Not sure if this wouldn't violate > but also use the same algorithm to calculate that result. https://benchmarksgame-team.pages.debian.net/benchmarksgame/description/nbody.html#nbody
class BaseClass {
public static function speak() {
echo "I have spoken.\n";
}
}
final class ChildClass extends BaseClass {
public static function speak() {
parent::speak();
}
}
ChildClass::speak();
When parent::speak() is called, the fbc has what I want, but consider this one:
class BaseClass {
public static function speak() {
echo "I have spoken.\n";
}
}
final class ChildClass extends BaseClass {}
ChildClass::speak();
Here the fbc will have a scope of BaseClass.
I want the class entry of the thing on the LHS of ::, every time, all cases. Why is that so hard?
@Sara Yes, that's sure, it depends on the question. :) But I think the most interesting question is production performance. Or are there other interesting questions?
@Sara Oh, and if we're talking about benchmarks.... I've already wanted to ask you and others if I could ask AWS (or other cloud providers) on behalf of the PHP project to support setting up an official benchmark for PHP, like what we had a few years before. Is it worth the try?
@IluTov Don't you have to store the opcodes in files? I believe OPCache stores them in memory by default (even when cli is enabled), so currently you're back to square 1:)
@MarkR On a somewhat related note: github.com/symfony/symfony/pull/25474 :D Since then, Dmitry improved the situation by adding a cache for constant default values :)
Do I need to do anything else other than configure without the debug flag to build php-src for production? master is approximately 3x slower than php7.4.
> I want the scope that the LHS resolves to in every case.
> parent::speak() should resolve to whatever parent is (which is BaseClass). > ChildClass::speak() should resolve to ChildClass > BaseClass::speak() should resolve to BaseClass
(using my examples above)
For the parent:: case it seems I want EG(scope).
I don't know how to know from the engine's perspective that I should choose EG(scope) instead of EG(called_scope), though.
I think I have no idea from the call point of knowing whether the fbc was reached through static:: or parent:: or something else, which is what's troublesome for me.
I don't think I can know whether I want EG(scope) or EG(called_scope) from the point of the call.
Anyway, I don't care that much about PHP 5.4. The key finding is that it's not trivial to know; you can't just poke the current state; you'd have to know where you came from.
Well... maybe. PHP 5.5-5.6 do have an execute_data but IIRC it gets remade or something if you push more args than it's expecting. PHP 5.4 doesn't have the call frame yet, correct.
I'm checking if debug_print_backtrace grabs everything I want in every case. So far so good, which means it might technically be possible (though maybe hacky, we'll see).
(as in partial re-implementation of bits of the engine or something)
Yeah. To get the actual scope of the call, you need to look at EX(opline), trace it back to the INIT_FCALL (or related opcode), and parse it out of that.
I have competing requirements if I can't get the scope of the LHS exactly correct :/
There are use cases for both.
Maybe I can figure out a way to know per function of interest if I should trace/hook inheritors, or just the base function. Not sure I can do that because I might need to know that prior to knowing if it's one of interest or not.
Welp I don't know if my reply to some random person on my PR for php-src was too aggresive or not but whatever coming up with dumb solutions and saying something provably false shouldn't need my sympathy
What's the best practice for preventing brute force attacks in a login form. Different companies implement different solutions. Some use captchas some lock you out of the account.