I'm just wanting to be able to slap it on a VM... the machine the VM now runs on had a retail Windows 10 on but it wont detect it when running inside the VM, so rather than paying £200 for the licence I could pick up an old T1700 Xeon for £140 which comes with a 10 pro OEM
I used to have a free MSDN subscription but that stopped working for me a while ago. And since I have done anything Windows-specific in a long time I did not bother to ask MS about it.
@JoeWatkins Microsoft cutting their support is what I'm trying to fix. At least so far as the processing horses goes.
Having spent 2 hours trying to work out MS software assurance licencing, I can only assume that MS doesn't actually want anyone to licence their software.
/home/derick/dev/php/derickr-vld/srm_oparray.c: In function ‘vld_dump_zval’:
/home/derick/dev/php/derickr-vld/srm_oparray.c:459:3: error: duplicate case value
459 | case IS_INDIRECT: return vld_dump_zval_indirect (val.value);
| ^~~~
/home/derick/dev/php/derickr-vld/srm_oparray.c:458:3: note: previously used here
458 | case IS_CALLABLE: return vld_dump_zval_callable (val.value);
| ^~~~
make: *** [Makefile:213: srm_oparray.lo] Error 1
line #* E I O op fetch ext return operands
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 0 E > DECLARE_CONST 'FOO', 1
1 DECLARE_CONST 'BAR', <const ast>
@MarkR putting together a note of the preferred spelling of standard variable names would be good. Except for writeable....which is going to be a shitshow.
If it were done at engine level for some strange reason, the biggest issue I see is the most common ones, string, int etc would need to be encapsed in quotes, lest we added something to get a typename
#[type(int)] $x = 1234;
I think it's unlikely though, probably more likely we'll get type support built directly into the language.
@MarkR it would be OK to move it to a library at first though: easier to refer to it, easier to version and to adjust. Since we can then have it in the AST, manipulating/upgrading becomes easier than the current annotations stuff
@MarkR We've already started it. Although, I've only finished cleaning up in Zend: github.com/php/php-src/pull/5847 But one for ext/reflection is on its way too
@Derick I saw your commit! Nice :) However, I spotted some snake:case usages in the OO API. Would you consider to switch to camelCase instead since the method names also use this format?
At least, this is the rule of thumb that we "agreed" to follow with Nikita.
Also, I lamented a lot in the past whether "timezone" or "timeZone" is better a name. Finally, I used the latter in an earlier project of mine, since it seems to me that "time zone" is the correct spelling :)
@Derick IMO current param names doesn't matter too much, since they are generally not displayed anywhere outside the manual. PHP 8 is the first version where they will have more significance in the code (because of named params + error messages are now including them)
I recently got a complaint from a coworker who looked at the prototype of str_replace() and intuitively mixed $search and $subject up, reasoning: $search - what I search in, $subject, the subject I want to find - except that it's completely wrong. Can we make that clearer?
@salathe Sorry if I decide to prioritize stuff that can only be done in a major release compared to the docs which can be done any time, and not like I didn't do a bunch for the docs, sure maybe not the EN version but never the less.
I don't if it's super adequate but maybe as Maté said a todo list of functions, I know Maté can update the first message of an issue as he's been doing that on the resource -> object one. This would put everything in one place instead of various issues
@MátéKocsis you might not be considering how much work that creates ... it's fine to cleanup in Zend, although I'm not personally convinced of the value of changing words in error messages, php isn't a week old, these error messages have been around for like a decade, but whatever, if you're not also going to help with migration guides and doc updates then you're really just creating work for other people, and or making the manual - our most valuable asset - worse ...
it's still very useful for new doc pages; I've used it several times; it retrieves arguments via reflection, but doesn't seem to cater to return types at all (probably because we didn't have them for internal funcs), and of course, union types are pretty new.
I'm trying to flesh out the reasons for salathe not being so happy about this kind of change ... people do forget once they are done working on code that the job isn't over ...
@cmb I think a lot is making stuff allow null when previously they were just overloaded functions
@JoeWatkins Obviously, I've also made less doc contributions as I'm more focuses on doing stuff which can only be done in PHP 8.0, I think that's one factor as to why doc contributions are lower than usual
+ Currently, there's still 200 default values around that don't work well together with named parameters, even though we've already fixed 100ish of them
when 8 is generally available, it must be documented ... lots and lots of people say they are focusing on code first and will do migration and doc updates - myself included - and have never found the time ...
@JoeWatkins All of these PHP 8 changes contributed significantly to my walking away from the project, not just resigning the editor position, actually walking away from PHP.
also, how much sense does it make to make in the region of hundreds of changes to code without touching any docs at all, possibly for several months ... really it would make more sense to prepare doc changes that match the code changes, maybe even the same person can review them and commit them at the right time ...
Also, and I don't normally share personal issues, this has directly caused illness: PHP docs and PHP 8 has literally broken me. So please forgive me if I'm a little short with promises, hopes and wishes.
@JoeWatkins At least for a while, for some measure of "out", yes.
