Words are hard, part 48: So part of the shitshow that is internals is due to us not having a set of clear 'etiquette' for noobs who have never used usenet. I think this probably should be separate from the 'rules' (which we probably should be enforcing) for people who are actually contributors to internals, as it needs to be a clear set of things that newcomes shouldn't do, which might not apply to other people.
For example, release managers don't need to limit how many conversations they get involved in, but if someone brand new to PHP is getting involved in multiple threads per day, that is a problem. Can anyone see anything egregiously wrong with Email etiquette for people new to PHP internals or anything that is obvious that I've missed?
@Danack having done erm... a couple of these, it would be helpful if there was some basic info to refer to about e.g. how zend_parse_parameters works - @NikiC can attest to how many back-and-forth updates were required in the handful of PRs I made for arginfo, because it's not always immediately obvious (to someone without c/internals knowledge) how the parameters are actually handled. I think I have a basic grasp of it now, in terms of | for optional args, ! for nullable, etc..
... so I'm apparently a glutton for punishment. dba_fetch has an optional middle argument (with a clear default of 0 if omitted) - so how do I document this for arginfo?
besides hitting whoever originally wrote the function that way with a stick, that is.
@Stephen, I have a respective patch for ext/dba basically ready. If you don't mind, I'll submit that as PR, so you could do a review. :) Some of these functions are really dirty, and it's hard to have meaningful stubs.
@cmb thanks for the heads up. No worries. I'll have a look, not sure how much I can contribute to a review, the other ones I did were practically written in plain English compared to deciphering what this is trying to do.
@Danack you link the mailinglist rules, but its downloading the md instead of directly rendering, maybe adjust the link? do you plan to "ratify" both etiquette and rules somehow?
@Stephen Interesting, I have not myself used ext/dba so my grounds are purely speculation and it would be great with some input from someone who actually uses it
@cmb the difference in how the various extensions handle arguments is quite surprising to someone with no previous exposure to the C - I guess it's because they get minimally maintained so they (mostly) build, but there's no project-wide standardisation of 'parse args like <THIS>' as the internal stuff progresses?
@Kalle I'm sure it's not a hugely used extension, but the concept of a simple key/value file-based database is (as evidenced by the number of drivers for dba) somewhat broad, and it provides a reasonably simple interface to those formats. In the context of that 'declining popularity' thread, things like using dba to read/write an lmdb database file makes it much easier to have a "daemon" that has an embedded data store.
but with ffi, maybe the appeal of light wrappers around c-libs will diminish.
I think keeping ZPP in place to check its type and validity of its image pointer makes sense, but I've moved the image destruction logic into the class free handler
with the advent of FFI, and preloading, is it realistic to deprecate the extensions in favour of a userland defined replacement? Or am I expecting way too much from those two things for that to be feasible?
@MarkR, yes, the destruction logic should be in the free handler. I somewhat dislike the additional check for gdImagePtr validity though. https://lxr.room11.org/xref/php-src%40master/ext/xml/xml.c#1464 does it better, IMHO.
@Stephen exactly right. it really only makes sense for interfacing with C code that not yet has a PHP extension and maybe even provides a simple public API
You're all talking about macos as though it's a bad thing, you need to consider the real world benefits of the ultimate sense of smugness you can exhibit from having vastly overpaid to have a machine with less compatible software and slightly more rounded corners :-)
Although I will say... that new hackintosh build Linus Tech Tips is doing... drooool. 386GB of DDR4 8 channel. That's almost enough for like... 20 chrome tabs
Re https://bugs.php.net/78543 If .get_closure throws, shouldn't is_callable() catch this and return false? Or shouldn't .get_closure throw in the first place?
@Kalle it's an extension of multiple desktops, allows an app window to go full screen in a new desktop (or "Space" in macOS terminology). I can't say I've used a linux desktop recently enough to know how it compares, but I certainly don't remember windows ever having multiple desktops/workspaces?
... not sure why, but I just had a mental image of Derick with a top hat and monacle, with his feet up on the desk, fanning himself with a stack of £50s as one of those tipping-ducks repeatedly hit F5 his billing email...
@beberlei the link seems fine for me. And not the etiquette. tbh although the current wave of people new to the list are currently annoying, I think that is at least in part due to other people's behaviour leading them astray, and a hard set of rules is quite different to a softer set of etiquette that should be applied differently to different people.
