDesign I'd say "come over here you sexy unmodified binary stream, give me one of those sweet, sweet bytes that you do so well"
Then I'd probably black out and wake up to find my wallet was missing
16:54
@NorthbornDesign I'd say you need a reason to change working code....but I think they still might not be fully equivalent. fread reads up to the number of bytes requested, and reading less than that number of chars is not treated as an error condition. fgetc seems to assume that there is going to be a character available.
just compiled successfully PHP... with all the things that i would need and i just saw a file jewish.lo being compiled ......
Yeh, there's a bunch of stuff for working with hebrew in core, because Zeev and Andi
i see -_-
@Danack Well, I'm not sure it makes a huge amount of difference with PHP's streams abstraction, because of the buffering. The stream reader for files uses the C fgetc() function underneath anyway, I suspect it will just fall through the same mechanisms and get the same result.
16:58
another one php_reflection.lo pretty hi-fi stuff i guess :P
Probably. But I'm not going to say go ahead and change it without a real good reason...
@Danack That is surprisingly good.
getc just aliases to read(1) underneath
So @NorthbornDesign yes, they will always be the same
The whole album is a pleasant change from the normal "RAOOOOROROORAOORA" metal I usually listen to.
17:00
...stop listening to it then?
What to do... found a publicly accessible redis server being used to store sessions, and the sessions include customer credit card numbers
Shopping spree?
the server belongs to a bank
Sweet jesus
@Danack Closer to rock than metal.
(I think)
17:01
delete that and never mention it again
otherwise you'll be branded as a hacker...
the bank is in one of those countries I don't care about, so, to the pub then
TEAR DROPS ARE FALLING OVER KEYBOARD (LITERALLY)
@ircmaxell Okay, so I mean this seriously with no ill-intent: to use these passwords to log into our systems we basically must use /etc/shadow. Which means that crypt is not an option since we are on RHEL. Why should I not use SHA-512 with a salt and rounds?
And if I should use SHA-512 via crypt, why it should it not be in password_hash?
@Saitama YOU FORGOT TO RUN make test!!!!!!!11111oneoneoneleven
doing it atm...
17:04
lol really?
@LeviMorrison Because password_hash is supposed to cover the 99% use case in a way that leaves no way for messing it up. If you have any special needs, you can use a special solution
Go make dinner or something, you'll be there a while
just a bunch of PASSes
That's the idea
@NikiC This is hardly unique. I can't imagine it is, anyway.
At least at universities it is really common to have a web-based authentication that matches the local systems.
17:06
@LeviMorrison Being a 1% use case does not imply being unique
If 1% is still thousands of sites it's worth supporting.
so the executable should be this one /home/gourab/Desktop/php-7.0.3/sapi/cli/php right??
@LeviMorrison Why?
We support significantly smaller percentages in core.
You already have an API for doing what you want, which works perfectly fine
17:10
It doesn't make sense to exclude it, imo.
@LeviMorrison We do support it. It's called crypt()
!!urban imo
[ IMO ] "In My Opinion"
What's the problem with using crypt in your case?
@NikiC Which is notably not difficult to screw up.
17:10
@Saitama Run make install, it will put the bins into a more user-friendly layout in your configured install path
Especially as you'll only be validating logins I presume
Which is hard to mess up even with crypt()
That's partly why we have password_hash in the first place.
!!urban PeeHaa
whatchoo talkin bout willis
oh alright !! thanks so much @DaveRandom you really have been a lot of help
