I took a long nap today so hopefully I can stay up and chat with you more about it, Joe.
I'll try to check back in every hour until I see you.
@Orangepill At the moment this is Traits-only.
This is for a variety of reasons:
1. There are definite declaration and instantiation points (use TraitName).
2. They cannot be type-checked against at runtime, simplifying the required minimum viable product.
3. They are already a compiler assisted form of copy-and-paste; altering it to add type substitution should not be too difficult (and thus far has not been; if I was really familiar with the engine internals it would probably be done already).
4. Unless declared abstract their prototypes can freely be overwritten without violating Liskov-Substitution-Principle.
Overall it's a really fantastic test-bed. If it succeeds traits will also be significantly more useful!
yay,so the modifications to the patch are only small, and I've noticed a few problems, I think we should start to write tests ... I heard discussion of syntax change, is that happening ?
I'm not exactly sure why yet, haven't debugged it, but when you have
<?php
trait Factory<I> {
public function create() {
return new I;
}
}
class Implementation {}
class ImplementationFactory {
use Factory<Implementation>;
}
class Other {}
class OtherFactory {
use Factory<Other>;
}
$factory = new OtherFactory();
var_dump($factory->create());
?>
so for all of the members of the class entry, we need to perform some similar operation to the method routine, sometimes just addref will do ... when we do all of that it will leak even more, so I didn't ...
sig and opcodes are part of the same thing ... in that case (methods) we need a deep copy of the function table we can modify without affecting the original entry
but in other cases, we may get away with just addref ... depending on how that element is destroyed by destroy_zend_class - which will have to be executed to resolve all leaks, and will be when we insert the entry into class table ...
@LeviMorrison one sec
okay this is the very hacky bit, literals and vars store the names of compile time resolved literals and constants, which contain the names of classes
blindly just swapping them out is dumb, but works as a poc ... we need more information from the compiler about what literals or vars should be replaced ...
(try to think about strange stuff that would happen if we don't have that information)
could I start writing tests now if we're not changing syntax, I really dislike working without tests ? and can you hook me up with commit access please ...
@LeviMorrison tbh I don't understand exactly how it works, but we've got some strange union/struct hacks going on in zvals now so that we can read the types (and gc info) from the fastest memory, I'm not sure how putting pointers in that space may effect it ...
I mean the instructions would be more complicated for sure ...
I'll figure it out and push some tests at least today ... I hope to figure out some of the bigger issues ... whatever happens now we need all of the logic for duplicating the entry, so I can work on that and we can deconstruct it and reconstruct it into whatever we need after compiler changes ...
It adequately describes them without committing to generic and template terminology which is important because we don't follow either of those semantics yet.
@JoeWatkins Hmm. I'm seemingly getting a conflict with your work and the previous commit?
/* Build mapping from type parameter to concrete type */
ZEND_HASH_FOREACH_NUM_KEY_VAL(trait->type_parameters, hash, value) {
zval * type = zend_hash_index_find(type_parameters, hash);
zend_hash_update(specialized_ce->type_parameters, Z_STR_P(value), type);
} ZEND_HASH_FOREACH_END();
but there are so many leaks already ... and the entries aren't being freed, so it's omitted, but there will be another addref if the update didn't fail ...
okay, I'll try to keep commits to a minimum, I tend to be noisy ...
I was thinking maybe we could start compiler improvements by simplifying the way parameters are handled, zvals aren't the best thing to express a type ... we have zend_type now, so how about we make type_parameters a map of type => parameter where parameter is zend_type ?
well even those that want to accept a constant will check a cache slot before doing the lookup, so you wouldn't need to change them, just put the zce in the right slot ...
if you have enough compile time information to know when to output a FETCH_TYPE_PARAMETER, you have enough information to know when ZEND_NEW is being called incorrectly, don't you ?
okay, so to expand on that ... you could have ZEND_FETCH_TYPE_PARAMETER_FOR_* set of opcodes, they can determine if the resolved type is suitable for the target opcode (ZEND_FETCH_TYPE_PARAMETER_FOR_NEW)
if you can set the target (the opcode you are fetching for) as extended_value or something, you can look forward and see you are fetching an int zend_type for ZEND_NEW target and raise an exception
so when you modify those, you are modifying the oplines where they use literals or constants, but without modifying the opline, you are modifying the stuff the oplines are pointing too ...
public function add(K $k, V $v) {
$this->collection[$k] = $v;
}
K and V are vars, literal constant strings, their value is stored on the op array, the oplines that reference them have a pointer to the element in the vars array ...
I just made a little push, for some reason there was code missing ...
<?php
trait Factory<I> {
public function create() : I {
return new I;
}
}
class Implementation {
use Factory<stdClass>;
}
$i = new Implementation();
$i->create();
run that before and after you build with that change ...
Looks fine, other than I still don't get the literals part. Are you basically fixing pointers..? Why do you need to do that? If we aren't modifying them they should still be valid..?
if we don't modify them, new I would result in new I :)
but your vm thing is going to fix the need to modify them whatever ...
it just makes it work for now ... it has obvious flaws as mentioned ...
<?php
trait Factory<I> {
public function create() : I {
echo "I";
return new I;
}
}
class Implementation {
use Factory<stdClass>;
}
$i = new Implementation();
$i->create();
I pushed some changes to insert entry into table and not do a blind memcpy, because it made strange things happen ... and name the class (should be generated compile time, needs unique name by runtime)
still not all leaks are gone, I get strangeness when I try to dtor the type parameters table
the house is waking up, so I'm running out of time, I hope I can find some more time later on today ... I have started writing tests but they all fail right now with memleaks ...
could generate name compile time and set as op2 for ZEND_SPECIALIZE_TRAIT and use op data to pass type_parameters table ...
@JoeWatkins So I changed type_parameters from a HashTable * to a HashTable. Then the class that uses the trait I need to add that type_parameters as the value in a different hashtable; I should go back to heap allocation, shouldn't I?
/home/levijm/Projects/php-src/Zend/zend_types.h:834:14: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer without a cast [-Wint-conversion]
Z_PTR_P(z) = (p); \
^
/home/levijm/Projects/php-src/Zend/zend_compile.c:6376:4: note: in expansion of macro ‘ZVAL_PTR’
ZVAL_PTR(&tmp, ZEND_TYPE_ENCODE_CLASS(class_name, 0));
@JoeWatkins Do we commonly cast these or just live with the warning?
@JoeWatkins I'm propagating the ZEND_TYPE_ENCODE_CLASS stuff up to when the type arguments are first compiled; since it gets used in both the arginfo substitution and for other stuff may as well do it as early as possible.
@PeeHaa update on the testing thing after i've used it for a while: it is really nice for testing logic that you are certain it makes sense. it is good for spotting programming mistakes. if you want to test code whose specs are not really known, then it's really bad, because you pretty much write tests that "validate wrong logic"... and that's not useful :B
found what worked: in http.conf there was stupid Require all denied line
by default - I had not added it
changed to Require all granted
and it works. I hate apache!!!! I should not be made to spend few hours to run a page. Of course security matters but if I cannot run my own page for few hours, that is not they way to make software.