> an attacker can make use of the capability of arbitrary file deletion to circumvent some security measures and to execute arbitrary code on the webserver
ahh... I was reading it like unlink itself would permit to execute any arbitrary code
@Webdev And I would expect that a free web hosting such as 000webhost will not provide mysql over localhost and you will have to change the server to their provided server address too.
@mega6382 You mean similar to how Java have wrapper classes for primitive types. It might not be very backward compatible. Also if you want to avoid using the old API, you would have to wrap everything over and over.
@PeeHaa I might start by mailing the internals and see If It can get a bit of attention. I'm willing to do some work to see it happen (I have done some work with php extenions before). Though probably there needs to be a large list of new methods for strings and arrays especially. I know it is not that simple.
@FlorianMargaine I've edited ~/.ssh/config to only have the keys I want. I think there is something else that remembers identities for you, to avoid having to type in passphrases all the time.
@PeeHaa I don't get what's wrong with nikic's extension. He did a great job and he started it 6 years ago. The methods he added seem pretty good but not sure if it covers everything. Also, adding more later is not an issue. The scope for the API also seems reasonable.
@Danack I recently setup different GH user accounts with 2 different keys and I had to change some configuration values. I'm about to go into my standup but if you still have issues when I'm done I can dig up what I did
@pmmaga we don't use github at work. I have been creating tokens for each of my own repos but realised I might as well just change the whole github config to use my personal key as that is all I use github for on this computer
@rtheunissen The RFC seems to have an inconsistency, or at least needs a bit more clarity:
> I want to define equality and I don't intend to compare this object (only __equals).
> Objects that want to explicitly disallow ordering can throw an exception or raise a warning in __compareTo.
We discussed that if __equals is defined but __compareTo is not that a throwable would be thrown. That sort of aligns with the first statement, but the second one implies that you must implement it and throw yourself.
@tereško I mean... I've been through some weird shit in my life, where I'd like to think of the matter through strange metaphors, but this guy is on another level.
@LeviMorrison after implementing this and updating the tests, I'm not so sure that I like this. If I've implemented __equals and I use <=>, I would except __equals returning TRUE to have <=> return 0 when __compareTo is not defined.
imho if you allow the comparison only between equal handlers you are going to avoid weird cases by design. if the handler is different, then fallback to php's default compare handler
@rtheunissen Why would you want that behavior? The use of <=> or <= or >= fundamentally include order. If there is not an order possible it ought to fail.
The operation is illogical. Just because you might be able to fulfill 1/3 to 1/2 of the requirement does not make it a logical operation.
@Wes Because they represent the same mathematical value, without loss of precision?
@DaveRandom Most (all?) languages that allow this have 2 or more. It is the author's responsibility to keep things in sync.
FWIW Python deprecated their cmp style in favor of all of these:
Doesn't it make more sense to put the functionality on hold until its generics dependency is met than come up with a workaround that (As far as I can tell) doesn't fit properly?
> The main motivation comes from NumPy, whose users agree that A<B should return an array of elementwise comparison outcomes; they currently have to spell this as less(A,B) because A<B can only return a Boolean result or raise an exception. ~PEP 207
Can anybody offer some internals/c help? If I've got an array of objects in arrays, and I want to replace the first object with an existing array (eg arrays[0] = other_array;) how would I do such a thing?
@LeviMorrison non virtual methods allow you to do stuff like this
$whole->(Int::__equals)($other);
$whole->(BigInt::__equals)($other);
i don't remember the exact syntax in c# but you can do stuff like this
class Number implements Equatable<Int>, Equatable<BigInt>{
function Equatable<Int>::__equals($other){ /* here compares against an int */ }
function Equatable<BigInt>::__equals($other){ /* here compares against a bigint */ }
}
this kind of stuff really doesn't fit php or similar languages like js or python
so you need to go with "casting" rather than inferring types from the reference
like $int->toBigInt()->__equals() and $bigInt->toInt()->__equals()
which if you ask me is much nicer than all the magic that c# does... overloading is a monumental mess
virtual methods are much more straightforward to understand, and i think it's one of the main strengths of languages like php js and python...
i am probably not being clear, sorry for that :B ask me again if i am not..