17:11
No, changing passwords, migrating hashes.
It benefits from all those new functions we made.
Didn't you say you can't migrate because you're afflicted by rhel?
Only because we dont' support SHA512 in password_hash
We should support it.
Generate a properly unique salt for crypt: go.
Properly check the passwords without timing attacks: go.
Properly detect that the hashing mechanism should be update: go.
@LeviMorrison that's not password_hash job
All these things are handled exactly by these new APIs.
17:13
Why am I duplicating this work outside of it?
It doesn't make sense to me.
We should make it easy to do correctly.
That was the whole idea!
17:25
@LeviMorrison I would argue that in 99% of cases, if you're logging in using /etc/shadow, you're doing something horrifically wrong. I trust you're in that 1%, but...
Assume for a second that I'm just naive - why shouldn't I do that?
soo where would be the .ini file ?? after make install
Kez
Kez
i'm trying to delete a row from a mysql table. can anyone see why this don't work? pastebin.com/JNF55Sj9
When I run phpinfo() I get this Configuration File (php.ini) Path => /usr/local/lib but i cant find any .ini file there
@LeviMorrison why would you tie PHP login to Server login?
17:35
@LeviMorrison if want to connect website login to server login, you should be going through kerberos or ldap
LDAP is unreliable - we have experience with this.
We are specifically not using LDAP.
unreliable?
it's being used at massive scale by basically every one of the fortune-1000 companies
bottom line is this: you should look at PAM, before you start digging in shadow file
if you dont like LDAP (which is odd), there are still other options
it's not that odd
@Saitama wherever you told PHP to look, which can be set with these
17:41
jesus christ, my PHP 7.0 production install is segfaulting after I last updated it
but only sometimes
so I have to re build it with those specific options ?? @Danack I haven't provided any when I built it tho
@Andrea try sacrificing a goat and sprinkling its blood on the altar (it's in the in the old version of that book)
@Saitama You don't have to. You could just put an ini file where it is currently looking for one.
really... seems legit ... cuz' PHP
@tereško Or a chicken
yesterday, by Fabor
Geeze, this asus router looks like something you'd sacrifice chickens over.
17:48
@Machavity I am not 100% sure that chicken is considered a "clean offering"
@ircmaxell Maybe just here at BYU, then.
But yes, LDAP has been very unreliable.
We do use PAM auth for omething else
I will talk to my boss about maybe using PAM here as well.
PAM is not a single authentication method
I am aware.
17:51
@LeviMorrison quite possibly. It isn't trivial to run, but it can be run very stable and scalable
I wonder if my boss will have issues with hitting the db for all logins, not just web.
I'll bring it up in staff meeting.
18:10
It adds a single point of failure
Currently if the DB has issues we can log in because of /etc/shadow
I guess it can be excluded with root, maybe?
@LeviMorrison if DB has issues, wouldn't the rest of the site be inaccessible?
Website, yes, but our cluster, no.
Those systems dont' allow root logins via password.
So that wouldn't work either.
I would have built it using kerberos, since both PHP and PAM can talk to it
... then again, I have never made anything like that, so I am talking out of my ass here
18:29
@LeviMorrison you can fall back on shadow... use authinfo_unavail=ignore for your pam db module
In order for that to be of any value we'd have to store the sha512.
Which means we'd basically lose the value of picking bcrypt anyway.
Anyone have or can recommend a blogging app?
I HERD WORDPRESS IS GOOD
2
18:45
<?php
$thing = new class {

