Goodmorning (if applicable). Could somebody help me with finding the terms to use in a Googe or DuckDuckGo? If feel this question is not suitable for a real SO-question... I don't request a solution, just the proper phrasing so I can Google further. (Or Duck further?)
I have a piece of PHP software on one of my servers. This can perform a service that I want to expose to the world. However, I want to limit it's access. So, I client of mine must be able to display a widget on her site. Her visitors could use that widget and when submitting, a request will be sent to my site, which will check if the request is indeed coming from her server and only then provide an answer.
-- How is this process called? So, I realy just want to know what I should search for. The discription above is too large for a search engine :)
hey @JoeWatkins any news from this? wiki.php.net/rfc/lexical-anon i've read the discussion and as usual there was a lot of noise with people suggesting crazy stuff. imho your solution is perfect
other languages (css, js, presumably others too) have "experimental" apis. they get merged and are available publicly but users are warned that it might be removed if turns out to be a bad idea. would be great if php did that too
sure one can apply patches and compile but not everyone is good with that
I wouldn't want to manage that kind of experimental release
I think you'd find the kind of people that would test that kind of release are those that are able to just apply a patch and test it anyway ...
there's no room in the ecosystem for that kind of release to be deployed en-masse ...
we have enough trouble getting people to upgrade to stable releases
we do have some kind of support from 3v4l to test unmerged rfc's, this is about as close as we can get to experimental releases ... anyone can play with it there without messing anything up ... you can't run your whole application, but ... nothing we can do about it in reality ...
@JoeWatkins :( what for example? php's bundle is massive... i use not even half of the extensions. i've always wondered why stuff like tidy are still in core
well it's a balance between providing a generally useful thing, and providing things that are actually used ... php is used in all kinds of environments doing all kinds of things, stuff that the people we talk to have never used might well be getting used quite widely ... because there is a vast number of users, and even if everyone you have ever spoken too is not using something, you have only spoken to a minuscule percentage of the users php has ..
you're still breaking deployments, you're still making it harder for people to upgrade to the latest version of php by doing that ...
also there's the maintenance problem ... things like tidy take no effort for us to keep up to date with latest engine changes, but moving it to pecl can easily kill an extension, there's no particular reason to keep it up to date if it's not breaking the build ...
there are a few actively maintained extensions on pecl, but in general stuff goes to pecl to die or be forgotten ...
lots of the pecl extensions that you would suppose have a decent user base are in a terrible state, ssh2 for example
it just can't work ... even though installing with pecl is easy, and hosting on pecl has considerable benefits with regard to release cycle among other things ... people (ops) still find it hard to actually use it ... even though there can't be many decent sized projects that don't use pecl, you still hear complaints about pecl being difficult to use ... I think you've complained about it yourself ...
I remain unconvinced, there's no remarkable difference between pecl install thing and composer install thing or adding a line to composer.json ... the thing that would allow extensions to die isn't how easy or difficult they are to install, it's that there is no incentive for anyone to maintain an extension that doesn't break the build ...
that's the only reason that things like tidy still work even, because if we didn't keep them up to date, we wouldn't be able to build php ... if it's on pecl, they'll be forgotten, regardless of how easy or difficult installation actually is ...
it will generate bugs (see the roughly one bagillion bugs for pecl exts on bugsnet), but nobody will do anything about it ... either because they can't, or because they can't be bothered ...
that's only a small fire ... but seems reasonable ...
but then
on the other hand, we are getting these reports precisely because optimization level is high, nobody is going to report bugs if we decrease/switch it off
I have to presume that opcache test coverage must be very low, maybe it's time to do something about that @NikiC ?
maybe we decrease in production versions and work on better test suite in master, then we can have at least some confidence that opcache is okay for 7.2 ?
it feels like there should be something we can do about it with tests, but I'm not sure how to write them, given what you just said about how they arise
To use it via curl you make a curl request to exampledomain.com/api and send post parameters, but it seems really pointless to do that when it's on the same server. I just don't know what file /api is using :|
@NikiC is there a way to have the pretty printer keep the escape sequences in strings as they were defined? $a = " "; $a = "\n"; both get parsed as $a = "\n";