kind of not PHP related.....but also, the problem is with the video file rather than PHP code...the only useful bit would be the error message, and headers of the response.
If you guys have a method which accepts a single character as an argument, would you guys do anything special to enforce that or just check the strlen in the beginning of the character? I'm wondering if I should accept an integer as the bytevalue, but that would just add extra work
@Alesana do you expect a certain character encoding? If, e.g. UTF-8, a bytevalue wouldn't be possible, and a more general integer would still be confusing.
@cmb The character encoding is passed in with the method but I guess I don't understand bytevalues or character encoding enough to do anything special like that
In the end the method isn't necessary anyways because I realized it was only being called inside a catch block when no exception could be thrown in the try block
I feel like if it is an iconv wrapper it should just process whatever string and the validation of the length should take in something that is responsible for it
There was a string converter and if it caught an exception when using iconv(...) it would loop through each character of the string and call it. But like I said the exception would never be thrown so I removed it completely
I was given the task of updating our services and libraries to PHP 7.4 so I'm trying to sneak in a little bit of light refactoring under the guise of PHP 7.4 enhancements :p
I have an object where if I free it, I get (zval_gc_type((ref)->gc.u.type_info) == 7 || zval_gc_type((ref)->gc.u.type_info) == 8), function gc_possible_root, file /usr/local/src/php-8.0.0beta3/Zend/zend_gc.c, line 646., but if I don't, then I get a memory leak from zend_objects.c where it's allocated. Any ideas?
@bwoebi I've been using lldb on macOS since gdb seems broken. This has been helpful: lldb.llvm.org/use/map.html Last time I did C programming was on Linux.
libgmalloc is basically allocating every single allocation as a dedicated mmap() without address reuse and then forbidding you access to it after a free()
Well, I mean if it's like a set of known characters, I'd just list the allowed ones in an array...or you could check the string length and php.net/manual/en/function.ord.php
I think that since the method was converting it from one character encoding to another it would have to work with any encoding and byte length and preserve it. But the idea for the method in general didn't make much sense so I just used the iconv(...) method itself anyways
@Alesana hm, seems like the exception was a promoted warning (via set_error_handler()), and the idea was to try to convert every single character to get the exact error position in the string. Just guessing here, though.
@cmb It might've been a promoted warning, but it also checks for false as the result (which would only happen if a notice is thrown). When it catches it, it will loop through each character of the string using for ($i = 0; $i < mb_strlen($str, $encoding); $i++) { ... }, then it will grab the character using mb_substr($string, $i, 1); and try to convert that character appending it to a string (which starts out as an empty string)
Something smells here though
I don't know enough about encoding to be 100% certain there's something off here but it doesn't seem right
as a suggestion then, I'd recommend first just recording what it does in depth for a large variety of different input, so to at least be conscious about what changes you make....
It depends what your function is doing. Returning boolean false when the function normally returns an int, or a Product object, is Very Wrong And You Should Feel Bad(tm). It's a total type mismatch.
Returning null is... less type bad, but still useless for the caller.
If there's no natural return value to use, that's when either exceptions or monads come into play.
But to answer your original question, the "check values early and bail out quickly if needed" pattern, known as guard clauses, is quite common and a generally good practice.
@Danack Yup will do. I see some similar pieces of code online with a lot of tests so I will write all the tests first and show which ones are failing and why they're failing
I'd like to execute something at script end in an extension but before destructors, etc are run. Is there a way to insert an opcode, or hook into something to do so?
@Girgias Nice job so far :) But I guess the worst part is yet to come... :D P.S. my girlfriend shows some mild symptoms of the COVID-19 (like lost taste perception), so I've just earned 2 nice weeks at home. :D At least I can do more stuffs before RC1.
I didn't believe these stories when I read them online, but I had htop open on my terminal at office and this guy(a developer) came up to me and said "are you hacking?" and I was like wtf?
all the tests read sanely, this is the kind of thing where I trust them because it's really just a change in program flow behaviour, so as long as there are enough sane tests you are pretty safe
tbf you are in a better country, maybe just chill there for a bit :-P
I know the French can be socialist to the point of tiresome sometimes, but in general it's a nice place with nice people
albeit grumpy people
(sometimes)
The only time I have ever been into a shop and fully blanked by the shop assistant as if I had offended her simply by walking through the door was in France
@DaveRandom We're often living in a bubble and tend to not have as much exposure to the individuals which are ... yea. … there are too many of them, but we do not meet most of them
The government definitely has the authority to do this, BTW. The US bill of rights specifically says: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people." The states can definitely regulate public health matters, which is why they can forbid smoking in public buildings and require you to turn your lights on your vehicle at night, etc.
@bwoebi ftr my bubble is much larger than yours I suspect (I do a lot of face-to-face direct interaction with end users and indeed some of them are awful people, but I think it's largely a minority
People showed up to an organized hearing for opposing masks, and guess what? They didn't follow health dept. requirements of wearing masks and were over capacity of the building. The people in authority adjourned the meeting immediately on arrival for health safety concerns. Like, what did they expect?
The thing is, to these people, this proves their point. "We don't believe in wearing masks, and we showed up to a meeting so people could hear our points and arguments, and they wouldn't even listen to us!"
Masks have only recently been mandated here, and there is extreme opposition to the mandate, and I common hear things like "We've been wearing masks and our numbers are going up! Masks don't work!" Let's ignore the fact we have multiple universities in our county and most of the increases are in these universities which just started the semester...
Elementary schools have been in session longer and haven't seen out-of-line increases, and masks have been enforced by all students, staff, and visitors, among other precautions.
The elementary schools, I mean. No idea what universities are doing, but every time I've gone to campus housing districts I've seen people gathering irresponsibly so there's no surprise there that we are seeing increases in cases at universities...
My kids only go to school 2x per week. Next week they are supposed to start going 4x per week. My daughter was tested yesterday; we'll find out if it's just the sniffles or if it's covid-19 in the next day or too. But even if they are healthy I'm not sure about sending them 4x per week...
yeh that's where it gets interesting, but I do get the impression that chunk of the US state is still fairly unimpeachable, it's much harder to be a dickhead in a group of 9 than a group of 1 (not impossible obv)