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17:01
I hate legal stuff, gives me a headache ... what you want is someone to say "I am an actual lawyer, practising in country X, Y and Z, and here are the rules ...."
I don't see that, I see conjecture and lay people reading legal documents ...
Need a [copyright] lawyer to tell me without conjecture if continuously developed open source software is requiring date ranges in copy decl
do retweeting please, one might see it ...
17:18
I have found a nice tool for os x… cputhrottle … it allows me to reduce CPU usage of PHPStorm…
so ... it's like a magic wand !?
I'll take two
> cputhrottle makes use of the task_info, task_suspend, and task_resume calls. task_info and task_threads are used to collect CPU usage statistics on the process, and the program then suspends/resumes the attached process appropriately until the CPU usage has stabilized.
just simple mach syscalls
that's clever
@bwoebi ... did you try nice phpstorm.sh?
@LeviMorrison nice only helps prioritizing relatively to other processes
but it doesn't force processes to idle more
17:22
Ah, I see.
Wes
Wes
bloody hell i still can't recover. been 4 days...
@Wes Recover (from) what?
Wes
Wes
i have a colossal headache now. just because it wasn't in the list yet
@Wes Cut the head off, then the headache should go away… oh wait… what makes you feel the headache and the headache are both in the head… doesn't work…
Wes
Wes
17:35
i don't use the brain much anyway. do carrefour sell guillotines? they are french
bloody hell. i'm rarely sick, but when i am, i do it properly
17:53
@Trowski Did I say that Amp\coroutine is probably fine as is considering the Observable back-pressure use case, yet?
@kelunik Yeah, I saw that message.
What do you think about it?
I was planning on using the Amp\coroutine name for a function that just invokes the given callable and returns the coroutine object, and rename what is now Amp\coroutine to Amp\closure.
@kelunik Observable back-pressure is a good use-case for it, so we should have some function that returns a callable that will upgrade generators to coroutines.
@Trowski Why Amp\closure?
@kelunik Being that it returns a callable the name seemed appropriate.
Also because I couldn't think of something better.
So I'm open to suggestions.
17:56
@Trowski In that case I'd just make new Coroutine accept a callable, it has the same effect and less API.
@Trowski Well, we can't name everything that returns a callable closure. ^^
It doesn't tell what the function really does.
@kelunik Yeah, that's probably true.
@Trowski Same thing we did for Lazy.
@kelunik No, not really. I'd like a better name for Amp\wrap as well.
@JoeWatkins In theory the copyright year(s) in a source file are meant to show the years that the contents of the file were written in. e.g. if you have an old code base that you work on every now and then, it would be appropriate to have Copyright 2008, 2010, 2012-2014 to show which years parts of the file were written in.
Mass updating source code to have the latest year is a pretty bogus thing to do.....but not much harm can come from it.
@bwoebi Thoughts on having Coroutine accept a callable in the constructor?
18:04
The whole thing is pointless to even discuss really. With the length of copyright being approximatly 90 years now.
The only difference it would make is when someone in 2100 wants to re-use some of PHP's source code in a differently licensed project legally, or do they have to wait till 2106.
/cc @LeviMorrison
before I/we can do anything, I need to hear from an actual lawyer ...
I can send you a bill for £500 if that makes me sound more authoritative?
it probably needs passing by internals also....
@Trowski I don't really like it
but I think I may agree @Trowski
I still don't care for it and would rather have a separate function or static method.
though, TBH, it's not that bad to write new Coroutine((function(){})()) with 4 extra parens…
18:14
@JoeWatkins That mirror thing can only be setup by GitHub Support directly.
@bwoebi It adds up.
@kelunik Not really
I would support changing php-src to not require the two wrapping parenthesis though
btw @JoeWatkins without a copyright assignment between people writing the code, and "Zend Technologies Ltd." that whole notice is bogus anyway...
@bwoebi What is the arity? Always zero?
@bwoebi @kelunik This is done all the time in JS.
@LeviMorrison what do you mean with arity in this context?
18:17
@Trowski Well, it sucks less now that PHPStorm has support for it.
meh, I don't care about your IDE. Code >>> IDE support. It's an extra bonus, if coming at zero cost, but that's all.
@bwoebi Well, what I really want is dropping the complete return new Coroutine((function () use (...) { and })());
@bwoebi Why are you immediately invoking something in this context?
@kelunik That I can agree with
@LeviMorrison because that function will contain yield and thus return a Generator
@bwoebi I already thought about hacking the Composer autoloader ...
