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@NikiC I only tried in 7.0
Wes
Wes
@NikiC aaaah, he means that. yeah that was a stupid behavior :B
@meda why are you passing stuff to a if it doesn't need them?
@tereško why so serious?
@Wes Obviously this is a simplified problem
what is happening is b is not even initialized
would love to know why
Wes
Wes
then don't put it inside the a()...
move it on a line on its own
17:03
echo in a constructor is not "simplified"
Wes
Wes
and since you are at it, don't pass it to a, because ain't gonna need it :B
@JustinKaz teresko either throws grenades or love letters <3
@bwoebi login and run a test
@meda implementation artifact. as usual, changing it is a mild bc break, so it has only been fixed in 7.1
@JoeWatkins ok
@tereško this is just an example, if I use any breakpoint it does not get hit
17:05
@tereško according to the PHP documentation examples, you don't declare __constructor as "public" - it always declare it as "function __construct()" I haven't seen "public function __construct()" - which I now take back... the documentation uses both.
@JustinKaz you kidding right
@JoeWatkins no difference, still 138 k req/sec
Wes
Wes
if you omit "public" it'll be public regardless @JustinKaz
@NikiC Oh I see
@tereško what do you mean "simplified" exactly? 3v4l.org/1ZfMs
17:06
@wes yes... but you can't call $this->__constructor() can you?
Wes
Wes
how is that even related?
@JustinKaz you can ^^
@JoeWatkins anyway, your CPUs were maybe produced in 2015, but it's 2012 technology
@JoeWatkins context?
Well, I stand corrected. That seems bad, being able to call the constructor after the object has been constructed.
Wes
Wes
17:08
how is that related to visibility :B
@kelunik Shall we tag a new version of the event-loop now? There have been some changes since last version (getWatcherId + info => getInfo) …?
hello guys..can anyone help me in payU money isssue?
@LeviMorrison you mentioned something about checking documented thermal limits ... we were making lots of heat and noise last night ... problem solved now ...
@bwoebi yeah it looks like 2ghz is maximum, everywhere I look it says that turbo boost doesn't set clock frequency of all cores at once, that it's only meant to kick in when some cores are under extreme pressure
okay, then leave it as is
but I'm pretty sure it's not a thing you can just enable by force, and can't be done for all cores at once
as it is now, or as it was before ?
17:13
@JoeWatkins As it is now?!
by before I meant twenty minutes ago
Guys please let me know if I can ask question here or not?
@JoeWatkins I'm sure you could, you'd just need a privilege escalation exploit … but as we don't have it :-D
@JoeWatkins did anything change?! It's the same for me
I disabled pstate so that cpupower is less useful now ... but since it's no faster, might as well put it back to the way it was ... so we can use cpupower tools ...
@JoeWatkins yep, revert that
17:15
ok, one more reboot then ...
@JoeWatkins It typically kicks in when some cores are idle while others are not.
why does enabling/disabling the cpu frequency scaler require a reboot?
It's aimed to increase your clockspeed when applications don't use all the cores.
it's kernel cmdline param @bwoebi
17:16
As we increase the number of cores the clock speed is generally lowered, so this makes up some of it when an app doesn't scale to use all cores.
that makes sense
there are some slightly faster xeons out there that are not too expensive ... soon as the wife forgot how much this cost, I'll look for some and sell the ones in it ...
At this point CPUs are kind of boring for traditional apps.
so it's the case that if I run an app that fits that description, only uses a few cores and all others are idle, it looks like it can raise multiplier for up to 6 cores at a time, is that right ?
@LeviMorrison what's traditional? Designed to run on only one core?
It's all about multi-core and scaling various things up and down (such as reducing power when idle or increasing it under demand)
And improving memory bandwidth and frequency.
17:20
@JoeWatkins that's not worth it TBH…
it might not be at the moment, but when the market is flooded again with next batch of cpus it might be ?
@JoeWatkins meh, CPUs don't get that much better with each iteration.
The next batch is Kaby Lake. Important for integrated GPUs and laptops and not much else.
oh well, 32x2 is good enough anyway
@JoeWatkins you mean 16x2 threads?
