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10:04
thnx guys :)
Got any plans this year to celebrate?
@JoeWatkins Do you have an overview what exactly was amended in typed properties patch during last two days?
we are respecting declare() now, I think just bug fixes otherwise ...
andrea mentioned something about not wanting int to be allowed to overflow, possibly only in strict mode ... what do you think about that ?
@JoeWatkins well, in strict mode it anyway fails when you try to assign float to int??
not right now ...
10:09
@JoeWatkins I thought it were only int to float widening, not the reverse?!
Also @JoeWatkins we really ought to find a solution for references; judging from mailing list, it seems like a showstopper for many :-/
I can't think of anything that isn't ugly ...
any ideas @bwoebi ?
ThW
ThW
morning
@JoeWatkins we basically need a function to check whether assigning the type is allowed, before each reference assignment
"each reference assignment" ... aren't they everywhere ?
Wes
Wes
OK (92 tests, 8352 assertions) that ratio
10:20
@JoeWatkins no, not quite … a few functions, but in general, mostly only a few assign opcodes in VM
hmm ...
<?php
class Foo {
	public int $bar;
}

$foo = new Foo();
$foo->bar = 42;

$thing = &$foo->bar;
$thing = anything_at_all();
?>
^ yeah, assign op
Can't it just be completely disallowed? I can't think of anything else that makes sense
it is currently @DaveRandom
we prefer that ...
The only other option I can see is to make every variable have the abiility to be typed
10:25
@DaveRandom it's (currently) enough to have only references typed (zend_reference struct)
@bwoebi what if I pass $thing into some other internal function ...
@JoeWatkins yeah, these functions do have to check when they assign by ref
actually that's a problem anyway ...
but AFAIK there are not that many funcs doing that
is there anywhere in refcounted we can put the type info ?
I don't really want to make that bigger ...
so the reference will need type and class, we allow references and in ASSIGN we check if we are assigning to a ref and verify type ...
that seems too easy ...
10:28
@JoeWatkins why in refcounted? it's only related to references
I know, was just trying to do it without making zend_reference bigger ...
problem is ...
YAY! Now I can access review queues!!!
@JoeWatkins don't forget you need a ce pointer
the error message isn't going to be very helpful from ASSIGN
we can't tell where the variable came from, which member it is ...
I think that's an acceptable trade-off though…
if you create a reference, you usually know what you referenced to it…
10:31
how does that help you determine where it's type was defined ?? you can accept an int &$param, you only know that it came in arguments list, no reasonable way to determine where it was defined and not much reason to expect any helpful locations in the stack trace either ...
@JoeWatkins stack trace tells you where the arg was passed?
well ...
I don't like it ...
@JoeWatkins surely you could add a list with the places of assignment by ref but that's a bit overkill
there's going to be some way you can change the type that I can't see ...
@JoeWatkins honestly, I don't like it too much either, but it's the best way to solve it…
@JoeWatkins if you do, it's a bug, shall be reported and fixed.
10:35
but why wait for that to happen, what good reason is there, in 2016, to write brand new PHP code that uses references ?
@JoeWatkins array_ API, bind_params … just to name the two most common
@bwoebi yeah, but I said brand new code ... and it would be brand new code ...
that's old code, that relies on references, we don't have to care about old code ...
@JoeWatkins we do… (sadly)
when are they going to be able to deploy typed properties in their API anyway ?
not for a long long time ...
@JoeWatkins well, I mean … I actually use things like end(), sort() etc. on my properties, also in new code … same for bind_params
and many other people do too.
It's the built-in API which is commonly used… you can't ignore it
10:39
so we grow references by sizeof(zend_uchar) + (sizeof(void*) * 2), and add branches into one of the highest frequency opcodes in the vm ... this does not feel smart ...
Can't create variable and use within ternary :(
return ($param = $this->parameters->get($withName)) ? $param : [];
@JoeWatkins ehm… we anyway have a branch in assign for reference
can we think of any other way ?
@JoeWatkins can you give it an assignment function ptr on creation to avoid the branching and reduce the size increase to one ptr?
I didn't look yet ... I don't wanna, this feel like it's going to break ...
class name and entry ...
unless we are not caching the entry, and I guess that we are going to want to do that ...
Eih, ce is enough
no need to store class name?
hmm ...
@JoeWatkins Also, the zend_refcounted->u.v.flags can occupy the type
