@NikiC I want to be able to trace a generator in the sense that every time it starts or suspends I call begin or end respectively. I'm not sure what actually resumes the generator though. I think I can get the very first call through regular fcall handler, the final end through GENERATOR_RETURN, and ZEND_YIELD gives suspend... (I think). Not sure what does resume, though.
I'm having one of those days where there's a million things I want to do, I have the energy and motivation to do all of them, but I'm trying to prioritize which to do first. ._.
@NikiC Code of some kind is definitely running; we're going in and out of a generator. Neither execute_ex nor execute_internal catches this.
If I use yield from on a generator I do see the inner generator. This might make sense to only trace the inner-most generator, but in the yield from $array case I think that the generator doing the yield from should show up as going in/out.
Probably, anyway. I haven't built the things these are probably use-cases for yet.
@Derick It used to be true for sure, but since official Docker images are available for pre-releases, it is no longer the case IMO. A few years ago I asked them to upload Docker images for RCs, but now even alphas are in the repository on the day of the release. That's a really significant change I think.
I ran all the testing for our latest launch in the 7.4 RC phase, we were going to be moving to it anyway, made sense to start testing sooner. Found a few bugs in the process. I could only do that because of docker though.
@LeviMorrison this might be a dumb thing to say without context, but shouldn't yield from $foo result in the same ops as foreach ($foo as $k => $v) yield $k => $v ?
(I'm assuming that "trace" is tied to ops on the stack in such a way that ^ still holds true)
I was under the impression that yield from was pure syntax sugar, not executed differently