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Dan
Dan
14:00
I tend to see/treat query parameters as optional, so DELETE resource?key1=id1&key2=id2 also seems kinda lame
@Dan that's what query strings are for
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom See above.
Is that just me being anal, or is there merit to erring on query parameters being optional?
@Dan do you allow PUT?
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom Yes, for resource replacement
Then it should have identical semantics, surely?
Dan
Dan
14:01
I was thinking DELETE with a resource identifier payload.
@DaveRandom What do you mean?
Oh, I see
Well, PUT accepts the full entity body, so it can use the properties of the enclosed body to locate the resource that it's replacing
It seems odd to have to pass the whole entity to DELETE
So I was thinking of isolating the resource identification properties to another type, which DELETE would accept solely to locate the resource for removal.
DELETE resource
{"key1":"id1","key2":"id2"}
I would say that this is what query strings are for, and that you should be using the query string in the PUT as well. However if I understood the nature of the data and the properties used to identify it better that might change
If these properties actually identify a specific resource, they should be in the URI
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom So how would I model the URI template?
To handle multiple identifying properties.
can you elaborate on what this data is and what the properties are?
are we gonna talk about how baby sting rays look like haunted ravioli https://t.co/nQEQoiyhdZ
/cc @Wes
Anonymous
should have /bcc so that you don't look racist.
Anonymous
you racist.
14:15
quick question: is the line number given in debug_print_backtrace reliable? I think to remember it isnt
@Gordon not completely reliable: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=47405
AFAIK it will also affect the backtrace
also, I think callbacks give weird line numbers, but not sure
OuterIteratorInterface method should be there – #74568
14:31
@kelunik For the limited use-cases of having to close only the readable half, that sounds very reasonable. Would end() should only close the writable half on Socket?
This could either be awesome or annoying composerci.miguelpiedrafita.com
> and know they're getting the latest build, untainted, directly
from you, the way you want to ship it
Totally doesn't sound like a marketing person
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom Basically, the entities are parity for join tables; many-to-many relationships identified by their composite PK-from-FKs
So the composite key identifies the entity
The join is more of an event stream; relationships are assigned and unassigned
@Dan OK, then what else (if anything) is in the entity body for PUT?
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom { id1: 1, id2: 2, state: new_state }
Wait, I don't have PUT, derp
I'm just POST-ing that.
No wait.
Fuck me
... am I supposed to understand how to destroy the lasts commit/revision in mercurial?
14:41
@Dan maybe later
Dan
Dan
THAT is PUT, I'm trying to expose semantic endpoints for POST/DELETE
So POST sets a new_state of created and DELETE of deleted respectively.
PUT: replaces the entity with a new entity and you specify the state
POST: replaces the entity with a new entity defaulting to created state
DELETE: replaces the entity with a new entity defaulting to deleted state
^ That.
PUT is easy, because you replace the whole entity
POST/DELETE are intended conveniences.
Which is inconveniencing me.
@kelunik Yeah, you're probably right. I wrote most of that before we were supporting React-style promises directly and it was meant to be a bridge.
@Dan I don't understand the point of POST there tbh, also it seems like state is a property on the server rather than a property of the entity itself
@Dan hmmm, wat?
regardless, the IDs belong in the URI for all operations because they are the things that identify the target entity
14:45
POST shouldn't replace anything, if there is a collision it would stop there, no? Replacing is the job of PUT. DELETE replacing an entity?
@kelunik Oh well… was mostly copy-paste from Icicle, so not a lot of time went into it. :-D
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom Okay, all other things held equal; how would one model a composite key into a URI sanely cleanly?
probably just /id1/id2
Dan
Dan
/k1/v1/k2/v2 ?
