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10:00
morning nikita
Well - I think i'm done for the night... 4:02AM sounds like the perfect time to go to bed...
@Justin you should stay up til 6
If i stay up till 6, i could probably get more done on this.. But figure I've already been working on this project since 7:30AM yesterday
what project?
Just a simple Task Management and Bug Reporting system for an Internal CRM that I built for work..
10:05
what's a CRM?
@NikiC customer relation mgmt
Customer Relation Manager
$firstNames = [foreach ($users as $user) yield $user->firstName];
what do you think?
@Gordon , i kinda think that we should downvote the answers too
=/
Figure since I have 3 other programmers working with me now -- Being able to keep tasks in a central location and what not will be good for productivity...
10:07
@tereško they will lose the DVs once it's deleted anyway
@NikiC Mmmm sugar.
can we please flag for merging of stackoverflow.com/questions/2808583/… into the linked dupe?
@PeeHaa :D
guys, help me remember a function
let's say I require_once 'a.php';
which function would return full path to that file?
;-)
10:17
@zerkms Don't know if serious, but`__FILE__`?
@PeeHaaL FILE returns current file's name
@PeeHaa ´ `
and I need a path to a file that is intended to be required
there is a function for that, and I cannot find it
__FILE__ sorry new here I don't understand md
10:19
@zerkms Doesn't rung a bell?
ring :P
@PeeHaa: FILE returns current file's name
__FILE__
w00
w00
@zerkms you mean getcwd()
and I need a path to a file that I want to require_once
w00
w00
?
@zerkms yup. Doesn't know what you mean though
10:20
oh
require_once 'a.php';
what does this code do?
@zerkms Huh? Are we trolling now?
nope
please answer
@Donut: yep, but I don't want traverse them manually
@PeeHaa I think he wants to know which file it includes
10:21
there was a function for that
argh, so terrible to not be able to google it (because there is million of question with similar but another meaning)
@zerkms github.com/nikic/prephp/blob/master/prephp/classes/Path.php tries to figure out which paths a certain include could include. Code is old and ugly.
@NikiC: I have seen an official function for that...
yes!
@Gordon: thank you! )
@zerkms np
10:23
@Gordon You're kidding me, right?
Ah, that function is as of 5.3.2
@NikiC PHP is the Lizard King! It can do everything :D
@Gordon: how did you find it?
if you googled - I'm curious of exact request
@zerkms i knew which one you meant, so it was merely a matter of typing "resolve" into the php manual search box
ok
I didn't want to ask it on SO because it would cause tonns of __FILE__ and realpath() advices )
5
A: How to check if a file exists under include path?

GordonAs of PHP 5.3.2, you can use stream_resolve_include_path — Resolve filename against the include path which will Returns a string containing the resolved absolute filename, or FALSE on failure. Example from Manual: var_dump(stream_resolve_include_path("test.php")); The above exampl...