I guess yeah, we'll always have the ce when the ref is created
10:43
^ that
so, t's just 8 added bytes…
yeah that's not so horrible ...
and a branch inside the reference branch
yeah … and now afk
(I still think it'll break spectacularly)
@JoeWatkins closures
@Andrea I already caved ...
10:48
Seems to my massively simplified view of the world that an assignment function ptr and an is_typed flag on zval is the actual right way to do it in a way that could be made robust and is extensible to other parts of the language
11:05
well that won't actually work @bwoebi ... in FETCH_OBJ_W there is no reference ... it's an indirect zval
11:18
@JoeWatkins happy birthday!
thanks @ircmaxell :)
You share my 1/2 birthday! (Precisely 6 months from mine)
high five
11:29
@JoeWatkins fetch_obj_w shouldn't deref the zval… the zval will still be a reference?
fetch_property_address doesn't deal with references at all
precisely
the reference is still there
but not sure how the fetch_w is mattering?
oh, I see
to propagate the type info
well, allocate an additional slot for type info possibly?
yeah
I'm not sure ... gonna come back to it ...
the most important part is getting a working solution … Dmitry will then improve it… ;-D
@JoeWatkins looking at the RFC, and I found a few problems that are indeed annoying...
How is it implemented? Is it just typed ZVals or do you do the type checking somewhere else?
11:38
not typed zvals
I imagined that
the fact that it focuses on WHEN the assignment happens, rather than WHAT is assigned is a bit of a no-go here (already experimented) :-(
11:49
@Ocramius not sure what you mean here
@JoeWatkins In general, I'd consider making unset() on typed properties put them to IS_UNDEF (so basically de-initialize them)
@bwoebi you mean is null, doing that already ...
@JoeWatkins no, not null.
undef
it uses is_undef currently, causing undefined property message
as if they never were assigned
so have to use is null
11:52
@JoeWatkins yeah, that's the goal
huh ?
it has to be is_null
it should cause an exception to be thrown if accessed after the unset()
@bwoebi specifically these two use-cases
Note that unset($val) is very different from $val = null
@bwoebi yeah, already done, testing then will push in a minute ...
@JoeWatkins ah okay … :-)
11:54
Now, I do know very little about internals, but if $val carried type-check information, then we could simply overload assignments, no?
@Ocramius operator overloading is bound to objects … allowing it for any type would be a significant performance hurt.
so hurt ...
Can someone link me to @Ocramius' justification for unset()?
I'm sure you've already been discussing it
@NikiC I just linked it above
@NikiC an use case is breaking cyclic references
11:56
@bwoebi so just null it out?
@bwoebi @JoeWatkins how much would it hurt? Is it a memory or a cpu issue? Is it because of zvals carrying an additional field?
@NikiC … if the type is nullable, fine … but it usually isn't ;-)
@Ocramius both … don't know exactly how much
@NikiC the generic use-case is 3v4l.org/bsHXH/rfc#tabs
@bwoebi If you're going to do something like that, it must be nullable
Otherwise you're just lying
It means that null is a valid state of the object, can't just pretend that it isn't
@bwoebi can it be implemented with the performance issue first, and then we focus on the performance optimization later? /cc @JoeWatkins
11:57
@Ocramius I don't think I understand this use case
it doesn't need to be merged, but at least we'd have a semantically correct implementation
Is this another of those "in the name of ORM" things?
@NikiC the use-case is lazy-loading. You create "empty shells" and then cause initialization on property access
@NikiC nah, null is not a valid … the property isn't meant to be accessed after unset()
ORMs and DICs use this
And we're relying heavily on it, to the point that we were moving to use only this approach, even for private properties
11:58
we dont need no stinking orms and dics (not trying to contribute something constructive)
@Ocramius Why does it need that unset() there?
Being unset() is the properties initial state anyway
Well, even without ORMs, this works for simple lazy-loading
At least if Joe implemented things right :)
@NikiC wrong ;-)
@Ocramius True for typed properties
They start out undef, not null
because null is not a valid value for them (well unless you actually make them nullable and use it as a default, obviously)
11:59
yep
The value is not null
This is what happens when you unset() a property: 3v4l.org/ohbgs
That brings the question … shall property type unions including null, start with null as value? [out of the RFCs scope, but important for later]
and it's covered by test cases too
I know what happens
I'm saying that typed properties will behave reasonably instead
--TEST--
Test typed properties unset leaves properties in an uninitialized state
--FILE--
<?php
class Foo {
	public int $bar;
}