Hmm, that's shite for discoverability
You don't need the keys
the keys are known
Dan
Dan
14:46
Yea, I guess so
I just don't like it, but I'll deal I suppose
resource/1 is clear in it's intent, resource/1/2 less so.
even /id1-id2 if you wanted, doesn't really matter, when stringifying composite keys you are just delimiting the components somehow
Dan
Dan
True, I try to treat / delimitation as resource traversal though.
maybe /id1:id2 actually, makes it more obvious that it's a mapping
Dan
Dan
resource/1/subresource = collection/identifier/subcollection
@DaveRandom Okay, I think I can work with that.
tbh I don't think I've ever come across any public API that has "link entities" like this
Dan
Dan
14:49
@DaveRandom Likewise, I may look at remodelling this boat
It's really because it's more of an event stream
And you're just appending state changes to it
So I was trying to map the HTTP method semantics to operations performed on the stream
Perhaps I'll abstract all the things and drink beer.
Using PUT doesn't make loads of sense there, because semantically I expect it to replace a whole resource rather than push an event
equally, deleting events makes no sense
once something has happened, it happened
Dan
Dan
So I should just permit POST and fuck the other methods?
I'm okay with that, I was just trying to expose convenience methods, which are seeming less and less sane as this conversation carries on.
@Dan it doesn't seem like you have actual resources, more like a servlet
like you aren't giving it things, you are asking it to do stuff
the requests aren't idempotent
(by the sounds of it)
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom Well, they are
If you push an event to change state, and the state would go unchanged, nothing happens.
So pushing in sequence true, false, true, true, false; the 4th change is ignored
No different than PUT-ing the same state to a resource.
I'm trying to find docs on modelling event stream resources over HTTP/REST
infoq.com/articles/rest-api-on-cqrs is in the same vein, but ick.
If you pay Mr Sturgeon teh monies (if you can justify that) he will have useful opinions.
Dan
Dan
15:01
Do what with my what?
I'm a grown man and I cannot get the hang of namespaces.
Can I just giveup and name my classes NamespaceClass instead of Namespace\Class?
Dan
Dan
What aren't you getting the hang of?
@TomasZubiri Only if you want to write for PHP 5.2
What's there to get the hang of?
Dan
Dan
Oh, I remember the days: Vendor_Product_Components_Ns1_Ns2_ClassName
15:13
I had ClassV1 and ClassV2, but they both had the same name. Sadly, when I tried to use them both, I got a redeclaration error.
@Machavity 000webhost isn't a good example though.
000webhost aren't people
7
> Either one requires PDO extensions to be installed, which aren´t on free accounts.
So I put Class (V1) and all of their dependencies on their on a new namespace(V1), and I added a use V1/Class as Class on all code that used V1.
that is either amazing marketting, or really bad sysadmining
Well, they're out there wrecking the Internet insisting that 640k is enough memory PHP 5.2 is just fine
I think I am doing it right.
> ... The breach included names, email addresses and plain text passwords.
Anonymous
@TomasZubiri share your code otherwise you're not gonna get much help or try and replicate your issue here 3v4l.org :)
15:18
@HamZa jaw drops
The thing is, it was promoted a lot, especially for newbies. I had an account like +6y ago
> 000webhost, the not-james-bond internet service, by newbs, for newbs
3 quarts of a year working on this project, goes out for company wide testing, feedback "Can we just put it back to the way it was?"
This kills the developer
Anonymous
i'd flip shit.
@Sean Well, you broke workflow
15:29
After the crap I've been through in the last month with this thing I'm just kind of broken lol
@Sean I spent 3 months on a project once and then the deal involving the project fell through
@Sean Did you 1) Get paid, 2) learn anything?
Yeah
If there's some part of it you can personally be proud of, fuck those guys, sweep it under the rug knowing you did your job well, and they're the ones missing out \o/
Anonymous
the latter always make me feel better if it falls through. If i've learnt useful shit doing it, it doesn't feel like a waste
15:37
then get a new job with real people
15:51
I'm using a PHP backend with Azure Server and DB. I was told to use C#/.net because PHP was going to bite me in the ass, but I want to stick with PHP.

So first qusetion is, what do PHP users think?

And on top of that, what is the best method to have PHP stream data from a server with a DB to client applications? Is that a thing?
16:03
You already have code in php?