Hmmmm... in the GD library there's some security checks which check for overflows and then "fail gracefully" ... as they're based on input values, can anyone think of a reason I shouldn't make them fail very-not-gracefully and throw a ValueError?
@Stephen Thanks for the feedback. I'm not going to do the work to keep that stuff updated myself. Though after thinking about things overnight my plan now is to change the scope of github.com/danack/RfcCodex to cover 3 things. i) The current stuff that is there, an opinionated curation of previous RFCs that didn't succeed ii) A list of stuff that could be worked on and links to those items. iii) a non-opinionated list of links to how to work on internals stuff.
@Derick top of my head, Olumide, Chris Schneider (the new one, not the other one), Chase Peeler, Mike Schinkel. All of those people are sending far more emails than are appropriate for people who have not made any useful contributions.
for everyones info - the stuff I was planning to do today is not going to be today, as I want to get that change just above done first, so that the overall picture is clearer for other people.
@MarkR, overflow2 is only used in imageloadfont(), and there it is not direct user input. Changing the usages in ext/gd/libgd/ doesn't make sense, since usually bundled libgd isn't used at all (except for Windows and CI).
@Danack right, no I was just looking for some reference material on args handling in the C, to make it easier for plebs such as myself, to help write accurate arginfo stubs.
There's actually seemingly several tests that just check for a matching resource type, considering ZPP will scrap anything which doesn't match gd_image_ce I'm not sure if those tests are meaningful anymore.
I have a function getByid(id) So it get data by id. secnario goes like this: step 1: we use getByid(id) send json data to ajax request. step 2: for getting data ajaxFunction(id) step 3: onclick event on ajaxFunction(id) In step 3 the id is passed to getByid fuction. the data is being used for an popup. when a user delete a record it has has some loading time. but the user is still able to click the button/link for the popup so another request is being made. But some time the id is already deleted in the database and getByid is doing request on id that does not exist in the databse. there fo…
@MarkR, well there are some customizations, which is basically why we still can't unbundle. But keep in mind that ext/gd/libgd isn't usually used (except for Windows and CI).
the header is being included as part of the build process of the engine, the generated compile lines (cc etc) don't have the includes for that part of the build ...
@MarkR I might have done that differently ... you could have typedef'd the struct in the magic header (since it's private) and defined it in the compilation unit, and so avoided the need for another header ...
you want that struct to be private
(read nikita will squeak if it's not)
also Z_OBJ_P(x))->image
that's wrong
@MarkR you need to put the zend_object at the end of the struct ... then fetching the custom type is pointing Z_OBJ to char and subtracting offset of zend_object in struct ...
if you want actual help rather than words in chat, do asking, I'll make time to get you started in a way that won't make people scream at you, and won't crash ;)
So, I think the experiment I did documenting past RFCs was reasonably useful to other people. Also, having been thinking about the internals shitshow a lot, I think one thing that I could usefully do, is curate information about future RFCs and other non-RFC work that people either are or could work on. Not so much project management, but just 'project plan documenting'. To that end:
RFC Codex - a summary of previous RFC discussions.
PHP Project coordination - a list of work that people either are or could be working on.
PHP internals links - links to how to develop PHP core/extensions.
I think helping other people find the work that could be done, and at least in part have the discussions about those pieces of work in places other than internals, would allow us to have fewer people emailing on internals (which would be good) as well as give people an outlet for stuff they could be working on, other than composing novellas to the internals list.
@Danack I wouldn't put "Move documentation from SVN to Git/github" as a project that people can pile on to, we have a bunch of volunteers already "working on it", and a plan, it's just executing that plan that needs to happen; which joe public isn't going to be able to help with.
I can certainly find a bunch of docs-related tasks if you're looking for that sort of thing, or are you more focussed on php-src?
AWS Networking question: I have several EC2s (Webservers) and an ALB. I want all the outgoing traffic from those instances to be from the same EIP. So no matter which server I send a request to, when they respond it routes through a NAT Gateway. Possible?
I have routes set up going to a NAT Gateway and then the NAT Gateway routes to an internet gateway. That works if I SSH in to the boxes and make a request outwards. But the webserver is not accessible. IE website doesn't load.
@Danack Is it worth working on "How to contribute" docs? Something to guide people towards things that are needed that may not need a ton of context or backstory?
@JayIsTooCommon No need to be jealous. Just go do it. I visited the UK back in July for 2 weeks. Mostly as fathers health is declining. Don't really miss it otherwise.