10:27
@Gordon: more than year ago. Already was unloaded from your cache :-)
Sam
Sam
Seen as the sql room is dead im hoping i can ask here
Im getting error 1248 (stackoverflow.com/questions/3363918/…) on my sql statement below
I cant seem to wrap my head around whats wrong, can anyone clear up whats going on for me?
SELECT leads.* FROM leads
INNER JOIN (
SELECT users.* FROM users
)
ON leads.created_by = users.id
why are you making a sub-select ?
Sam
Sam
@tereško I only want to select 2 fields in the second table. As it wasn't working with that, i was using a select all at the moment
@Sam SELECT l.*,u.* FROM leads l INNER JOIN users u ON l.created_by=u.id
10:39
SELECT t1.*, t2.id, t2.name FROM leads t1
LEFT JOIN users t2 ON t1.created_by = t2.id
@Sam nice rep
Sam
Sam
@Ashu That works great, ive never seen it written like that before. I better get learning fast... Ty bro :)
@webarto Thanks for the answer :) No questions or answers just to keep it the same now haha :P
I thought i had a comment starred, then i realized it said 'Sem' not 'Sam' :(
can anyone help me with this please? stackoverflow.com/questions/11242295/…
10:55
My pdo
$stmt = $db->prepare("insert into image(src,top_left) values(?,?)");
$stmt->bindValue(1, $time, PDO::PARAM_STR);
$stmt->bindValue(2, 0, PDO::PARAM_INT);
My table image has a auto-incremented id field but how can i get it after doing this insertion
I just suggested to make the less used a synonym of , please cast your vote: stackoverflow.com/tags/simplexml/synonyms
You do not have the required score on this tag to vote for this tag synonym
Morning
@Somebodyisintrouble basically after ->execute() you call ->lastInsertId();
10:58
Yeah not everybody can vote. You need more simplexml powa ;) Morning @ircmaxell
morning, 7AM @ircmaxell ?
yeah. woke up a bit early today
and before commit because iam using transaction
@ircmaxell I remember those times :)
@ircmaxell it's 4:29 PM in my country but nonetheless good morning
10:59
:-D
@ircmaxell morning
@ircmaxell morning
Good am
I guess you are drinking coffee, eating a croissant, and trying to type "Good"
no, just sitting hear reading...
@ircmaxell my bad :)
I thought we are in same position :D
@hakre do these idiots really think that using some new HTML5 goodies is easier then good ol' database...
@NikiC: am I over-reacting about that return null on parameter parsing issue? I really think it's a bad idea for a function that can return a boolean false (yet alone only a boolean)
@webarto lastinserid gives the last inserted id into database no matter who has inserted it .Am i right?
11:06
@ircmaxell All functions return null on invalid parameters...
and I think that's wrong
you'll return null too :P
@NikiC Yummy
@Somebodyisintrouble last insert ID of transaction, not the last ID in table
@NikiC Is that true? Don't some return FALSE other return NULL and give warnings?
And some other even throw some Exceptions?
@hakre There is a very small number of functions which return false for BC reasons
But the general behavior is null + warning
I am not able to ask a question..
enlighten me why is return false; or return null; bad, or why is boolean return bader...
11:08
@NikiC Why is there BC for some functions and not BC for other functions?
i have 67 reputation still no permission to ask question
@vipul_vj Try harder.
what to do now..
this is not customer support
@NikiC Looks nice :)
11:09
pissed offf
@hakre because in some cases people relied on it and in others they didn't...
@NikiC which again, I think is wrong
@vipulvj You should go and answer some question
@NikiC Hmm, who decides that who needs something or not?
@ircmaxell You are allowed to think that, but you still have to null+warning :D
11:10
@somebody
@NikiC +1
@so
@Somebodyisintrouble i've answered many questions
@vipul_vj Please keep that negative energy out of this chatroom. Thank you. Be polite and nice.
@NikiC Well, as I said in the mail, for the other two functions I can concede, but for password_verify I don't. I think that since it returns a boolean, it should always return a boolean
@ircmaxell no, i do not agree
it should return false in case the passwords don't match
but if your call is completely fucked up it should warning+null
E.g. if you pass a file resource to the function or something like that
Because it's gross misbehavior on the developers part
11:12
@hakre accept some of questions and answers so that i get permission
@NikiC Wow, stop, this reminds me so much at the argumentation of one of the dumbest wordpress core developers of all time. The argument going is: "Shit in shit out".
Please do not do the same mistake.
@hakre only if you like them
@hakre I don't have a mistake to make ^^ The warning+null behavior is already in place and was so for a long time
@NikiC Well, as you wrote, this is only for existing, not new functions.
@NikiC but not in any security sensitive functions...
11:13
@NikiC Also there are exceptions to this rule already, so I don't see any argument to not add another exception.
Or to say it this way: You need to look up every function anyway inside the manual before you use it. It's always the same with PHP, you need the manual everything else is guessing.
@hakre No, the point is that you don't have. There is only two or three functions not behaving that way. get_class is one example
Also, you should not check for the null return value
as I said, it only happens if you passed completely wrong parameters
E.g. if you call strlen() (i.e. without an arg) what would you expect?
And more importantly, should you care whether it return false or null in this case?
@NikiC I already out a strong warning about shit in shit out attitude. Don't do that. ;)
@NikiC PHP is loosely typed. You passed a NULL argument which is a zero length string, so the function needs to return 0.
@hakre lol
I completely disagree
This is the kind of behavior which makes PHP a crappy language
"Keep the script running at all costs"
@NikiC And btw, take that to a higher level: How to distringuish between a function call with wrong parameters and a method call?
"If I get complete shit, try to make some sense out of it"
That kind of thinking is what led us to the good old 0 == "foobar"
11:19
@NikiC No, it's about some other point here actually. About where you should be conservative and where you should be open-minded. The return should be strict. Always. For input you can have other rules and can be more lax.
you is not meant as you personally but when writing a function.
@hakre Lunch, will discuss later :)
@NikiC asking about List comprehension on the internals List. Cunning.
@NikiC "To expect the unexpected shows a thoroughly modern intellect." Wilde
Server: XAMPP... :/
-1
A: Use of undefined constant erorr in php