@Danack I'm not responsible for what it's defined as (sorry I wasn't clear). I've got a zval *arrays which is full of objects, and I want to replace one of the objects in it. array_init is for a new/empty array right? That's no good if so
@LeviMorrison this is the point at which I realise I am doing something that pisses me off a lot when other people do it, opining without all the facts despite someone taking the time build a document laying them out, so sorry about that, I will go read it properly and maybe even have some actually constructive feedback afterwards
@duncan3dc arrays is not a HashTable, it's just a plain C array, so arrays[0] = array; deals with replacing it at that level, the question is what you need to do with the thing you replaced
`error: incompatible types when assigning to type ‘zval {aka struct _zval_struct}’ from type ‘zval * {aka struct _zval_struct *}’ arrays[0] = array;`
@LeviMorrison > Why would you want that behavior? The use of <=> or <= or >= fundamentally include order. If there is not an order possible it ought to fail.
@rtheunissen I think we should first consider operator overloading more generally. If we decide not to go that route then we can try to pin down this detail.
It seems that the critical bug happens when you do a mass delete action using filters and you select delete, then select delete again quickly. The second query that executes doesn't have a "where" condition so it deletes the entire collection. Sigh...
Nightly. The only issue we're still looking into is the frequency of image backups due to the size and how Magento wants photos stored for the application.
@duncan3dc I can (a bit), it's just it's more complex than your current issue - firstly I'm fairly sure you will need to decrease the refcount on the zval you are replacing, as it will have been increased when passing it in the the function and if you don't remove the ref it will leak (I'm fairly certain about this but would need to double check)
secondly you will need to destroy the new zval you created before the function returns otherwise that will leak
which sounds better? trying to write advertising verbiage for a page - Download <App Name>, <Organization>'s mobile app for staying connected! - Introducing <App Name>, <Organization>'s mobile app that helps you stay connected to what <Organization> has to offer!
@LeviMorrison OK, now I have actually read it: yes, basically all of it. w.r.t the three bullet points:
1) "no risk of breaking bc" - true and generally positive but largely irrelevant to interface or not (you can still have an interface that defines the method with a __ prefix)
2) "...would not give you any useful information" - but it absolutely would. It would define whether the type has sortable semantics or equality-only semantics, in a way that is not only useful for the engine to determine the programmer's intent, but also gives a type that can be used in userland for e.g. the args of a generic custom comparator callback.
3) "already uses magic methods" - true, and obviously precedent is a strong argument for many things, but for this specific thing I'm not convinced it's a good one, because I'm not convinced that (in a perfect world) other things that are currently implemented as magic methods wouldn't have been better implemented as interfaces - for example it would have possibly been a good, explicit way to enforce that anyone who implements __get() must also implement __isset()
@LeviMorrison no, generally agreed, but having stronger type semantics is (imo) never a detriment
also, although this is totally irrelevant, it would technically be slightly more efficient at lookup time (I think) - inheritance chain vs ht lookup + scope check
but that is a total non issue
@rtheunissen ...and doesn't "Objects must implement Sortable to be compared for natural ordering" just sound nicer? :-P
so i have to develop 2 features in my code base. i have created and completed a new branch for feature #1. for feature #2, should i continue off of the code base for feature #1 or start from the main branch?
assuming feature #1 and feature #2 do not depend on each other
you can always merge feature 1's branch into feature 2's branch if you take forever at developing the feature like me (sometimes months in between when I work on something -_-)
yeah, I have a master branch which I consider what is live on the production web server, and I have a development branch where I make changes onto, and then merge that branch in to master