17:22
32x2ghz
all the time comparing it to the massive amount of money I paid for this i7, which is 16x3 ... it's still amazing value for money
@JoeWatkins how much have you paid for it?
a few pounds under 1000 (just for the cpu, not including ram/case/disks/power/gpu or anything else)
for the i7
this one about £500 now ...
So weird. This API takes the integer value of JSON options mask.
As. a. URL. parameter.
:eyes:
17:25
@JoeWatkins But I'd bet something 16x3 i7 will be a bit faster than the 32x2 Xeon
@JoeWatkins also, on your consumer desktop you want less cores and more Ghz in general as there are more traditional apps running.
for the kind of things I'm doing, there's not much in it .... and the i7 was 3x as much by the time I could actually use it ...
@bwoebi Depends what it is. If it scales well with cores then the Xeon could easily beat it.
Parallel builds, for example.
@LeviMorrison Yes, but not when technology is three years newer
^that's the kind of thing I am doing ... it's very suitable for that ..
@bwoebi Eh... not really applicable in general. The days of "newer being faster" have been over for a while. They are better in some way but you may not benefit from it.
17:29
they're not working on making cpus faster anymore, they are working on making them more efficient
The last few gens have mostly been focused on power reduction and power management.
If the i7 is faster I'd bet it is mostly because of memory bandwidth improvements or something and not really anything about the CPU.
that's also true, uses ddr4
(which is extraordinarily expensive to buy)
@LeviMorrison It's still true, just not that excessively though??
@Levi as in more throughput, less cycles etc. per instr, less branch miss overhead…
17:33
@bwoebi Sandy Bridge and latest i7 have the same flops throughput.
(in practice usually)
Nothing has changed with branch prediction in these models.
Wes
Wes
bool assert ( mixed $assertion [, string $description ] )
bool assert ( mixed $assertion [, Throwable $exception ] )
hm, i just noticed that assert() signature changed in php7
@LeviMorrison yeah, but well… that's floating point ops, not the normal CPU ops
Wes
Wes
ah, i can still pass a string
@bwoebi I don't think there is anything that changed with regards to regular ops in these models, but I could be wrong.
I've actually been waiting to upgrade my desktop at home for a while, but there haven't really been compelling changes.
@LeviMorrison dunno about it concretely, but between my i7 from 2011 and 2013 I see significant improvements
17:36
I did upgrade the GPU and put in an SSD though.
surely the one from 2013 just had more cores
I had a something something k i7 before this one, it wasn't slower, but had less cores ... that was all
@JoeWatkins I'd guess memory bandwidth improvements.
and that yeah
@JoeWatkins I mean after accounting for cores … It's like 2.4x the improvement, but just the double cores
but then I could afford more ddr3 than 4 ... so swings and roundabouts ...
plus the board is maxed at 16gb ddr4
17:38
@Levi I really have no idea how much memory bandwidth is a limiting factor
yeah me neither
We see improvements on each new gen because of memory improvements.
In Xeons anyway.
Honestly we wouldn't have purchased Haswell except that the vendors priced it aggressively.
@Levi well, when I test with Aerys, I see nearly zero LLC misses in user memory
So I do not really feel this is impacting it much … but well… // dinner
yeah I'm gonna eat too ... lata chaps
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins is the resolution 1824 x 984 you gave me the other time still valid?
17:42
Hey! I never got the elephant background at 2560x1440 or at 4k!
Wes
Wes
lol
i started doing a better elephant logo
then ocd kicked in and after 3 hours or something i put it on hold :B
The one I'm thinking of wasn't a logo.
Wes
Wes
? :B
@JoeWatkins can you tell me if also this does the artifacts i.imgur.com/uwiCwd8.png ?
Was like a small elephant with textures in the background.
Profile view of elephant
Wes
Wes
yeah it's what i'm doing ^
but i tried doing a better elephant and lost a lot of time on it :B
but if you want i got PHP SE7EN i.imgur.com/eXkLn0J.png
WHAT'S IN THE BOXXXXXXXXXX?
i.imgur.com/TQIPIAG.png with slightly darker colors here
17:54
@Moshe have you worked with React Native so far?
@Ocramius I have a christmas present for you: github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser/issues/41#issuecomment-269230733
@Shafizadeh Nope.