@Trowski Both solutions seem reasonable, but I guess I prefer closing only the write side. It has to be documented either way.
@TomasZubiri Yes I have code in PHP
@kelunik I also prefer only closing the write side, so sounds good.
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom So, in the end, I stripped all the mutation endpoints except POST
So now you can just "create" new states
Fuck helper methods.
@Trowski Did you see my PR to amphp/byte-stream? Do you think that's a reasonable implementation?
16:13
@Nonlin What is the client written in? The most common way is to send json or soap objects through http.
Is stream_socket_shutdown(STREAM_SHUT_RDWR) equivalent to fclose()?
user image
6
cc @Leigh :p
Wes
Wes
@Jeeves shut the f*ck up
@Wes Please don't use that sort of language here.
@TomasZubiri its going to be C# WPF application
16:18
@Wes Are you crazy?
Wes
Wes
better, b*tch?
how the hell did they manage to make iterators so complicated :B parentinnerouteriteratoriteratorgrandad
not even me when i am on drugs
Evening
@PeeHaa I'm not vegan
those guys are fucking nuts
You're not?
nah, I eat cheese and drink milk :D
16:22
:P
I thought apes only ate leaves and bananas and shit like that
@Leigh eggs?
@Leigh uh... I think maybe the vegans you know are doing it wrong
3
@kelunik no.
@DaveRandom hahahahaha
@kelunik close() and shutdown() are different syscalls
@DaveRandom Actually I'm on a largely vegan diet, but I don't kick up a fuss if something is non-vegan
16:23
BOOM INSTASTAR
I wish I could !!tweet a message combo
@Leigh you sound like one of those "mostly vegan, because buying good meat takes too much effort" people
@tereško Mostly vegan because I'm vegetarian and lazy
@kelunik essentially the difference is whether the fd is released (and eventually associated resources) or not
@kelunik no.
oh lol what Bob said
Day 6 of drinking Huel for 2 meals a day - I'm pleased to announce the worlds most disgusting farts have subsided
16:25
I feel @DaveRandom post deserves so much more. You people are no fun
We need to eat less beef world-wide. It's incredibly energy inefficient to the point it's actually an issue.
@bwoebi How do we close a socket then? Explicitly in Socket::close only, but not possible via ResourceInputStream or ResourceOutputStream?
brb food
@kelunik you just don't close it. You rely on the last reference to it being removed, automatically initating closure
Might be fine...
16:27
@Dan I feel like I can't really comment further without understanding more about the actual problem domain than I really have time for :-P
16:39
@kelunik Perhaps we shouldn't call fclose on other resources.
Otherwise it's inconsistent between sockets and other resources.
Hope this doesn't fall under "Asking to ask" but I just got a pre-interview assessment and I failed to answer one. I'm hoping there's people that could help me figure out what the right answer would have been cause it was very interesting and I'm hoping to learn. The question was: i.imgur.com/rpj2yBs.png and the given code was: image.prntscr.com/image/1df8c3645f2c488ab88ec3a495102917.png
Dan
Dan
@DaveRandom S'all good. Speaking generally, event streams should be forward-only, so it makes sense that you'd only be able to append and query. Append = create, helper methods are cruft, thus only POST and GET
If I'm not supposed to ask this here I'll remove it.
@bwoebi is that the same as shutdown on exit?
@Trowski So basically remove close()?
16:42
I've got a question related to code formatting - in world of simple and very stupid getters and setters isn't PSR compatible formatting too inflated? very simple getters/setters are oneliner methods which most of the time are build using one statement assigment/return
@kelunik Basically. Probably kept as a private method on ResourceOutputStream.
if you open lots of sockets and don't close any of them wouldn't that eventually make you run out of fd's?
@brzuchal What do you gain by doing that? You are still typing the same thing
@PeeHaa Shorten code?
16:46
Whitespace isn't code though
Yes, I know whitespaces tabs etc.are not code, I meant less lines and then I can read without scrolling them
Which can be easily read on one single screen in longer classes
nvm I think it's stupid
Sorry bothering you
Return in a finally clause silently ignores an exception thrown in a try clause – #74569
I just felt it isn't right for stupid getter to take four lines for such obvious statement
@brzuchal lol don't be sorry :P
@brzuchal Did you see the failed property accessors rfc(s?)?