user1483324change your php.ini to only show the errors you want to see

11:32
i liked the comment of codecoaster there
"Thank you, that works fine. But in my another system I never used quotes before yet they worked well, can you tell me should I change config in php.ini file – Kmanikandan 1 min ago" omfg
@NikiC: I don't care for $firstNames = (foreach ($users as $user) yield $user->firstName);, it feels ambiguous...
@ircmaxell not to mention it looks unreadable and can easily be achieved with array_map
well, the generator concept is interesting. Not sure I like the yield syntax (I like python's reverse syntax) $a = [$row['foo'] foreach ($something as $row)];
11:43
@ircmaxell That was a bad example.
No, I mean using ()
@ircmaxell ah. that's the standard generator expression syntax ;)
in the sense that () can wrap any normal expression as a grouping
so it's ambiguous as if it's a grouping or a generator...
@ircmaxell That's what I first wanted to do, but decided for the other syntax for two reasons:
1. It's hard (impossible?) to implement using PHP's design
2. It makes the whole thing non-linear.
non-linear?
11:49
@ircmaxell [$x foreach ($a as $x) foreach ($b as $y)] is in the end run as foreach ($a as $x) foreach ($b as $y) $array[] = $x; So the first element goes to the end (but the other elements are not inverted
eih. fair enough
Also the fact that PHP uses foreach ... as makes the syntax look strange
I mean x**2 for x in range(10) kinda makes sense. But $x foreach (range(0, 10) as $x) doesn't make much sense to me
@hakre :)
I don't quite get why you all have such a big problem with the null return value :/
Has it ever been a problem for you?
11:58
yessss .. got online
@NikiC We are hopefully not discussing the always case, which we know does not exists. We are discussing how or not the general case can be an excuse to (not) make the exception here for ircmaxell's function.
/me 's on a bus
@hakre Ah, I thought we are discussing always ^^
Though I also don't see what should be different about ircmaxells particular case
IMHO, any security sensitive function that returns a boolean should always return a boolean...
12:03
@ircmaxell Why?
@ircmaxell I mean, honestly, why does it matter if password_verify('foo') (only one argument) returns null and not false?
@NikiC think why it might be called with one argument. Perhaps it was dispatched through call_user_func_array()?
@NikiC Because you can't do strict comparison of the return value with a single expression. That makes code more complicated than it needs to be.
For a security context it's important to reduce complexity.
@Gordon nice!
You can do a true result, but not a false one, which may be non-obvious
Not to mention it makes the API lie
"We have to distrust each other. It's our only defense against betrayal." - Tennessee Williams
@ircmaxell So you think that people will write false !== call_user_func_array('password_verify', lotsOfDirtyMagic())?
What does annoy me is that for failures after parameter parsing we usually return false
That's just inconsistent imho
@NikiC It's possible...
@ircmaxell You should also protect the function from someone editing its source code and introducing a bug into the function! Just to be safe ;)
@NikiC I think that all errors should return dependent upon the function. Some it makes sense to return null. Some false. Still others -1 or possibly array() or "". But my point is the return on error should be context dependent, not an arbitrary rule that just makes life difficult for the user
I don't think this discussion will get us anywhere :)
12:12
> It's important to craft code that is not just correct but is also good. It needs to document all the assumptions made. This will make it easier to maintain, and it will harbor fewer bugs. Defensive programming is a method of expecting the worst and being prepared for it. It's a technique that prevents simple faults from becoming elusive bugs.
neither do I. But I'm sticking with the false return for password_verify
@ircmaxell argh
I'm sorry. I think it's important enough for that function to do it