@ircmaxell possibly. Tbh nobody reads documentation though.... just presenting directly a list of stuff that could be worked in would hopefully make it easy enough for people to find stuff that they have an appropriate skill level to work on, otherwise people will gravtitate towards suggesting their cool new idea for an RFC. Aka what is currently happenin a lot in internals.
They're professionals. VBA is the Vietnamese NBA. But standard wise... not at all. I would be a starting player for them if I was Vietnamese and I don't look at myself as a good player.
As someone brand new to the PHP/internals world who knows that "contributing some actual damn code" is prioritized around here (understandably), I would *love* anything that makes it easier for me and people like me to know what actually needs doing :)
Also... Hi, everyone, first post, I saw y'all loved all things artisanal here so figured I'd be a perfect fit.
mm, if you have a array with named keys, how do you check if the first element in that array is not empty? not knowing what the names of the keys are in the array
I think just parsing the internals discussions and summarising stuff is about as much time as I can commit to, but if others want to write words that describe how to participate i’ll certainly accept them as PR or link to them.
I hate Apple. Of course they can't support displayport MST over USB-C like everyone else so I can run dual monitors... Need to buy 2 proprietary cables if I want that...
@Danack for people with significant skills to build new language features, sure. But for the majority of people who want to help, I think it's intimidating
@ircmaxell yes, as I said to Salathe, at least part of my goal is to use the energy people have who aren’t capable of writing C to other useful areas, so that the internals mail list is easier for Internals code discussions.
Is it bad design to have a SQL column that only has a value for a few rows and NULL for everything else? I have a table, where items in it can refer to one of two master tables.
It doesn’t look easy to have a foreign key constraint over two tables, so the only other thing I can think of is to have two columns, refA and refB, each of which have a foreign key reference to their respective master table. When the value is related to master A, then refA contains the item ID and refB is null. Same thing the other way around
But it looks bad design to me where half the values in each column will be null because they wouldn’t be applicable. Is there a better design I can follow here?
@Danack I haven't read up very far but if it's for docs. The outdated appalling MS for docs would put any sane newcomer off contributing, it did for me. It'd be cool if it was modernised. Especially as it's core infrastructure imo. That could even be a project to sell to non-C's - new documentation.
@ircmaxell this approach looks wrong to me as well. But I am not sure what’s the way around it. Currently, I have a “items” table which has a type column. The type column refers to the id of a “types” table. Issue is that I have a second child table called “special_types”. The model of this table cannot fit the “types” table.
@Fabor Just exaggerating. I fight and play a lot of footie but it took a good 8 months to sort. Good on you :) But please start sticking around R11. You're missed.
@DemCodeLines what differentiates a type to special type?
Let’s say I have an item table that lists the name of each element in an html page and then a type table that has a list of all html element types. Then item table has a type column that maps to the Type table in order to map each element name to its html type.
Here’s the thing, some elements may be of a custom directive type
The directive is basically an item that is stored in the items table
why not have it be a type, and have the type table have either a boolean flag to indicate it's a special type, or a nullable foreign key to the custom type if it exists
@DemCodeLines so you have default types and user created types. That makes sense. But why are the user created types so different that they can’t fit into your original types ‘model’?
@JayIsTooCommon user created types are actually based off an existing item in the items table, the type is actually a reference back into the items table. But general types are hard coded names that live in a different table. In other words, normal types are just strings while special types are actually other items in the items table. As a result, I can’t have one column store both static strings as well as references to the items table
@DemCodeLines it all sounds a bit smelly. Without digging, it sounds like you’re using the naming ‘type’ for two completely different things. Hard to say without seeing it all. But ^ having one extra column isn’t a bad thing. Just sounds like a refactor might be in order
Would it be better to include a “directive” standard type and map special items to this type? Then if I see that the item is mapped to this specific type, then I look at a new table (“specialTypes”) that maps an item id to another item id. That’ll allow me to map an item to another item. But not sure if this is cleaner though.
you can also add a standard_type_id column to your types table. If it is a standard type, this will be null. Otherwise, this will have the id of the standard type it refers to. In this case, your items always have one and just one type. To know what kind of type it is, you can look at that column
@LeviMorrison I use a dock. And that's kinda the point. To switch between computers, I switch a USB switch, and the input on a single monitor and it "just works"
@JayIsTooCommon I moved onto the JS room, and then SO got on a bandwagon of being WeLcOmInG and then just moved onto Discord with the regulars of the JS room
and now I indulge myself in Discord for the most part with some other server which I frequent in it