18:21
well, do what you want in your own personal application nobody has to see…
@bwoebi That's the exact problem of that solution.
@kelunik is return new Coroutine(function () use (...) { ... }); that superior to return new Coroutine((function () use (...) { ... })());
(no.)
It's applying band aids
@Trowski I think I don't really care. But a separate function is for sure unnecessary.
@Trowski yeah, please revert the addition of that extra function… I find it more confusing now to know what function does what exactly
18:28
@bwoebi I did it in a separate branch since I wasn't sure if I liked it or not. :-)
So nothing to revert.
oh, great then :-)
Hi guys ! any one interested in listening to a 30 second guitar riff I recorded recently ? its kinda inspired by git workflow :D . soundcloud.com/vkbdev/inbetween
@Vamsi I would have asked for the guitar track to remix it but it will probably just end up collecting dust like all my other awesome ideas
@PeeHaa got any of your remixes uploaded somewhere ?
18:43
I think there are some in here. Not sure any more what is on it tbh
As said. I do other things with my time now sadly :-)
@bwoebi Any idea why amphp/dns fails randomly? github.com/kelunik/acme-client/issues/46#issuecomment-270006930
damn ! you have dropped some pretty rad remixes 6 years ago . Hope I can create a 5 min track at some point in future .
It doesn't throw a timeout exception, but either a NoRecordException or fails all promises in Amp\some and throws a generic ResolutionException.
@kelunik I have no degree in reading crystal balls… Would need the DNS traffic to see what caused it (preferably in Wireshark friendly format, that's easiest)
At least if there wasn't a timeout exception, there should have been an answer from the DNS server
@Vamsi It's just so much work and I have so little / patience nowadays
19:00
@bwoebi Oh, I thought you'd have one.
@bwoebi Well, there is definitely something wrong.
@kelunik Sorry, only able to guesstimate :-P
If I run the following command repeatedly, it sometimes takes a bit longer and when it does, it doesn't exit the event loop.
php -r 'require "vendor/autoload.php"; Amp\run(function () { foreach (["older-browser.lodesys.com", "aidswalkaz.org", "casadecristo.org", "lodesys.com", "redbrunch.org", "redisthenight.org", "thehopetapes.com"] as $domain) $promises[$domain] = \Amp\Dns\resolve($domain, ["types" => [Amp\Dns\Record::A, Amp\Dns\Record::AAAA], "hosts" => false]); var_dump(yield Amp\any($promises)); });'
Happens with just the first three domains, too, but not that often.
@bwoebi When exactly does Amp\Dns\resolve fail with Amp\Dns\ResolutionException: All name resolution requests failed → When does github.com/amphp/dns/blob/master/lib/DefaultResolver.php#L259 fail?
@kelunik not possible to send the request (e.g. a kernel level restriction), invalid response, no response for that record available
@kelunik ran a twenty times, got no issues
@kelunik have you tried the fix/partial-udp-timeout branch?
aka spoken to Dave.
19:22
evenin
@bwoebi Okay, the following doesn't hang completely. But sometimes it needs a few seconds to resolve.
until php -r 'require "vendor/autoload.php"; Amp\run(function () { foreach (["older-browser.lodesys.com", "aidswalkaz.org", "casadecristo.org", "lodesys.com", "redbrunch.org", "redisthenight.org", "thehopetapes.com"] as $domain) $promises[$domain] = \Amp\Dns\resolve($domain, ["types" => [Amp\Dns\Record::A, Amp\Dns\Record::AAAA], "hosts" => false]); list($errors) = yield Amp\any($promises); exit(count($errors) ? 0 : 1); });'; do echo -n "."; done
@kelunik Nope, not for me
okay
after ~40 runs I saw one which took a bit longer
> Except you implement the event loop in pure PHP ofc, which is likely not the case. – ab @ 68029
^ @bwoebi Do you have time to look into that?
@bwoebi Could you comment on the issue and ask for what you need?
Wes
Wes
@Danack maybe you have an opinion about this softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/339313 ? :P
also evenings \o
@kelunik into implementing that you mean?
19:38
@bwoebi yep. / merging hrtime into core if suitable.
@kelunik Is it available on Windows too?
Seems like it's not much code. But I think even part of it would be enough to have a hrtime function. Could be named monotonictime, too, similar to microtime.
@kelunik Could you please discuss it on internals first?
@Wes I'm not sure I understand the difference. In particular "Takes a considerable amount of time to run because as its tests are very generic, they must be a lot for them to actually cover all cases." ...why? The number of tests should just depend on the numbers of possible behaviours, right? Which should be independent of whether you're testing the interface or the implementation?
