Ugh. Every time I have to do dependency management using pkg-config or cmake I learn more pitfalls about each, and as far as I can tell there really aren't any good solutions except to build exactly what you want out-of-tree (and notably omit anything you don't want, such as if you want static libs make sure there aren't dynamic libs present as well!), and then still do some praying.
zend_new_interned_string does not ensure the string is persistently allocated, zend_new_interned_string can be set by anything
what is actually required is that the string is persistently allocated, because it's stored in that persistently allocated hash
I just had a look at the history of that function, in PHP5 it was very obviously meant to be persistently allocating everything
when it was upgraded for 7 it wasn't done properly and noticed in 7.3, when someone inserted the strange interning, probably because they weren't properly aware of the original requirements ...
that's when the block became strange, nobody with a clue did that ...
> HASH_FLAG_PERSISTENT renamed into IS_ARRAY_PERSISTENT and moved into GC_FLAGS (to be consistent with IS_STR_PERSISTENT).
a month after that he realised there was a bug an decided to "Use interned strings for browscap files parsed at MINIT" to solve it ... wrong solution imo
for example if you want to pass either a Product entity or a User entity, or any other any other entity into a method. The purpose is for keeping a file upload service decoupled from one specific entity.
@cmb now that I look at that patch in context, it wasn't broken ... but other rationales exist, such as the userland implementation is probably more widely used because of the cache support it has, it will never have that kind of feature internally ...
@KerrialBeckettNewham class ProductService { public function __construct(Repo1 $r1, Repo2 $r2) { ... } public function saveProduct(string $file, Product $p) { $this->repo1->create($filename); $this->repo2->create($entity, $file);
> true/false values for features such as frames, JavaScript, and cookies; and so forth. Is there a browser that exists that doesn't? It seems a bit antiquated. Are there metrics of it in use?
Well the php.net/manual/en/function.get-browser.php page goes on to say that cookies have to be tested. The information it provides just looks to be of little to no benefit... I mean the examples include support for vbscript and 16 bit windows..
I don't think we have any usage metrics at all. Packagist download numbers are potentially irrelevant, since the package might be distributed as Wordpress plugin or such.
OTOH, we might add telemetry to php-src; most users would certainly be happy about that. :p
If we're not sure how a function should work, we'll give you one behavior 50% of the time, otherwise the other. We can then evaluate bug reports to determine which one is more popular.
@cmb I strongly suspect a good chunk of people would be willing to allow a trusted script to run a code audit and report back metrics on usage (provided the source code itself wasn't uploaded anywhere else). Push it through the usual social avenues and php.net and might be able to yield tens of thousands of responses over a year.
@NikiC So I'm trying to use arg_num 0, but I'm getting back double deprecation notices in same cases, and in others ones they just disappear (in reference to github.com/php/php-src/pull/6661/files#r616794445) are there any other places where arg_num=0 is used which can trip this behaviour?
Okay, I fixed the double notices (because I was doing something really dumb)
Oh I don't think we can actually use 0, because it's also used by zend_verify_weak_scalar_type_hint() which should have a side effect
well, it seems I presumed wrongly. I don't know why they would both be checked at the same time. I'd make triple sure they actually have the same name.
There was a big piece of dust on my screen and it was making it look like there was a ' after the first LockDown. To mee it looked like this name='LockDown' but reality it was name='LockDown
I do wanna make some stuff but I don't have the patience (yet)
at some point I suspect I will fall down a hole and do a 20-man team's job for a few months, because (also, apparently) I have very little self discipline :-P
I'm not great at keeping myself alive when things are going fine, I was told the other day by a doctor that he was close to admitting me to hospital for dehydration when I went just for prescription and had not been been drinking the day before, just forgot to drink water for like a week
@PeeHaa Analyzed a Java heap dump today, about 1GB of heap space is wasted for about 4 string values, because we use JSON with a Map<String, X> instead of an enum as map key. :D
@CharlesSprayberry We also do that often, but these are kept in memory and the values are neither deduplicated nor interned, because they're read from the database. If keys are a small set of possible values, we usually use enums for that.
I think there's another big chunk of empty string instances, but that's for tomorrow, only added deduplication to a single place for now.
@kelunik I see. I've only just been getting back into Java over the last month so been tripped up a couple times and when I read that I was like "Oh shit" :P
yeah. alpine is segfaulting if I run our test suite on phpdbg and all is fine when directly running phpunit
which is consistent with how it is on windows
Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 20480 bytes) in D:\...\vendor\nikic\php-parser\lib\PhpParser\Parser\Php7.php on line 1571