@NikiC Which reminds me: why do people never talk about "concrete" or "not abstract" syntax trees?
@LeviMorrison they don't?
18:03
I never do.
I guess most people don't care about commas or semi-colons in their trees.
Sure
I've seen that Eric Lippert is currently building a concrete syntax tree parser for Hack
Wes
Wes
it is perfect if you ignore that the boat is going backwards :B
@NikiC what's a non-node subnode?
For really good syntax formatting and style checking and similar tools I think we need to use both token stream and the AST.
Wes
Wes
18:27
phpstorm 2016 users: do you get autocomplete for Error and Exception's constructor arguments?
there is no __construct stub. it has disappeared
@bwoebi a property on a node those value isn't a node (or array). E.g. a property with a boolean / string value
@bwoebi do you have more numbers...? Not only the most expensive one but also how often which one is called?
@staabm Well, given a request being keep-alive, there are only 2 syscalls per request ideally, one recvfrom() and one sendto()
if it's a new connections, there are a few more syscalls: 2x fcntl (get+set for non-blocking) & getsockname()
But depending on bodysize you could get several recv or send syscalls, no?
18:40
(And obviously a close() call at the end)
@staabm sure
You tested with hello-world?
@staabm yes
hello world behind a router
No calls for communication between master and worker processes?
none needed?
you just need communication when there's irregular behavior (i.e. loggable messages or admin action)
Isnt incoming traffic been balaced from master to workers?
18:42
@staabm no … SO_REUSEPORT.
Wes
Wes
LeviMorrison there is no way to document an union on php.net? only "mixed" is possible?
*on php.net docbook
Ah, kernel does it..
yes
Nice.
Maybe i will have some time and can do some blackfire profilling of the php code then
 
1 hour later…
@Jimbo moin there
morning Jimbo.
20:11
@JoeWatkins Well, make -j32 is quite fast … except for zend_execute.c which usually is the last file being compiled… and takes a while…
20:29
Trying to get certbot to auto renew but it's not working - anyone use lets encrypt and can lend a hand?
Hello . To center a text and div in css i could use
.centrer {
text-align:center;
}
but it does not work. Only the old div align=center works. can someone help me know why ?
@JoeWatkins putting kid to bed but will talk shortly
@bwoebi Thanks it's okay, me being retarded again. Nginx needs to be reloaded after renewing certs
20:56
Found this gem in source…
if (!interfaces_only) {
	if (instanceof_interface_only(instance_ce, ce)) {
If NOT interfaces_only, then check for interfaces only
…whut?
21:13
check the code coverage for its true branch :p
PHP doesn't have any big things to fix anymore
well, it has a few, but less than before
Wes
Wes
@bwoebi why does php even work?? :B
morning
hmm
what if
array methods, but they just mapped to array_ functions
@JoeWatkins Did you two do further tests yesterday?
What I totally forgot: Does our own connection limit do anything @bwoebi?
@kelunik oooh … I suppose yes … just increase the limits to very high for tests
21:23
$array->keyExists($value) would be mapped to array_key_exists($value, $array)
@Andrea /me runs
@JoeWatkins can you describe the job?
@bwoebi I don't know the options, could you just commit them to demo.php? Because that's the file others might use, too.
private $maxConnections = 1000;
private $connectionsPerIP = 30; // IPv4: /32, IPv6: /56 (per RFC 6177)
private $maxKeepAliveRequests = 1000;
@JoeWatkins I has enough monies to get another 959 in Spain :-)
21:27
@kelunik ^ these three
Can't WAIT to get back on the road!
@Jimbo are you planning to be in Manc at any point?
I assume you are somewhere Preston-ish atm?
@DaveRandom Yes. I'm thinking 3rd Jan although not sure
@Jimbo k cool well give me a shout, we can meet in the middle if you cba coming down this far
@bwoebi why the bitmask comment on this line? How is it related?
21:29
@staabm That's how an "IP" is measured
@DaveRandom Will do!
i.e. you can only have 30 concurrent requests from a same /56 block @staabm
Makes sense, although in IoT world 256 seems like a low-ball in the not so distant future
@DaveRandom uhm… you know that IPv6 is 128 bit … you have a space of 2^72 then… (not 2^8)
@bwoebi k. Comment could need some love then :-).
