For PHP 8, I'd like to fix our use of static inline in headers. Sort of by definition, static functions should only exist in .c files.
Basically, we should use inline without static in the header, and then in one corresponding .c we should repeat the declaration but with extern in front. And then compile with C99 or newer.
And while making everything case-sensitive will make many things a lot simpler and faster, doing the deprecation is going to make things quite a bit more complicated and possibly slower
And I don't think it's possible to make this "declare" controlled (because it needs to affect both declaration and use sites)
@Derick I don't really understand what the problem is from that tweet
@Wes It's possible, but probably not very popular ^^
tbh I don't really know how ugly the deprecation would be, maybe it's not so bad
@LeviMorrison That does not seem right to me
As far as I know, (in C) raw "inline" is pretty much always wrong
Actually I don't really understand what you're suggesting. Do you want to basically perform the usual ODR deduplication by hand rather than letting the linker do it?
@LeviMorrison as nikita says; static means by definition only that the compiler will not export the symbol. (and by extension not reuse the code between different object files) Every function defined in a header (i.e. which can be reused) must be static. So ... if you want independent inlined functions (you cannot inline functions from other c/obejct files), you need to define these in headers.
if I want to edit php docs and I use github as auth service, I'm guessing I still need to request an account, but do I still have to email the mailing list?
@Tiffany You need a PHP VCS account if you want to commit to the SVN/Git repos. If you just want to use the online docs editor, logging in with GitHub, to submit patches then you don't need to request an account.
@Tiffany yes because otherwise it stays in the W.I.P. section, which I can manually add to one of my patches and commit but then you don't even get your name automatically added in the commit message
@Derick Trying to understand your code right now...
Am I reading correctly that at the start of each function (call?) you scan through the whole function and class tables in search for newly added functions/classes?
And in particular the ZEND_HASH_REVERSE_FOREACH loops that check for _idx
That's a bit of an internal detail, but it's a way to loop over just the newly added elements without having to hardcode too many hashtable implementation details
the iteration wouldn't indeed matter, but, then I need to do the "break" until the right _idx is hit. Which means you might end up iterating over the table a lot more than you need
as I would expect only one or two (out of hundreds/thousands) classes to be added each time I check
Uh, so. I had a library called varDx that I'm in the process of re-writing. The namespace I'd used previously had also been varDx, but if I'm re-writing it anyway, should I also rename the library to VarDx so that the name and namespace match?
@NikiC I'm looking at the AC_FUNC_FNMATCH that I removed, do I really need to add it back? I'm not sure what's it's purpose would be in that instance, but I don't really now Autoconf. But from the doc it seems just to ensure the compiler implements it correctly?
Why ? What happens if we dont ? If we are adding Location header I can understand that the page redirects so we wouldn't see any output, but what about other headers ?
I am new to PHP and web dev, I dont understand. What I presently think is that by using header() we set the headers in the HTTP responce, body is a different (the page/JSON object that is sent).
@user123456789 Nope. When you issue anything back to the web browser headers are sent then and there and then the output. I've had partial PHP pages send on occasion
When running my script, I am getting several errors like this:
Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /some/file.php:12) in /some/file.php on line 23
The lines mentioned in the error messages contain header() and setcookie() calls.
What could...
It feels like Bug #55283 (SSL options set by mysqli_ssl_set ignored for MySQLi persistent connections) [ext/mysqli/tests/bug55283.phpt] is always failing on Travis Arm64
@NikiC Before C99, that was probably true. Are you aware that C99+ changed this quite a bit? I'm not trying to solve ODR by hand, though that it is a side effect.
Doing it this way allows for optimizing usage sites without linkage issues, because you know exactly which translation unit will have the definition. Using static inline in a header is almost certainly wrong in every case -- at least since C99.
static inline functions should never be used from naked inline functions, because there may be duplicate symbols and this is a problem for issuing security fixes -- if the code is updated and a library is rebuilt, then the duplicate symbols are an issue. However, doing it the way I outlined will avoid it because it was inlined (in which case it's out of date, but there aren't symbol conflicts) or it was not, and the library that actually holds the symbol got updated and all is well.
So I guess in a way I am solving ODR, just not the basic use case that most people think about when they talk about it.
@bwoebi This is the out-of-date, C90 view. This changed in C99.
Question: how PHP uses CPU registers to pass arguments? If I want to define internal function handler as assembly, what registers are used for that? There should be pointers to the zend_execute_data and retval address, but in what registers and how to use them?
@ircmaxell a little bit, but some good article will help me a lot, because ABI is stuff that depends on CPU arch as I know and registers can be used in different ways...
@lisachenko my understanding is only for purely static functions. For anything that's exported, then it would need to use the normal calling convention
My question was about local internal functions, eg, I want to define a method in the Matrix class that performs SSE matrix multiplication via assembly code
So, it’s about zend_internal_function.handler pointer that receives control
@ircmaxell this one is good, thank you! Food for thoughts for several days )
well, it's a function pointer, so it couldn't be optimized to use a different calling convention, because it may not be part of the same compilation unit, no?
They use their own code, thus have control over calling conventions, as I know they support different conventions. I can have a look at implementation, but this scares me a lot...
Now I need to learn assembly a little bit, allocate code and structures for page sizes and memory boundaries, extract arguments from the stack and perform SSE call 👍🏻
@JoeWatkins, just noticed pecl.php.net/package/strict. The Github repo doesn't seem to exist (anymore). Seems obsolete; can the package be marked as being unmaintained?
How do you prefer to write static content on a website, front-end (like in templates) or backend (maybe some config file/db)? This doesn't include data derived from the DB, just text from the website.