19:53
@bwoebi Yes, can send a mail later.
s/the/against/
Wes
Wes
@Danack yes, in most of cases the tests look the same regardless of what the approach is, but not always. ie, if you wanted to write tests that are completely unaware of the implementation, sometimes you are forced to write dozens of them, while just testing the code paths would be much simpler. and with this i don't mean i prefer the latter. both have advantages and disadvantages
cc @FélixGagnon-Grenier
@Wes can you show an example?
Wes
Wes
20:06
hm, let me think about it. i don't have a simple example, no. hm
@kelunik perhaps there's something wrong, I cannot reproduce it … perhaps @DaveRandom has a better idea…
Wes
Wes
@Danack an example could be... if i have a function A that does something, should i be aware that the function uses another function B for it to work, or should i test A's signature regardless of how it's implemented? because if i'm aware that A uses B, i can assume that B works/is tested and just test what A adds to B
Ok, I see what you mean.
Wes
Wes
my guess is now that yes, i should be aware of B, otherwise things can go insane way too easily
@Danack I do not. My graphviz knowledge is quite minimal. I know just enough to wish I knew how to make it do what I want more easily. but it seems to not want to most of the time.
20:19
@Crell k, thanks anyway.
@Danack I will say the documentation for it is frequently not as useful as I'd like. :-( I get the impression that it's not intended to be used directly, but that .dot files are intended to be the output from some other program.
@bwoebi We may want to think of a different name for Observable if we want to keep our implementation.
Just to avoid confusion with Rx and ECMAscript observables.
@Trowski why?
Ah
Do you have a good word instead?
Emitter is the first thing that came to mind.
@Wes I think if it's just the next layer...then probably, otherwise you're not testing the thing properly. But if you do it for all layers, then yes, the top level of thing in your app could have a large number of possible tests to have 'sufficient' coverage.
20:23
@Trowski You're talking about this kind of stuff as part of Amp: reactivex.io ?
@Crell I'm talking about using a different word for our async-set abstraction, as it differs from Rx.
Rx will be compatible with Amp once it implements the async-interop loop.
So I'm thinking it might be better to use a different term there.
@Trowski not opposed
@bwoebi Seems the most appropriate, since we're using the verb emit.
@Trowski though, that's currently for the actual Emitter, not the consumer…
@bwoebi ObservableEmitter, ObserverListener, EmitterEmanator (ok, I dunno about that one…)
20:33
Emanator sounds like an ancient alien relic that the hero is trying to reach before the villain does.
@Crell Not sure if an argument for or against… :-D
@Trowski I'm not sure either. :-)
@Trowski isnt a Emitter something which sends messages and a Observable somthing which gets notified?
Emanator sounds like a Doofenshmirtz invention, which is awesome!
@staabm I always considered them nearly synonymous. To me something which is Observable would be producing something to be observed, not receiving values.
Making Observable and Emitter basically equivalent.
20:39
@Trowski When I read observable my first thought is the thing that gets send to something
Also wth is a Emanator :P
Use that one!
@Trowski Moderator instead of Emanator ?
Just to be clear, I'm looking at the name for this class: github.com/amphp/amp/blob/master/lib/Emitter.php
Emanator or Moderator seem appropriate.
This interface github.com/amphp/amp/blob/master/lib/Observable.php would then be called Emitter.
And this class github.com/amphp/amp/blob/master/lib/Observer.php would be Listener.
Wes
Wes
@Danack why is next different from all? :P dunno...
@kelunik I imagine it's the arp issue. Ask if it stops failing when they use a non-local DNS server (e.g. 8.8.8.8)
/cc @bwoebi
Anyone here work with SolrBundle at all?
21:01
@tereško Christ. Life never ceases to amaze me.
ah ffs. I need to take pauses.
@Trowski Emanator … I think I'm about to learn a new word (looking up :-D)
@bwoebi instantly added the my pool of DescriptorClassTermsRepositoryFactory
@FélixGagnon-Grenier :-P
@DaveRandom It's on Windows, so it's 8.8.8.8 anyway.
21:20
@kelunik Then yeh, need a trace, pref one from a fail and one from a success
@Ocramius stop trying to point out crap to laravel people. It's bad for your health
@PeeHaa Who will then?
@bwoebi You also don't point and laugh at retarded people and tell them they are stupid do you?