$foo = new Foo();

unset($foo->bar);

var_dump($foo->bar);
?>
--EXPECTF--
Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Typed property Foo::$bar must not be accessed before initialization in %s:10
Stack trace:
#0 {main}
  thrown in %s on line 10
good or bad ?
12:00
@JoeWatkins good.
@JoeWatkins 100% bad, given how the current tests cover it
@Ocramius why?
This is basically breaking one basic mechanism of PHP, and only for typed properties
really ?
what ?
@Ocramius huh?
12:01
@JoeWatkins If @Ocramius insists on it, though I hate it
@bwoebi because you cannot intercept access to that property anymore
I hate it, I thought he just asked for it ... and now he says it's bad ...
He misread your code, likely
This "hack" (that is covered by test cases) has been relied on for at least 3 years
@Ocramius The error there is on reading the property, not on unsetting
12:01
@Ocramius wtf … then don't define the property at all?
ah, I see
@JoeWatkins would the code above work if __get was implemented?
sorry, I misread your example (stopped reading at TypeError)
@Ocramius why do you define a property if you unset it immediately?
@bwoebi I don't code it like that: a wrapper usually unsets the property
The example is simplified for the sake of understanding how it works
Should I code a full example?
12:03
Hey, guys, i need some help with .htaccess rewrite.

This is expression to remove public folder from root url
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ public/$1 [L]

but it works just with root folder, can you help me change it so it would also work with subfolders?

For example http://domain.com/subfolder/public -> http://domain.com/subfolder/
@Ocramius why shouldn't it ? __get is not invoked for properties with a declaration ...
@JoeWatkins __get is invoked for properties that are declared but are unset
hmmf ...
I think these aren't super common use cases ...
12:05
that's the mechanism that is being used
@JoeWatkins @Ocramius is right, if your property is in IS_UNDEF state, __get() should be invoked
These are used in symfony/dependency-injection and in doctrine/orm
but it's not in an undef state
and other stuff too
@JoeWatkins in what state is it then?
12:06
@Ocramius btw, I would appreciate it if you could maybe write down a list of PHP features that are being abused in the name of the greater good, so we have an idea what stuff we oughtn't be breaking :)
@NikiC I wrote tests for php-src for those
@JoeWatkins after unset() ?
@JoeWatkins It should be undef
12:06
(they are merged too, fyi ;-) )
well, no, because the engine will raise undefined property, even though it performs the read anyway
I'm not using stuff just because it happens to work: always wear a condom
@Ocramius Tests can be changed if they look like unimportant edge cases ;)
erm, I mean... always write tests
@NikiC a changed test is a BC break, and it should raise red flags/RFCs
@Ocramius for example, in this instance a test doesn't help you
12:07
@Ocramius there are acceptable BC breaks which don't raise flags
:-P
Because you're not testing typed properties
ZVAL_UNDEF is what it does to deleted untyped properties
@NikiC yeah, because the new feature doesn't replicate the same test
Which is why just having a short list of weird things being done in the wild might be useful
@bwoebi they still need an RFC.
12:08
@Ocramius s/./ in theory./
no, if that's just theory then all the process is just bullshit
:-)
@Ocramius It just means that we're actually living in the real world and not in fairy land
Some tests are testing outright bugs
If a test fails it means that someone needs to carefully evaluate what is going on
@NikiC they still need an RFC if someone wants to "fix a known bug". A test is a guarantee, and changing them voids guarantees
Doesn't mean that you necessarily need an RFC
12:10
anyway, I think I documented all my stuff in ocramius.github.io/voodoo-php
unless we leave the unset handler alone, and change the read handler to just omit the warning message for typed properties, then everything else would be normal, right ?
there's now a strange mix of code in object handlers and vm handlers, by the way ...
I wonder if we should move as much out of vm handlers as possible ?
@JoeWatkins you mean to avoid warning plus exception to be thrown? yeah
@JoeWatkins yes
btw, int $foo = 123 would be totally awesome (outside of class scope)
hint typed zvals hint
no it wouldn't be awesome ...
12:11
@Ocramius why [would it be awesome]?
it would be extraordinarily expensive in every imaginable way ... in reality ...
@JoeWatkins that's why I said "give it a shot" and then we'll see the impact :P
we already know what the impact will be ...
@Ocramius It's not something you can just "give a shot"...
@Ocramius enjoyed your phpuk talk :)
12:12
@NikiC eh, true, I don't know how many locations depend on the zval data-structure alignment
@Patrick thx
@JoeWatkins @bwoebi Wondering if we should revisit array-of types by adding an or'd type mask to arrays
The by-ref stuff... I can probably find workarounds for now. I did it for performance, not for actual need
Ah, no, I actually have a use-case that needs it. Sucks.
What do you need it for?
Lemme code up an example
@NikiC … and how would you do O(1) removal of array elements? (unset)
12:16
@bwoebi what's the problem?
I mean, of course if we run into a type check that doesn't match the mask we recompute it
It should be a rare case
If you're going to use "typed" arrays, they will probably actually be typed ^^
Though the interaction with weak types will be ugly
bah
Yeah, I think weak types make this impractical
I mean like [int, int, float, float] … now, we remove one float and need to foreach up to the first float to see whether mask is still int | float or only int now
@bwoebi no no, we only do that on type check
this is because people use fluent interfaces with wrapper classes
if the mask doesn't satisfy the type check
then we can narrow it
12:20
@NikiC Ah I see … would work, possibly still quite expensive
@bwoebi I think for strict types only it would be pretty good. especially as the type mask can also be used for fast destruction of simple arrays
But I wouldn't even know how array<int> is supposed to interact with weak types
0
A: Silence "Declaration ... should be compatible" warnings in PHP 7