21:31
is there much point to scalar methods
@bwoebi oh right yes, I was thinking 64 bits for some reason
@NikiC booooo. I was rather hoping for a disclaimer stating you don't support @Ocramius' code :P
@Andrea what you mean like autoboxing?
@DaveRandom akin to that, though the implementation might be different
@Andrea In that case I personally think that actual scalars no, but I would also not include strings as scalar there
i.e. I think direct method calls on arrays and strings would be nice
but certainly not essential
They just look nicer
21:34
I realise now that my idea of class-like primitives is not really worth implementing without adding useful methods to the primitives
and I also realise that adding new string methods without adding a Unicode string class would be unhelpful to the goal of Unicode-awareness
so maybe I should do ALL THE THINGS!
at once, I mean
@Andrea for small values of all
@NikiC I can see it now. RFC: Twenty-First Century String Types
@Andrea Stop it. Twenty-first century is synonymous to the political apocalypse… nobody wants twenty-first century style things.
2
It would: 1) Add a new interface/new interfaces for string-like types, 2) Make the existing string type implement it, 3) Add a new UnicodeString or UString type which also implements it
@bwoebi Ah, I know. RFC: Year 2000-Ready String Types
better :-P
21:40
But why stop there. RFC: Internet-Ready Strings
@Andrea meh
@NikiC well, yeah :/
the title is actually subtly self-deprecating
@Andrea Especially not fond of having a ustring
nobody titles things “twenty-first century” now because that was only cool in the late 90s, and to a later extent, early 2000s.
@NikiC it would just be a class, but… idk
If we're going with scalar objects, we should consider whether we can make the string api be utf8 by default
But I mean sanely
I.e. working only on utf8, working only on byte offsets
21:42
@NikiC Is working only on utf8 even sanely possible?
Well, you need both, it depends on the application
As we know, codepoints, graphemes etc.
Python 3 had the right idea, really. On the web, almost everything is UTF-8.
@Andrea what exactly does it do? (link?)
@bwoebi Strings are Unicode by default ("foo" is a Unicode string). There's also bytestrings (b"foo"). Python 2 did the opposite.
At this stage, if PHP introduced Unicode, we'd have to go for the Python 2 approach (backwards-compatibility), which is annoying
I wonder how PHP handled the Millennium Bug.
@NikiC I don't think the API for strings, at least the type PHP currently has, should be UTF-8 by default
it should be encoding agnostic (which in practice actually means ASCII, alas)
you could add a Unicode view or a Unicode string type to that, though
21:49
@Andrea What I had in mind with "default" is that you would have two methods (where relevant), one that works on utf8, one that works on binary
Without assigning the string itself any intrinsic encoding
@NikiC you could do that.
that's sort of what we have already with the normal string functions versus mbstring
Basically have a length() (codepoints), binaryLength() (bytes) etc
Wes
Wes
@NikiC ew .P
@Andrea so they did what PHP 6 didn't do?
@bwoebi Python 3 did what PHP 6 failed to do
21:51
yeah, that's what I mean
I should hack on UString again
@Andrea yeah, but inverted. And ... somehow using byte offsets where possible, though I'm not sure how the interactions would look like
@NikiC you'd essentially have two versions of every method, either both prefixed or only one. it'd be ugly.
@Andrea Not every method, though I'm not sure how many
In any case, I think that adding something like UString will result in a huge mess
actually, you'd need >2 versions in some cases
21:53
It just doesn't work out if by default you get normal strings
@NikiC that's what bothers me
Then you get fun dealing with hey this API accepts normal strings but this accepts a UString and now I have to wildly cast everything back and forth
my hope would be that PopularPHPFramework version X+1 or X+2 would do it for you, but…
@NikiC yeah :/
maybe I should attempt to redo PHP 6
@Andrea I think less methods would need to be duplicated than one might naively think
For example indexOf does not need a binary variant (it may need an ICU locale parameter though)
@NikiC there's at least three viable ways to look at a UTF-8 string which PHP currently supports: bytes (str* etc.), codepoints (mb_*), extended grapheme clusters (grapheme_*)
21:57
@Andrea yes, but e.g. the extended grapheme cluster distinction only really makes sense for lengths
You don't really need it anywhere else
You know what's nice about PHP? you just choose the function which you need and apply it
Well, lengths and iterators
@NikiC anything with indexes involved
@Andrea Indexes should not depend on it
As said, indexes should always be byte offsets
Though they may be opaque byte offsets
@NikiC that will explode beautifully with English speakers
Wes
Wes
21:58
u"à"          ->cps()           ->bytes(UTF::UTF8)
Seq<Grapheme>   Seq<CodePoint>    Seq<Int{Byte}>(a string...)