@PeeHaa I'm confused in one hand I would write short one, but PSR coding standard etc. most of people used tu etc.
Yes I saw.
16:49
My initial knee jerk reaction would be: your class is too large btw
And I saw today Hack constructor promoting properties
@brzuchal yeah I think @Gordon tried that one too
I can remove all getters/setters and include my library plumbok/plumbok and add annotations so it'll be very short then
Wes
Wes
@PeeHaa that one failed as anything fails on internals
But I don't know how someone else would felt reading my code
16:51
@Wes they all failed :)
Wes
Wes
i mean, people started proposing crazy things
and discussion derailed as usual
@kelunik @Trowski The only reason to call fclose() is when there are other references to the resource which you cannot immediately remove…
Wes
Wes
just look at the discussion about joe's anon class lexical scope :B
@Wes discussion is always on mailing lists which is hard to read for me, some proposals are very interesting
I wish to see someday some place I talked about some time ago where idea/feature proposals can be in the same place with discussion, votind etc.
To much some...
@bwoebi @Trowski Actually I'd just not support half-closed streams. If you need that much control, use rawConnect() and implement some input and output steam on top of that.
16:55
@brzuchal Just go for it
@Ekin They get closed automatically when they are GC'd.
@PeeHaa What chances do I have? That it'll accept
I don't know. Only one way too find out :D
@Trowski yep I assumed so, I was considering for a long running process
@Ekin Same is true there as long as a reference to the fd doesn't exist.
16:58
I see
@kelunik That was the original approach I took.
Just came up that some protocols require half-closing… I'm not sure what protocols, I'd like to know some examples.
React has an open issue for half-closed streams, but there isn't much interest in that feature.
@Trowski We can always release a new major version or add something to the socket implementation if we need it.
@kelunik Seems reasonable at this point. I have just never had a desire for half-open streams… and technically with $stream->getResource() it's trivial to do it without any direct support.
17:30
I'm getting some super weird behavior that I don't understand. I have two objects that are properties of another object. Each of the property objects have a method called "isValid" which returns "true" or an error object.

If I var_dump them individually without var_dumping the other, I get my expected result. If I call both, and var_dump them indivudally, the second one is always merged with the first.
This should not happen. There is no code that does this.
Maybe I just can't find a bug, but I was wondering if there's any weird PHP nuances that would cause this?
@Allenph probably because you are still using the same "error object"
you might need to look up how php's approach of "copy-on-write" works, when it comes to objects
most of even advanced-level developer don't understand that behaviour
@tereško Thanks. I'll look it up.
@Allenph the short version is: php objects are actually passed "by handler" and not "by reference"
see this example: 3v4l.org/8tH8Y
you will notice the #1 and #2 in the output
that indicator should be different for each separate class instance
the "full explanation" is a bit more complicated, but this should give you a "surface level clue" of how it actually works
17:47
@tereško I'm confused. That's output is what I would expect.
well ... what is the output you see, when you var_dump of your "error objects" ?
I figured it out.
It was much higher level than that.
I wrote the class as a static service originally and when I changed it I forgot to remove a reference to "self."
It just happened I had never used the class twice, I guess.
Does anyone know the proper way to have PHP stream data from a DB without hammering the DB?
Actually, I know I have, I don't know why it happened this time and not those times.
So, I guess you can refer to "self" even within an instance?
@Allenph yeah, making the class static is usually a terrible idea
@Nonlin that is a very nebulous description. What do you mean by "stream data from DB"?
Anonymous
18:00
Does anyone think that Stackoverflow badge looks ok/not? github.com/samayo/bulletproof
@tereško Essentially my DB is going to contain data that a PHP Script will provide it every minute via one single query.

Now inside that data is unique info for all the registered users. So when a client logs into the Application I'll want to update the user with the latest info every minute or so.