AndreaIf you really must silence the error, you can use a silenced, immediately-invoked function expression: <?php // unsilenced class Fooable { public function foo($a, $b, $c) {} } // silenced @(function () { class ExtendedFooable extends Fooable { public function foo($d) {} } }...

I am a monster.
I mean, it would be clear if the array itself were typed, but how would this work on a parameter boundary?
Wes
Wes
PHP Warning: Declaration of Example::do($a, $b, $c) should be compatible with ParentOfExample::do($c = null) in Example.php on line 22548
@NikiC eih… try to cast all elements of array? :-D
Wes
Wes
12:24
i'm pretty sure has an entire application in one file only
@bwoebi but that would require actually copying the array
yes.
after all you can't touch the original for a by-value pass
basically generics + weak typing + parameter-only checks === huge, huge mess
Why did we introduce this weak typing thing again? :(
you know why :-P
@Ocramius Okay, this case doesn't look so important
12:26
@NikiC I expanded the example to explain the "WHY": 3v4l.org/8VDoZ - a longer article about why fluent interfaces are flustercluck is at ocramius.github.io/blog/fluent-interfaces-are-evil
--TEST--
Test typed properties unset leaves properties in an uninitialized state
--FILE--
<?php
class Foo {
	public int $bar;

	public function __get($name) {
		var_dump($name);
	}
}

$foo = new Foo();

unset($foo->bar);

var_dump($foo->bar);
?>
--EXPECTF--
string(3) "bar"

Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Typed property Foo::$bar must not be accessed before initialization in %s:14
Stack trace:
#0 {main}
  thrown in %s on line 14
right ?
I liked arrayof @NikiC happy to revisit it ...
@JoeWatkins __get should be called?
where does the fatal come from there?
the final FETCH_OBJ_R (->read)
@JoeWatkins but it calls __get?!
12:28
That would just be calling __get(), not access the property
I'm sure you said it should ...
@JoeWatkins it should be the return value of __get, not a typerror ?
@Ocramius I'm not sure I understand it even with that ... Why do you need the reference and don't just use the property on a stored object?
what return value ?
@JoeWatkins in this case, null (as the function has no return statement)
12:30
it is the value returned by get, when it returns a value
@NikiC I could just copy the state, yeah, but the original object Hi might still be referenced
not to mention that it may be even referenced internally
you can't have null, it's a typed property ...
I'm so confused ...
@JoeWatkins in this example, __get() returns null
@Ocramius What's the problem with it being referenced?
so the last bit should just say null in the dump
12:31
@JoeWatkins not the property, the return value of __get()
Ah, or you mean referenced as in &?
@NikiC the problem is that then you end up with the wrapper and the original object having unsynchronized state
@Ocramius But why aren't you just storing the object you're wrapping?
And accessing its properties?
$hi = thing; $wrapper = newThing($hi); ... stuff happens
@JoeWatkins $foo->bar === $foo->__get('bar') IF $foo->bar undef
12:32
@NikiC oh, that could actually work, but I'd have to rewrite all the methods (in all the scopes, even with conflicting names) to access the wrapped object's state
I could also unset the local state and have all __get() calls reference the original object's state too... hmm
so in some cases $thing->thing will result in null, and in others $thing->thing will result in an exception on uninitialized ... depending on magic ... that's horrible ...
@Ocramius I'm probably missing something about the particular use case here, but just working through the original object would seem a lot clearer to me
yeah, that could probably work, so I'd shift away from by-ref and use __get() + unset() again (assuming unset() is fixed)
@JoeWatkins it is, but that's PHP semantics
if null is never valid, then it's never valid ...
12:33
@bwoebi This would screw us big time
We'd no longer have a type-invariant
Oh, I see
I mean, from an optimization perspective
@NikiC no control over the original object, but I can probably keep its state. I can experiment with retaining just a reference to the original object
I prefer to leave it to throw an exception ...
Anyway, the entire problem is that you have a method doFoo() : self, and anything you "wrap" will be broken by this sort of API
12:34
Yeah, @JoeWatkins you're right … but the exception message is wrong then
no it's not ...
it should say that the return type of __get() must match the properties type
doesn't care where it came from ...
(doesn't know where it came from either)
<?php
class Foo {
	public int $bar;

