docbook is very suitable, so long as it's very far away from me ... I'd like it to be more user friendly ... people have suggested switching to another magical system, but it makes no different what spells we cast to turn things into documentation really, and these spells do work ... ish ...
I once started to write a thing for phd to show off pthreads, I never finished it ... but it's a lot of work to do in one thread no matter what you are doing it with .... and it wouldn't have to use pthreads, a bodge like parallel test runner would also improve things a lot ...
@cmb I've only written like... 2 pages of docs in my time, so my sample size is tiny, but caring about it linking to other functions / pages accounted for... maybe 5% of what I cared about. The other 95% was checking how the page looked, reading / re-reading the text, making sure the tables presented the info clearly. How successful I was at that is for someone else to decide, but only at the very end did I care about links to other articles.
I mostly give up on extensions now, I'm just going to focus effort on php itself, if someone comes up with a really good idea I'll implement it ... but people just complain when you package things as an extension, and I don't get enough support to warrant spending time on them ... it's either work on complicated extensions nobody cares about or is willing to install, or go back to being useful ... so I do the latter ...
unless someone pays me a million dollars a month ...
@Girgias When I was running on a native linux FS in WSL it took about 45 - 60ish seconds for a manual rebuild and render. Using a windows mount with its IO performance, I could go off and make a cup of tea in the mean time.
2 black boxes and one box of an indescribable color and shape, possibly from another dimension
@NikiC my approach to the factory feature must have some flaw in it, do you know what it is and are saving it for later ? because I'd like to know what it is, I see it's there but can't identify it ... if you don't know what it is, can you just think real carefully about what it's doing for five minutes, and then tell me what it is ... if there's really no flaw and it should be fine, can you also tell me that and I'll stick at it ...
if ($ac["SEGFAULT_SPEED"] == "yes" && version_compare(PHP_VERSION, "5.3.7-dev", "lt")) {
$b = basename($mxml);
echo "\n\nPHP will segfault now :) - Don't worry though, the $b has been saved :D\n";
}
If cobol is anything to go by, PHP is probably going to be in use for another 100+ years. We should really start fundraising to create a secretive sect of monks with knowledge of internals, and have them cryogenically frozen or something.
@NikiC I've narrowed it down to something to do with constructor promotion ...
<?php
class Foo {
public function __construct(public int $day = 1) {}
}
$foo = new Foo(...);
$foo();
?>
==1697631==The signal is caused by a READ memory access.
==1697631==Hint: this fault was caused by a dereference of a high value address (see register values below). Dissassemble the provided pc to learn which register was used.
#0 0x555a3fcbfb49 in zend_gc_delref /opt/src/php-src/Zend/zend_types.h:1191
#1 0x555a3fcc1a97 in zend_assign_to_variable /opt/src/php-src/Zend/zend_execute.h:144
#2 0x555a3fcc6a8c in zend_std_write_property /opt/src/php-src/Zend/zend_object_handlers.c:741
#3 0x555a3fbde04c in ZEND_ASSIGN_OBJ_SPEC_UNUSED_CONST_OP_DATA_CV_HANDLER /opt/src/php-src/Zend…
@NikiC should we add the optional parameter to get_defined_function() on the chopping board? As this is now useless as disabled functions cannot show up anymore if I understand correctly
@NikiC yeah my bad, I rebased and it went away ... though I thought CI pulled in the most recent commit and that was started after those fixes, but it went away anyway, sorry for noise
I guess read the tests and see if they allow you to clarify any things
then move onwards I suppose, I guess as a matter of courtesy you should restart the clock on discussion period whenever you start it again ... this is a different thing than previously discussed, and the document is large, and people may have grown tired with the last discussion ... agree ?
there's not really any rush, another week makes no difference to us, but it might be the difference between someone having the time to vote or not, vote either way, doesn't matter ... it's a lot of information to read, and the second time we had the conversation in a month, it seems like a good idea to allow the normal discussion period ... it maybe also helps to reset the conversation and give people the idea we're not pushing too hard, we're starting again ...
but hey, it's you conducting the discussion mostly, so whatever really ... it would be nice to force a reset so we don't have the same conversation, or pick up where we left off ...
@Crell that's more a ze test, impl detail ... probably not, unless you can find similar reference to the handling of statics with regard to closures in existing documentation
@JoeWatkins I think the effects of this RFC are going to be felt long term, perhaps not for it's immediate uses, but because it puts PHP on the path to being able to tidy up callables and put the 'callable' mess on the bonfire. I think the long term benefits of it combined with piping depend very much on if we can agree on a scalar objects API (or can somehow optimize away the needing to fetch everything for write)
we get to have the bonfire with the simpler solution too though ... it's obvious to everyone this isn't straight forward in the same way as typed properties wasn't (fun fact, I wrote the first impl of that too, very early, crap impl) ... and it's obvious that we knocked up the other thing in a few hours and there wasn't really anything to bikeshed or argue about ...
if I was them, and I couldn't read an impl and was bored with reading rfc's, and I was being informed by the opinion of the most vocal highly respected developer, I'd probably rather go for the simpler thing and start building the bonfire, than read another RFC and listen to another month of discussion ...
1. The "dynamic dependency injection" thing that Nicolas had been asking about. 2. Closure::fromCallable(foo(?)); // Not sure if this is really needed, but we had it previously.
@JoeWatkins Well, then we should try and get Nikita on board with this version. It's not radically different, but much more precisely defined.