If I have 1000+ users logged in at the same time each making a hit to the DB for their latest info that seems like a lot of calls being made very frequently to the DB. Is there a method here I could take to get the job done but not risk hammering my DB?
Or perhaps this hammering isn't as big of an issue as I take it?
@PeeHaa I can't stop laughing
;-)
@samayo seems fine.
on a separate note, @samayo, you should really do something about his method: scrutinizer-ci.com/g/samayo/bulletproof/code-structure/master/…
it does too many things
Did you wrote answer :p
18:12
@Linus not yet. The beer is still cooling
:)
Anonymous
@tereško Thanks. Unfortunately, I can't do much. I had to choose between quality and usability, and refactoring that method would mean the class won't be as simple as it is, to use now. So, I had to go with usability just for this one.
@Nonlin do those queries actually contain SQL joins? Because, if not, I would recommend placing in front of DB a noSQL cache/buffer
Anonymous
... or until I evolve to a better developer and find a better middle ground.
@samayo splitting parts of that method in various private methods would not affect the usability in any way
I am not telling you to change the published API
18:15
@tereško Where can I find out more about this concept of noSQL cache/buffer?
I'm using Azure btw.
Anonymous
@tereško I'll recheck again. I've always wanted that perfect 10 scrutinizer badge
@Nonlin the common options are Memcached (if purely for caching), Redis and CouchDB
@samayo btw, this method call seems wrong (from examples): if($image->getMime() !== "png") <- that's not a mime-type
So the idea here would be to cache the results and hit the cache instead of the DB directly?
That would still incur hits to the server at the least or a separate server? Couldn't I just save the data as a json file on my server and just hit that? Wouldn't that be the same thing @tereško
Anonymous
@tereško You mean it would have to follow image/ as image/png to be a mime?
@samayo yes
Anonymous
18:19
In that case, I could use getExt() maybe..
@Nonlin actually, in case of various noSQL solutions, you would actually be hitting the memory and not the filesystem
Anonymous
I'll do that for v3
though, it depends on how the RDBMS is actually set up
@samayo getFullPath should be returning full path to the file. All your examples show relative path.
Anonymous
oh fk ... you are right.
Anonymous
Stupidest mistake actually
18:23
you should also add "support PSR4" for your v3 milestone
and add a requirement for exif in composer.json
Anonymous
Wait .. what? exif is not a package, it's an extension though.
yes
you can add "required extensions" in composer.json
Anonymous
I didn't know composer checks for extensions.
and your package claims to support 5.3, but it is not actually running test for it in travis
Anonymous
Yeah, it's that f***ing PHPUnit
Anonymous
18:29
I don't know how to solve it for now
Anonymous
But the lib does work in 5.3
hmm ..
and for some reason you have hardcoded minimal height and width for an image
Anonymous
That's optional.
what if I want to upload a 960 x 3 "separator" ?
it doesnt look optional from where I stand
Anonymous
Ah, that one. I meant you said the whole upload option.
Anonymous
18:32
That's just to validate the image
960x3 is a valid image
Anonymous
Yeah, I will make it 2px the minimum.
hell "spacer.gif" is a valid image
(if you are old enough to know what those are)
Anonymous
Nah, but you are right
getter should not have side-effects
Anonymous
18:36
That one, I have to disagree with.
Anonymous
It seems completely logical to me
Wes
Wes
class Image implements \ArrayAccess :B
You damn kids with your lazy fetches
Anonymous
Done creating those issues for now github.com/samayo/bulletproof/issues/62
Anonymous
Thanks @tereško.
Anonymous
18:39
btw: you would make a terrible boss one day :p
Wes
Wes
@Dereleased yeah. do it in the constructor @samayo
also tab & spaces mix. AGHRDF
dsfjgoijretgjodgfj
@samayo bosses dont do code-reviews. That's a responsibility of team-leads.
Anonymous
@Wes someone messed it up here. The class used to be neater :)
oh, one more thing
I'm confused. According to php.net the last version of php is 7.1.4 , but the download page says it's 7.1.5
18:42
github.com/samayo/bulletproof/blob/master/src/… , @samayo does this count as "string" or "boolean"?