	public function __get($name) {
		return "string";
	}
}

$foo = new Foo();

unset($foo->bar);

var_dump($foo->bar);
?>
@bwoebi why? It's a dynamic property now, it is not a property read anymore
krakjoe@fiji:/usr/src/php-src$ sapi/cli/php ref.php
PHP Fatal error:  Uncaught TypeError: Typed property Foo::$bar must be integer, string used in /usr/src/php-src/ref.php:14
Stack trace:
#0 {main}
  thrown in /usr/src/php-src/ref.php on line 14

Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Typed property Foo::$bar must be integer, string used in /usr/src/php-src/ref.php:14
Stack trace:
#0 {main}
  thrown in /usr/src/php-src/ref.php on line 14
expected, I think ...
12:36
@JoeWatkins no, just string(6) "string"
nope, wrong type
@JoeWatkins yes, that's fine
$foo->bar is always an int ...
__get and the property itself have nothing to do with each other
@Ocramius correct.
12:37
yeah, they do ... $foo->bar no matter what happens, must always return an int ...
$foo->bar is an implicit method call at this point
but we are requesting a property, so I need to get that properties type (regardless of its state)
Basically, all of this sucks
@NikiC I fully agree ;-)
Can we solve @Ocramius problem without unset()?
12:37
@NikiC property accessors :P
@JoeWatkins I think you are confusing __get with a property accessor btw, that's why there is some confusion there. __get is just "mixed random shit, we don't care"
so you do not need to add any rules around that, IMO
@Ocramius If I access $foo->bar, I want to get the type specified by the $bar property.
no, I'm not confusing anything ... what is the point of typing the property bar if sometimes, depending on magic it can violate the type you declared ... that can't happen, it's horrid ...
Whether actually __get() is called or not, is an internal detail
@JoeWatkins Yeah, that would pretty much loose all value
@JoeWatkins can you please push once?
12:39
No point having invariants if they are not actually invariant...
@JoeWatkins true, but still, you are now executing some checks after __get() was called: more WTF layers
keep it simple: stop at the property level
nah
@bwoebi done ...
stop adding strictness to more layers, that can happen later
@Ocramius the point of the type is to have the type invariant
12:41
Yeah, and I'm telling you to simply stop caring when magic is involved. Skip for now, solve once the ideas are clear
Adding a type check post-__get can be done, but it doesn't need to happen now
@Ocramius and I'm STRONGLY disagreeing here.
doesn't matter where the property comes from ... table or whatever, if it has a declared type, it must not be violated, or there is literally no point ...
@Ocramius The idea is that we know that $foo->bar always returns T, or throws. That's the idea. If magic can violate that, it's not happening
@NikiC then we have a method implementing generics that is not actually a generic? :P
folks, I'm just saying to let it be for now
tackle it later: the entire unset/by-ref stuff is already SNAFU enough
@Ocramius please … it's fine now as is in the patch
@JoeWatkins the stack trace possibly should include __get() though … I find the error message pretty confusing here, TBH :-/ I know that's adding complexity here, but :s
it's giving me that WTF moment of "the type is Foo, how can it be actually Bar here"?!?!
you don't quite immediately think of __get()
12:46
line number matches right ?
@JoeWatkins I feel like it should be on the return statement of __get() … But I realize this gets hard to impl…
yeah I'm not sure how to even do that ... maybe it can be done after ... maybe building fake stack traces is a thing that would be useful elsewhere ... maybe ...
yeah, put that on the TODO list for later, nothing urgent
3v4l updated
@JoeWatkins how do you update it?
12:57
just ping him on twitter
I mean ... using my super special magic wand ...
mornin

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