once a request in sent to server then can't be denied.Is this statement correct
your choice :)
and in any case, I really don't care about what it returns
12:14
No, not only his choice. I'm with him, too. Please make the return value of that function less - not more - complex.
As I said, I think such an error can only occur during development and is trivially fixed
In that case I just don't care what it returns :)
@NikiC PHP is an interpreted language.
@ircmaxell Also, I want to mention: I think returning false on parameter errors is semantically wrong. For password_verify true should mean "the password is correct" and false should mean "the password is wrong". Returning false on parameter parsing errors would thus be semantically incorrect. Because there false doesn't mean "The password is wrong", but rather it means "We don't know whether or not the password is wrong", which in my eyes is well expressed by null.
@NikiC Any wrong is the password is wrong. Otherwise there's a chance that not false is confused with true
12:18
So you don't see a difference between "The password is wrong" and "I didn't even get a freaking password, how should I know whether it's right or wrong?!"?
correct
because the warning is thrown to indicate that something went wrong
But in any case, as I already said, this is just an edge case, I don't really care about it. I don't intend to pass wrong parameters. So from my point of view it could return whatever it wants
@NikiC So why then do you object ircmaxell's proposal? If you don't care, you should be fine with any suggestion.
@hakre Out of principle
"I don't care" as in "I won't be affected" ;)
Well actually, practically what I see is this: To gain the interface what ircmaxell is looking for practically (if not implemented) is using the function this way: $result = is_bool($result = password_verify(...)) ? $result : FALSE;
That sounds rather complicated only to deal with the error cases. You know the long version.
12:23
@hakre return (bool) ...
Though I don't see why you'd need to do that
@NikiC That does not check the return type.
The normal use case if just if (password_verify(...)) echo "logged in!!!"
@hakre hm? null is false when cast to bool
If you introduce a second return type (next to bool which the function only needs to work), for proper error checking, you need to check the return type as well, as that is the criteria to differ.
Anyways, I think we are good bikeshedders :)
I'm proud of us :)
We should write a 50 page analysis of the issue
And submit it for security certification
I think the papers of cyclomatic complexity exist already. And what I wonder is that the PHP manual does not document the NULL return value if it's that common.
12:27
@hakre Because it's the same for all
Many function say they return value is bool while it's mixed.
Only documented if functions do not use it
@hakre Only the "normal" return type is documented
Not the error types
I.e. only the primary type is in the docs
@NikiC Any reason to hide that?
@hakre Any reason to add it?
I mean like, add a note to every single page?
Wouldn't that feel a bit redundant?
Not that redundancy is bad
@NikiC Please see the text above the comic I linked in the picture. About pre- and postconditions. Those have to be documented.
@NikiC It's a difference between not documenting a return type and documenting it.
12:29
I'm giving up
Otherwise users might think, they can just cast a functions return value (or they even don't need to) which can have serious implications.
Especially in a security context.
I'll just assume that you are right for now
I feel like disagreeing, but if both @ircmaxell and @hakre say the same thing it can't really be wrong
It's less about right vs wrong, and more about weighing the tradeoff between consistency for the sake of consistency, and explicit APIs which behave in an expected manner...
Good summary I'd say.
@NikiC: did Pierre respond to my PASSWORD_MOST_SECURE constant message? I disconnected right after posting it for a few minutes
12:37
posted on June 28, 2012 by Ulf Wendel