Wes
Wes
@samayo that's why everybody defaults to "fuck you" for any PR they receive
assume that any change suggested is wrong. don't merge blindly...
Anonymous
@tereško boolean.
Anonymous
Why?
Wes
Wes
because return; is not boolean, nor string :P
Anonymous
Anonymous
The end result is what matters. But yeah, I should modify that as well :
that is not what you function is returning
Anonymous
if(null) is false anyway, so I was too lazy to do anything
Anonymous
Actually the whole lib was a way to play around git/github but it caught fire and I just started 'improving' it without much motivation
Wes
Wes
implicit type conversion (coercion) is bad @samayo
18:49
look at it this way: it's something to put in your CV
Nite all
Wes
Wes
wait, how does that have 188 stars :B
Anonymous
Yeah, though it's too trivial for that.
Anonymous
@Wes Why? you jealous? :)
Anonymous
People will star everything and anything these days.
Wes
Wes
18:51
except stuff i write
:B
Anonymous
I on the other hand, am very picky of what I star. I don't even star my own repos.
which reminds me, I should put in some additional work on improving documentation of my latest effort
Anonymous
Are you working on something?
yeah, an authentication lib
Anonymous
Symfony or standalone?
18:54
standalone
well, we are using at work in a project, which is built using some of the symfony's components
Anonymous
Man, I would love to learn Symfony & Drupal.
Anonymous
With these 2, you can get a job anywhere here.
Anonymous
I just need an interesting idea to stay motivated.
Anonymous
Anyway, @tereško when you are done with your project let me know, I would love to take a look
Anonymous
If you intend to open source it
19:00
it is already on github, but I still have not made a version-tag
it's still in .. emm ... fiddling development stage
I am not entirely happy with the public API
Anonymous
If I am not mistaken, this is like FOSUserBundle right?
Anonymous
That was one horrendous bundle btw.
that's pretty much the universally accepted opinion on FOSUser
Anonymous
I'll PR if I find something, I'll be making a site in Symfony3 soon, I will try to add palladium and see if I can help
not yet
wait till I make a tagged release
I am still changing the API
Anonymous
19:09
Ok.
19:38
@Trowski What do you think about IteratorStreamMessage?
@kelunik I was considering making another class as a data source other than an iterator since it doesn't care about back-pressure.
@Trowski Yes, rename to Message and add backpressure.
@kelunik Honoring back-pressure and implementing promise is weird though.
If one message shouldn't care about backpressure, the iterator just shouldn't yield its emits.
@Trowski Subscribing to the promise will disable that.
I'm also for disabling read once onResolve has been called.
Aerys would have to change (possibly significantly) for that to work
19:47
@kelunik I wouldn't add backpressure here
So Aerys will always buffer the full request body even if I do not use it at all?
Actually I may have spoke too soon, looks like Aerys only uses onResolve on the body in tests, which is fine.
@kelunik it won't. … that's what the mechanism of size increasing is for
A crashed advertisement reveals the code of the facial recognition system used by a pizza shop in Oslo... https://t.co/4VJ64j0o1a
@bwoebi Makes sense to default the body size to 0 then and always pass some size for getBody()?
19:51
@kelunik we currently have 64 KB as default I think.
@bwoebi Where is the iterator emit code for bodies?
@kelunik well, in httpParser the emitting is controlled and from there relayed to server
@bwoebi Why is github.com/amphp/aerys/blob/amp_v2/lib/Http1Driver.php#L110 still an assert instead of an explicit check?!
@kelunik the explicit check should be done at the inputting place, like in StandardResponse class
@tereško these guys are wayy too serious about pizza.
19:56
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I just see it as natural next step
companies want to provide personalized advertising
on a busy street they want to show the ad, which would interest the largest part of the people that are currently there
in about 5 year, this will be a widely accepted practice
I like my privacy, but I also know how both people in marketing and people in development think

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