Basically, given an associative array of possible arguments, and a callable, give back a partial that has those arguments that have a value in the array prefilled.
$callable(..., ...$named_args_that_matched); - Looked kind of like that?
place holders are positional, and unpacking takes up an unknown number of positions, we can't say "here are the semantics, except when you use unpacking", or except anything ...
it doesn't make sense, we've defined these placeholders as positional, and unpack takes up an unknown number of positions, we've disallowed named param overwrite of placeholder, unpack may overwrite place holders ... I don't want to make exceptions ...
If there's a logical reason why a certain call style can't work, sure. But... this does work in a sensible way unless it's actively blocked. Please don't actively block it.
I've told you why, we have to keep the rules simple ... you're saying ?, ...$ar will work, but that depends on the contents of $ar, and if $ar should happen to overwrite ? and that raises an error, to some that's obvious and others that is surprising ...
"However, argument unpacking when creating a partial is not supported. There are some cases where it would work fine, and others where it would result in a variety of error conditions such as variables being out of order, variables being used as positional placeholders and in the unpacked array, etc. Rather than have support for only some combinations, which would not be easily identifiable through static analysis, the implementation omits them entirely for consistency."
we tried wide open scope, I have wounds ... okay not actually wounded ... but I learned my lesson, we gotta keep it simple and easy to understand, narrowing scope is a legitimate way to do that if it doesn't narrow so far that the majority use cases aren't handled, everything remains easy to understand
I grant that it does leave open the potential for removing that limitation later, so I'm picking my battles because even with that limitation it is still a hugely important feature that I want to pass.
you know that argument handling hasn't really changed, all of these things that we've pinned on have been done with compromise, and pa is the latest set of compromises ... in an ideal world, we'd go back to the drawing board and write all code gen and prologue and all related things in mind of the things we are doing today, and that's a legitimate project for PHP 10 or whatever, and then we lift some of the limits of pa and other things too ...
harder to imagine because jit now, but it's maybe a thing we do, pa is not the only thing with limitations, we can only have anything with compromise, and when we try to accommodate absolutely everything, it's not workable, I mean I can write code that will make it work, but everybody hated it the results ...
I already added that to the variadic section. Unless you think it's misleading or inaccurate, let's just move on. As I said, not a hill I'm dying on, especially when we're this close.
I'd put a simple one line rule at the top with "rules of", then a little section somewhere underneath, if you feel it's necessary ... or maybe it's time to have a future scope ?
yeah it might be good to talk about that ... it's the sort of thing I imagine we can solve elegantly in some far off future version, where the handling of arguments (or calls, or both) is rewritten or at least in some way more accomodating than it is today ...
I can write code that will make it work, but what does it mean to apply to a non-existent function anyway
I mean if you drop off the reflection dump from that example, it will work, but it leaves the engine in an unknown statte (will fail assertions on a debug build) if you don't immediately execute (or eventually at least) that trampoline ...
I can make it properly work so that it doesn't fail, but I'm not sure what I'm making work, we can't build a prototype, there is no argument names, no definition ... it's confusing to think about ...
yeah whatever I do is not going to make any sense really, if we make up argument names it has all kinds of implications, it we omit them we cannot build a prototype and so cannot handle further application, this just doesn't make sense
When a PHP (or Apache) process crashes, PFTT will try running it a second time to confirm that that specific test really caused a crash before reporting the test as CRASH.
Well, I have to admit that PFTT2 has some minor issues. It is much slower than run-tests.php -j1, it always passes EXPECTF tests, fails randomly on mbstring tests (and some others), has a hard coded list of ~1000 XFAILS – but other than that it's mostly great! ;)
@Crell I think it's something to propose after @NikiC's accessors RFC (or any simpler variant of it), isn't it? Realistically, 8.2 seems to be a safer target for clone with.
Convenient timing. I was just about to mention that maybe someone should update the mailing list with regards to the status of "Short functions, take 2".
@MateKocsis As with a lot of RFC these days, it seems like a valuable stand-alone made more valuable in concert with other RFCs. I don't think it has to wait.
@Danack I literally just opened the vote for it, but the server is being slow.
Basically every RFC I'm working on or tracking this year is related to some other RFC. :-) It's all about synergy!
@Danack I think so. It's still 100% parser implemented, but the logic is now a lot cleaner. It first unifies both function and method body definitions, then tosses one extra line into that definition to make it work. Quite elegant.
Also, does anyone know where I can submit an image that really smells like it might be an invalid image that hopes to abuse bugs in image processing libraries to hack a machine?
@Crell I'd like to first ask @NikiC 's opinion here if he sees any issue with adding support for "clone with" with a future compatible way with any readonly property implementation.
Short functions is mine, and is just some lexer tricks. Auto-capture multi-line closures are @NunoMaduro's. There's probably more optimization to be done there but he hasn't had bandwidth to do so yet.
@MateKocsis I pinged him earlier about accessors, but he's not responded. I think he's tired of me asking him about his own RFCs. :-)
his first point about opt in for by-ref capture could be sorted later on ... but the second point, this:
For much the same reason, capture analysis for arrow functions is very primitive. It basically finds all variables that are used inside the closure body and tries to import them, silently failing if they are not available in the outer scope. For multi-line closures, this would commonly end up importing too many variables. For example:
fn() { $tmp = foo(); bar($tmp); return $tmp; }
Here, there is no need to import $tmp from the outer scope, but a naive implementation (which I assume you're using) will still try to capture it.