Some people speak incredibly fast, others make you fall asleep listening. If you have a heterogenous MySQL cluster with differently sized machines, some will be able to answer questions faster than others. PECL/mysqlnd_ms 1.4, the PHP MySQL replication plugin, allows you to assign more requests to the faster ones ...

(1:58:20 PM) Pierre: ircmaxell, huge immense infinite -1
(1:58:28 PM) Pierre: ircmaxell, for PASSWORD_MOST_SECURE
(1:58:43 PM) Pierre: ircmaxell, but name it PASSWORD_DEFAULT or smtg similar as suggested
(1:58:46 PM) Pierre: :)
no, the other reply
> <@ircmaxell> I think PASSWORD_MOST_SECURE implies that it's a moving target over time. But PASSWORD_DEFAULT does not make that same implication as cleanly
@ircmaxell I didn't get such a msg
dammit
freaking spotty internet connection
Yeha, I also have that a lot
12:39
it wasn't normally
good evening to all indian ... and Good day to all foreiner
@Tauseef gd evng
:)
@pbvamsi good evening !!
@Tauseef gud evening :)
@Ashu good evening Ashu !! you are Momedian ?
@Christian reading now
i love when people call themselves idiots in an explanation stackoverflow.com/questions/11207241/…
@Ashu there ?
@Tauseef what is Momedian ?
12:48
@Ashu hmmm ... muslim
just your name says like that ....
@Tauseef no, i am Punjabi(Hindu)
@Ashu okay, :)
Okay buddies Am going for TEA Break
Will be back in 30 minute
:D
@CarrieKendall Fun fact: "Until 2007, the California Penal Code Section 26 stated that "Idiots" were one of six types of people who are not capable of committing crimes."
@hakre LOL nice
what should be done before while uploading image to server
1)Inserting image name into database
2)Copying image to server
13:04
@Somebodyisintrouble BEFORE uploading image to server?
15
Q: PHP image upload security check list

usef_ksaI am programming a script to upload images to my application. Are the following security steps enough to make the application safe from the script side? Disable PHP from running inside the upload folder using .httaccess. Do not allow upload if the file name contains string "php". Allow only e...

Older question but still has some merit stackoverflow.com/questions/198346/…
@Somebodyisintrouble i'm doing client-side resizing first before starting upload, lol.
how you do client side resizing
@Somebodyisintrouble i'm using a jQuery-flash plugin, see here : shift8creative.com/projects/agile-uploader/index.html
@webarto
@Somebodyisintrouble but there are a lot of different flash plugins doing same you can search
13:18
@draconis Suppose iam making three copies of a image of different resolution(100X100,200X200,300X300) now how can i do it using client side resizing
Will i need to make 3 http request then for single upload
unless you zip them
@Somebodyisintrouble I didn't understand your question, are you trying to make 3 different resolution for an image?
Then i guess you need another plugin because as i know this one doesn't have a function that will allow you to create 3 copies of an image but i'm not sure, look the document.
user986408
stupid question but how do i solve this: i have a shipping cart and when i click on a product it get's into my session array and get's reserved in the database, if the user logs out without really buying it i'm using the session array to reset the reservation in the db - but what do i do if he just closes the window
13:28
Iam not sure but facebook also makes many copies of a single image
but another soluton will be make 300*300 on the client side and others on the server with GD library or something, i'm not good with php(just learning) i don't know are there any other ways to do this without GD library so i'm using GD.
But if you know actionscript you can find another open source flash plugin doing this and modify it for your needs.
user986408
anyone ?
@skripted use javascript onunload method
and ajax together
user986408
13:32
this is not secure enough
user986408
already thought of that
what is not secure
user986408
not secure is for people either not having js enabled or messing around
w00
w00
@skripted can't you set a timestamp on the reservation? So that it's only reserved for a certain amount of time?
user986408
my first idea was to save the username along with the reservation and reset it on the next login .. but the thing with the timestamp should do it too
user986408
13:35
@w00 but what event should check the timestamp ?
user986408
a cronjob ?
user986408
solved. thanks
w00
w00
nice
Am I doing it right?
$tempValueSoPHPIsHappy = $ebdb->isDuplicateArticle($content['id']);
	if($tempValueSoPHPIsHappy){
		return new xmlrpcresp(new xmlrpcval("Duplicate article warning"));
	}
13:48
@SomeKittens As far as?
Originally, I had the call to isDuplicateArticle in the if statement, but PHP yelled at me for that. I hoped someone would find amusement in my variable name choice.
@SomeKittens Why did PHP yell? It shouldn't have unless you wrapped the method call in empty or isset
I dunno. I Googled the error message and it told me that I shouldn't have method calls in if statements.
@SomeKittens What was the error message?
Some coding standards don't allow assignments to be made in conditions.. but I don't know of any that say to avoid methods all together
i.e. if ($foo = $ebdb->isDuplicateArticle($content['id'])) { ... }
13:53
@CharlesSprayberry I dunno, let me go break it again
@SomeKittens Please do, I'm interested to see as well.
Hey guys! A 'quick' question - I'm thinking of using JSONP to authenticate users. Is this 'secure'? I mean, do I have to think some 'validation' techniques in?
@Repox Just use jQuery, that's all you need
@SomeKittens I'm not following you? How does this address my security question?

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