I hope you feel better anyway ... I also decided to do that which rewards me for a bit, I wouldn't say I walked away, but after a bad experience I had earlier this year with some open source work, I decided it best to concentrate on other things also ...
@JoeWatkins It's easier to decide on final naming in code first and then do a semi-automated docs update for everything
Because implementation and docs are separate repos, it's not really feasible to update both at the same time, and would cause a lot of friction as we decide on the details
I should also mention that there has been explicit guidance not to document PHP 8 yet. I think that's a bad decision though, and we should allow PHP 8 changes now already.
I'm not sure I see the problem, why can't the PR that changes code also tag and maintain a pr in the doc repo, and make changes to it as decisions influence code changes ?
Having lived through a decade of Drupal development, "whoever shouts loudest is in charge" is the absolute worst possible way to run anything ever invented.
no shouting involved, he does the actual work we are talking about ... many could, and don't ... just like niki does the zend stuff, so his words carry weight, christophs carry weight in docs ...
@MátéKocsis as for param names, i checked dom extension because it has large API surface, and the names all look good to me, no generic or weird things in there.
@beberlei Yes, it seems mostly fine. Just one thing: it might make sense to change $attr to $attribute in DOMElement::setAttributeNode(), even though the type is DOMAttr.
I have a huge list (100,000) of temporary, free, or spam email address domains. I want to check them to filter out the ones that aren't valid (eg. don't have dns or nameserver)
Does anyone have any idea what the most efficient way to do that would be?
Usually we just say that their email failed validation because the domain name could not be resolved. We've saved countless support tickets from catching it early before they start to complain that they're not getting registration messages etc
am I correct in thinking that by having attributes in core, it makes libraries like Doctrine more powerful because it allows these libraries to free up parsing code? I feel like I'm missing something else...
@Tiffany It's rather that we have a properly typed API which is asserted by the language itself instead of a free-form format just held together by convention
that manual doc-comment parsing is unnecessary is just a welcome side-effect
@Tiffany I'd say doctrine's annotations parser is, over time, likely lose market share, as it were, because it's now effectively core
Personally as soon as 8.0 lands i'm planning on moving 95% of my annotations off of docblock parsed by doctrine, and over to attributes, and modifying my custom container framework to use parameter-level attributes for mapping specialities
I know I said this during the 7.2 release cycle, but I'mma say it again. I want to propose increasing the vote threshold for RFCs brought to vote less than 2 months prior to feature freeze.
6-8 weeks before FF: 80% 4-6 weeks before FF: 85% 2-4 weeks before FF: 90% 0-2 weeks before FF: 95%
The period between feature freeze and GA isn't a "no RFCs" window.
And in fact. Any vote could STILL allow passing at 75%, but if it passes that but not the higher threshold, then it goes in the subsequent branch.
So really, it's 12 months.
Because it happens EVERY. SINGLE. RELEASE. A rush of RFCs goes into rushed voting, and people get butthurt about something passing (or not) when they thought it shouldn't (or should) have, but there's no time left to fix up the details.
e.g. Attributes, Named Parameters, and that's just examples from this week.
That is, perhaps, down to the fixed annual release schedule, which while I appreciate the regularity of, might perhaps be better served by using the RFC process itself to trigger the feature freeze.
@Derick it's funny you say that, this was a huge issue at my last job. DBA would apply an upgrade to test server for ERP, would encourage users to test it... maybe a handful actually would. And the handful that did, only did it because we had convinced them why testing is important and finally understood (or they encountered a patch that broke their shirt and they didn't understand why)
But yeah, my exit from any company is: 1/ Get everything not already open sourced open sourced, so I can refer to it later. 2/ Copy off anything purely personal that happen to be on the system. 3/ Nuke the site from orbit.
Is memgrind aware of slab allocators? That's neat.
I would GUESS that it's saying "technically, your process owns that memory, but I happen to know your allocator (e.g. tcmalloc/jemalloc) hasn't internally allocated it.
So it's an ordinary overrun as far as you're concerned.
@MarkR I saw that too. What made it worse was that just yesterday I was in a meeting talking about feature work which shifted (topically!) to compilers and then people were suddenly like: "Uh... I have another meeting to get to. Bye."
@Sara while I agree, for example the saner numeric string one I asked Andrea if she was continuing looking back at it (well trailing whitespaces) and she said she would try to before coming back to me IIRC in early June that she couldn't in the end, but I still had some university shit to do, so I couldn't really start it before end of June :(
@Sara that is a great idea! :) another appoach could be to require RFCs on new stuff to be voted on 2 month before feature freeze or similar, then allow only amendments until feature freeze
I prefer that method because it allows my changes to be reviewed by veterans before they're added. For minor changes, I don't mind committing them directly in SVN, but for the changes I made, e.g., to the properties page for typed properties - I wanted that to be reviewed to catch any mistakes I made and nudge me in the right direction to improve it.
I'm getting a lot of "you don't have authorization to view this" messages ... which is valid, but I thought most of this should be publicly viewable...