@PeeHaa Depends who it is… If you are the one being retarded, I enjoy laughing :-)
21:33
wow now I read that back. @tereško would be very proud
@bwoebi :P
Forgetting to stop wireshark recording = a few million packets in RAM slowing down the whole computer…
@bwoebi So the Twitter streaming API is not a valid use case for an Observable for you?
@kelunik No
What's a valid use case then?
like in Artax or Aerys\Message
21:43
Artax? Where in Artax?
@bwoebi The twitter streaming API is a perfect example of a use-case of Observables.
where the updates are directly contributing to the result or providing additional information
@bwoebi If it were just that, we wouldn't need any backpressure mechanism.
@kelunik Artax\Client::request()
@kelunik that's why it originally had none…
It was not designed as such
@Trowski This use case would not need a when() though
@bwoebi It does. When the connection breaks for example.
21:47
@PeeHaa wat?
what did I miss?
@kelunik no, it will never have a success value
there's no point in yielding that
@tereško Was reading random twitter crap twitter.com/Ocramius/status/816018630852956160
@kelunik That's the classical example where you'd attach a callback to be called on error explicitly
@PeeHaa here is a nice rule of thumb: if the mentions in your tweet take up more space, than the content, you are using the wrong damn platform to discuss shit
.. sorry, just woke from a nap
The whole point of the Promise is getting the promised value. Errors may happen, and there needs to be a way to communicate these, but the integral part is the future value.
@kelunik @Trowski At the fundamental level: Would I want to yield and wait for that? No? Then the Promise is not the right tool.
21:59
@tereško :P
I cant even ..
that muppet has never played skyrim
@bwoebi On client close it will just resolve with null.
@kelunik does that event interest us? no.
@bwoebi So how do you plan the new API for Artax?
@kelunik I'm not planning a new API for Artax?
22:05
I guess we want to use Message as in Aerys for response bodies?
@kelunik possibly, yes.
@bwoebi We planned a rewrite long ago.
@kelunik sure, but no concrete details
@bwoebi And the response body should be an observable I guess?
@kelunik yes, why not? Responses are finite.
22:08
Emanator < woot?!
@bwoebi The Twitter streaming API isn't.
@bwoebi @kelunik github.com/amphp/amp/tree/rename-observable Branch renaming Observable to Emitter.
@kelunik I'm aware. Responses are usually finite though.
@Trowski I think the names were fine except for Postponed.
2 hours ago, by Trowski
@bwoebi We may want to think of a different name for Observable if we want to keep our implementation.
@kelunik Also, no idea why you would use anything involving when() on it then, except for getting the final exception.
22:12
@Trowski Observable is perfectly fine. reactivex.io/documentation/observable.html
I mean, no point in using combinators there etc.
@bwoebi Where?
@kelunik Our observables have different semantics.
@Trowski Not really?
@kelunik on the special case of long running requests
22:14
@kelunik Rx Observables aren't promises, that's the biggest difference.
Plus ours will emit values even if no one is listening.
(which totally makes sense)
year 2017 will be grand, I just feel it: archive.fo/udsHs - we will finally add another P to LGBTQQIP2SAA for "pedo"
@Trowski They have an onCompleted as well as onError.
@kelunik Sure, but using them in coroutines is a pain, which is why I made them promises as well.
I'm fine with keeping them named Observables, I just was throwing out a suggestion.
@Trowski Which is fine for me.
22:15
@Trowski I'd like to separate Observables which push updates for getting a final value and Observables which are really just infinite streams which may abort with an error sometime
@bwoebi I really don't see this as necessary. Rx doesn't do this.
So what if a promise never completes…
Obviously you don't yield it in a coroutine… then you probably want to use an Observer and iterate over values emitted.
@Trowski Rx doesn't provide a value upon onCompleted() though
btw... do we have a default maximum input time for Aerys that fails the yielded body?
@Trowski in that case you do not need the object to implement when()
@bwoebi No, which I always felt was a missed opportunity.
@bwoebi It needs some mechanism to report errors, so you'd end up with a very similar function.
22:21
@kelunik 983040 seconds is the default [this really is just the maxHeader+BodySize * keepAliveTimeout] … so, no not really
@Trowski errors, yes. But the second arg is useless
And in this case it also makes sense to detach a listener to errors
@bwoebi I guess we should have that?
@kelunik not sure whether it gains us anything
an attacker may just as well open a new connection when the old one gets closed
And as soon as he stops, 6 secs later it gets stopped anyway
@kelunik do you have a concrete scenario where it helps?
@Danack Nope, but at unlimited everything for $34 per line that's pretty good.
@bwoebi An infinite set has no completion value… I'm not seeing a need for another abstraction that is nearly the same except for that detail.