@Wes o god
Wes
Wes
...
we could be deliberately obtuse
"foo"->bytes->blah(), "foo"->codepoints->blah(), "foo"->graphemes->blah()
@Andrea This is how rust does it
It's the only sane way to do it imho
Wes
Wes
@NikiC how about equality? if you don't work with graphemes natively you are doomed to normalize the strings at every use. which is the biggest error i made in my previous version of the thingy
22:03
for PHP 8.0 we will replace the Zend Engine with CPython 3 and see if anyone notices
Wes
Wes
lol
@Andrea There is something to be said for this, although no need for ->bytes, those can be default
@Andrea Well, if you mirror the semantics exactly, we'll notice it because our servers are suddenly very slow
@DaveRandom the problem with that is it makes the wrong way the most convenient
idk and I don't care that much, I'm gonna go do something more fun
hmm
22:18
@Andrea dunno. I would counter that you need to actually understand what you are doing in order to use unicode correctly anyway, thus it's better to explicitly state whether you are working with codepoints or graphemes. Bytes should be the default because not all strings are unicode, and strings double up as bytes arrays in PHP anyway.
come to think of it though, PHP already has okay-ish Unicode support
you have a choice of byte, codepoint or grapheme-level manipulation
the functions are awkward, but you can do everything you need to
this is true of arrays too
speaking of which, I still want to implement function foo(): [int, int]
@Andrea Indeed. I am not a fan of magical implicit unicode support.
@DaveRandom ehh. other languages do things well here
Unicode is awkward. It's not PHP's fault.
@DaveRandom that much is true, but PHP's representation of strings is outdated
22:23
@Andrea Other languages (with the exception of JS, maybe?) do not have to cater for the same huge variance in technical ability that PHP does.
@DaveRandom bullshit
gesundheit
@Andrea srsly though, Unicode is hard. PHP developers are frequently idiots. These two things do not mix well. IMHO.
that's true of any language
…except maybe Haskell
@Andrea OK, different tack. What is goal(s) of adding "unicode support", whatever that turns out to mean. What is that actual problem that is being solved?
I mean I'm not necessarily targeting you with that question
I don't think I've ever seen such a statement of intent in the context of PHP
@DaveRandom ever read the PHP 6 design document?
22:28
I... guess not?
doesn't really answer the question, though
I'd say the goal is to make it easier to write software that's interoperable with the wider non-ASCII world
@Andrea E_VAGUE
just like every other thing that is ever said on this topic :-P
@DaveRandom broad mission statements are
after all, “Unicode support” is itself quite a broad concept
oh look it's @Sara
@Andrea This is my problem with the whole thing. It's a thing that sounds great and everyone has a reflex reaction of "oh yes, clearly we want that" but it means so many different things to different people and actually I have no clue what it is specifically going to do. Clearly you can't just magically make strlen() "unicode aware" because apart from anything else, is it going to give me codepoints or graphemes?
@DaveRandom sure
22:38
An objective list of concrete problems is certainly something I would like to have, but also not something I feel like I even know where to start with :-/
22:49
@Andrea I'd like to see Shapes implemented which are effectively PHP 4 objects aka arrays with methods and key structure
@bwoebi I'd just like copy-on-write value type objects
^ no you're right with structs
yeah ok
maybe I'll implement those someday
if I'm very bored and have free time
neither of which are very likely in 2017
@Andrea dunno, what's up for you in 2017?
@bwoebi various things
22:53
Well… okay.
Note: it's bullshit to try to benchmark more than 30k concurrent connections (from a same interface) because ephemeral port range…

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