	public function method(string $arg) {
		var_dump($arg);
	}

	public function otherMethod(string $arg) {
		var_dump($arg);

		with ($this) {
			->method(strrev($arg)),
			->method($arg)
		};
	}
};

with ($thing) {
	->method("Hello"),
	->otherMethod("World")
};
?>
noun
noun: herd; plural noun: herds

1.
a large group of animals, especially hoofed mammals, that live, feed, or migrate together or are kept together as livestock.
Wordpress is pretty nice if you don't look at the code
I done this for a screencast, I just realized it's no good for that ... still, here it is ...
And update it every day
@JoeWatkins JS's with?
18:47
And don't try to build something custom in it
And don't host it yourself
^^ Don't even change the default theme.
Or install any extensions/plugins/whatevertheycallthem
@JoeWatkins wouldn't it be better without those redundant ->?
So many "don't"s, what then can one "do"? Lol
closer to vb.net ...
@nikita2206 it was just for a demo thing ... not sure, I consider it scrap, but thought I'd leave it for anyone to play with ...
yes, removed it ...
evening
19:14
@DaveRandom I don't know how I feel about this one
19:29
posted on March 02, 2016 by nlecointre

/* by Rinecamo */

<?php
$thing = new class("Hello", "World") {

	public function __construct(string $hello, string $world) {
		with ($this) {
			hello = $hello,
			world = $world
		};
	}

	public $hello;
	public $world;
};

var_dump($thing);
?>
that's not totally horrible ...
@JoeWatkins Well, not totally
I think method calls and property assignments are all that is useful ... probably ...
I actually quite like it @NikiC
I'm sure it is possible to find something more horrible than that...
I like almost anything better than endless $this->thing = $thing lines ...
in every constructor ... ever ...
19:41
@JoeWatkins If that's the problem you want to solve, it may be better solved by __construct(public string $hello, public string $world)
Like HHVM supports (I think?)
that's nice ... but I still like with ... ctors are always a bad example ...
it happens to be nicer than what we have now, but I think it stands on it's own ...
@JoeWatkins To me it just looks like you're assigning to a constant
<?php
$thing = new class("Hello", "World") {

	public function __construct(string $hello, string $world) {
		with ($this) {
			hello = $hello,
			world = $world,

			setMember(strrev($hello))
		};
	}

	public function setMember(string $member) {
		$this->member = $member;
	}

	public $hello;
	public $world;
};

var_dump($thing);
?>
also, that ...
@JoeWatkins And then extend that with a strrev method, yay
you don't always use props directly, but I still prefer missing out all the addition $this-> stuff on every line, whether using props or funcs ..
it's silly code, you know it is :)
I'm saying the public string $thing is nice, but it doesn't solve the whole problem of repetitive horrible constructors on it's own ...
19:45
@Danack @Danack thanks for answering me earlier today. Good to see it is not a fault on my side, sad to see it is still not resolved. I will try your fork tomorrow and compare results
@JoeWatkins Sure ... doesn't change the fact that this will muddy the water between method calls and function calls
Anything looking like a function call may also be a method call
only inside a with block
And that method may even be defined on a class that extends the current one, so any call you do can actually be hijacked that way
but yeah it does ...
And worse, it might even be accidentally hijacked
19:47
wait, I'm not getting "hi-jacked" ?
It basically means you need to make sure that any methods you define do not intersect with a global function name that may be used in a with block
@JoeWatkins Ah, I think I missed something in the syntax
you don't have too ...
Wes
Wes
@NikiC i liked @Gordon's idea more. i don't like that dependencies are declared in one place while other stuff may be declared how it's done now
I didn't see that this is actually totally new stuff
Wes
Wes
private $baz;
function __construct($this->baz);
is nice imho. not limited to constructors, also setters
19:48
not even proper statements
but a comma separated lists
in that case, yes the ambiguity does go away
urm yeah, I started writing for a screecast, got a bit carried away .. I quite like it though ...
totally useless for the screencast, need to do something else ... too complex ... and no vm stuff
@Wes Yah, or that
Why did that fail again?
I dunno if it actually did fail ... but I think it rather strange to move instructions for assignments or calls to the argument list itself ...
Wes
Wes
i don't remember
again I like it better than what we have to do now ...
19:52
public function getX() => $this->x;
public function setX($this->x);
with helps to solve the problem of repetition throughout a codebase, the ctor tricks are nice, but they're not as useful as with imo ...
the future?
Wes
Wes
have you guys seen F# ? can we have that in php? :D
@Andrea it's ok but i'd try to get real properties too
@Wes no.
or, well, I'm not sure I'm a fan of properties
Wes
Wes
public Baz $baz;
one line
19:54
@Andrea wouldn't that encourage people using getters and setters instead of doing "proper" oop?
@Patrick "proper"?
Wes
Wes
@Patrick most of "proper oop" mutator methods are logicless anyway
@Patrick proper?
@jbafford as in the objects actually has methods related to what it is doing/responsible for. getters/setters for everything encourage breaking encapsulation and "using" the object inside other objects
Wes
Wes
@Andrea anemic model
validating the type is enough for most of cases
19:55
@Patrick well, that'd depend on why the getters/setters are,.
of course it can make sense in certain cases like simple value objects
It's not uncommon to have protected/private properties with no public getters/setters
Don't get me wrong, they definitely have a place. But making them easier to write could lead to a lot of unnecessary getters and setters
I constantly worry about the modules in my applications being decoupled, but then I remember you have to quit iTunes to update Xcode.
Kinda like people using public or protected as default instead of private
19:57
Can you tell what these two methods do without needing to look at the body?
class Gate
{
    public function equalsAccessLevel(int $accessLevel): bool;

    public function meetsAccessLevel(int $accessLevel): bool;
}
I don't necessarily agree they'd be unnecessary, but yes, the effect would be to wind up with more.
@PeeHaa the first is ==, the second is >=
Great. Tnx

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