@bwoebi Gotta make them use that interface!
@JoeWatkins My understanding is that it doesn't require the carrier to support it; you would need hardware on your end to do it though.
22:28
@bwoebi Other than an attacker keeping a lot of sockets open, no I guess.
@kelunik Regarding that , he can just reopen sockets as said
One of our "20 gig" connections is bonding two 10 gigs.
@bwoebi Except when there's a limit.
@kelunik He has a limit of simultaneous connections, not a limit of connections per time unit
@Trowski From a practical perspective, no point in that. From a purist perspective, I feel it should be added.
@Trowski Also, when the Observable ought being infinite, it makes sense to explicitly unsubscribe (from when() [shouldn't be called when though] as well as subscribe()).
@bwoebi It does, which is why my original implemenation returned a promise from subscribe that had a dispose method.
The observable itself was not a promise, but the subscribers were.
Maybe we want to revert to something like that? ^
22:36
I don't feel really well with that … it's two different things for me still.
They're semantically different (finite vs infinite, needs unsubscribe vs. not, will have a meaningful value at the end vs. not)
@bwoebi For Artax' current watch(), how would you implement it in a sync application?
@kelunik What do you mean?
@bwoebi If we would not return a promise, but a response directly. Just pass a callback to the request function call?
@Trowski also, an Observer for an InfiniteObservable does not need to check for valid in a loop. It's always valid, unless someone threw an exception … so well… there are quite some differences
@bwoebi finite vs. infinite isn't really semantically different. They have to use the same thing, see streaming APIs.
22:40
@kelunik Either that, or preferably a setWatcher()
@kelunik it is, because you don't have to check for an end
@bwoebi Right, except when it threw an exception.
@kelunik in which case the Promise returned by InfiniteObserver::getNext() would throw - no need to check for while (yield $observer->valid())
@bwoebi Except that you don't know whether an HTTP response is a stream or not.
@kelunik HTTP requests are always finite though… they may take a long time, but will always end regularly or irregularly
(e.g. connected node going down and properly closing the connection - or connection aborting)
I'd e.g. have Observable and FiniteObservable implements Promise, Observable
@bwoebi Which methods do they define?
22:52
And then also class InfiniteObserver { __construct(Observable); next(): Promise; } as well as class FiniteObserver { __construct(FiniteObservable); getValue(); advance(): Promise; getCurrent(); }
@kelunik interface Observable { function subscribe(); function when(callable(\Throwable $e)); }
(and FiniteObservable no extra methods)
(Observable should also provide a way of unsubscribing, whether by returning Promise or a dedicated Unsubscriber object or whatever)
\cc @Trowski ^
so e.g. interface Observable { function subscribe(callable($data): ?Promise): Unsubscriber; function when(callable(\Throwable $e)): Unsubscriber; }
That's just a first draft… There may be better ways
but merging Promise-Observables and Infinite Observables into one thing sounds inherently wrong to me.
@bwoebi I'll have to think about what can be done because I'm not particularly thrilled with any solution.
I feel like this also is a topic where @rdlowrey may have his own opinion on. I'd like to hear it.
@Trowski I'm not yet either. I'll give it more thought too.
Anyway, off for the night
23:11
@Trowski @bwoebi @kelunik - What is it that you are trying to solve?
Would really help me out if someone could take a look, thanks.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/41434238/check-this-in-laravel
@bwoebi And then we have next() and advance()?!
@bwoebi Why a nullable return for subscribe?
@Ashkru I checked it, detected Laravel and gave a downvote
thanks for playing
@mbonneau Discussing about Observable implementing Promise right now and whether that's right.
@tereško you downvoted why?
23:15
[email protected]
   Letzter Fehler: 550 5.7.1
   Erklärung: host pair1.php.net [76.75.200.58] said: mail rejected by policy.  SURBL
              hit Spammy URLs in your message See
fuck it.
@Ashkru because it is a standard "write code for me" post
@kelunik No no, subscribe would be returning an object, the nullable is the return of the callback.
... also, thanks for reminding, I should also give it a closevote
@mbonneau Because our Observerables implement Promise, an infinite set will never resolve the promise.
I don't really think that's a problem, but @bwoebi seems to think so.
Ah - I tried implementing ->observableToGenerator (RxPHP Observable) that emitted Promises and that is where I ran into an issue - onComplete
because if the promise was already handed out and then it completed - I had no way to signal that (unless I made a special Exception)
23:39
Seems like php.net rejects php.net URLs as spam.
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