In 2005 we announced the Zend Framework project. A great framework was the missing link in moving PHP from departmental to strategic Enterprise adoption. We had already delivered on the other necessary Enterprise requirements incl. broad database support, strong OO, XML and Web Services in PHP 5 and standard tooling via the Eclipse eco-system. By delivering best-in-class best practices th…
On a server running FreeBSD 8.3-RELEASE-p3, Apache 2.2.22 from ports, PHP version 5.4.6 from ports, output is being garbled on the second load of a script. The problematic behavior was only detected today, but we suspect it began with a recent ports update.
Here is an example script:
<?php
...
@ircmaxell They only have one web framework and it worked out very very well for them. Now everyone that needs something that is any good gets to build it from scratch cough
Also, read his question, segfaults and function <null character> do not exist, it's not a proxy
best bet is to do a debug build and run through gdb on the command line, if he can reproduce the error that way, will land you exactly where the error is and then you can get a bug report out.
Very sporadic, hard to consistently reproduce the same failure, but always a failure on the second or subsequent load of a page using the minimum example
@PeeHaa Everything <= 5.4.1 doesn't work properly with a couple of autoloaders and is not working, .2 and .3 where security fixes that might not apply but .4 and .6 both fixed a LOT of segfaults that I ran into
@PeeHaa So for the code I'm currently running every else breaks ;) Also maybe it's just me getting in the mindset that every ".6" release can be used. Well 5.2.7 and 5.3.6 ;)
Just for the record, "too localized" does not mean the same thing as "general reference" or "duplicate of some other question but I'm lazy to find the duplicate". — BoltClock47 mins ago
Yes -- turning APC off caused the problem to stop. Changing the extension load order so APC loads first also caused the problems to stop. Move it to the bottom, restart, refresh several times, and it comes back. I can reproduce it.
I will check out the settings before I submit a bug report, for the time being.... I was trying to do something when I ran in to this, so back at it :p
@grmpyprogrammer @rdohms WHAT? He's delusional for wanting natural competition between frameworks, instead of... someone playing kingmaker?
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I'm not against pointless rants against technology that has a limited number of use cases but If you can't make me laugh while ranting I don't want to listen
The bar for evaluating what is and is not a production-worthy framework is looking more like a flooring tile when you consider the number of Drupal sites in existence. Node.PHP, you say? Hell, why not Node.VB?
I am planning on staying at the office a little late tomorrow night, I probably won't be able to assemble all the info till then. I am behind on the project I was supposed to be working on when I ran in to the trouble, so gotta push forward on that. It relies on the box where we had the troubles, so I can't mess with it ATM
I am still farting around with ODBC over a network share, possibly the slowest thing ever, since dialup AOL
@edorian The Zend MM allocates a memory pool and also automatically frees memory. So it's not particularly useful for valgrind. USE_ZEND_ALLOC=0 disables it.
I am usually a troll online. I try to make a concerted to be the opposite of a troll in places where I use my real name; it does not come naturally to me
I would appreciate if somebody could break this down into something more understandable:
var stepsWidth = 0;
var widths = new Array();
$('#steps .step').each(function(i){
widths[i] = stepsWidth;
stepsWidth = stepsWidth + $(this).width(); //3000
});
first o...
@edorian - Hi! While writing up a tag wiki for [phpt] I noticed that the example in my answer to your question no longer works. I can use PHPUnit to run the .phpt directly but not using the test case extension. I submitted a bug on github but was hoping I am just doing something stupid. Any ideas?
@MikeB It has to be a smoother progression than that! We aren't that bipolar. At minimum, we'd be looking at the Fall of Indifference, followed by the Winter of Resentment. Only then could the Spring of Hate be possible, capped off by the much-anticipated Summer of Open Murder in 2013. We must take a moderate approach to retain any credibility.
Well, as you know then in Rails when you define your logical model, it creates classes for every entity.
So say you generate a model by the name of "user", you can then use it as both a static and instantiated class in your code, e.g. :user = Users.find(:id), or :user = new User()
I'm trying to achieve similar syntax in a framework I'm tinkering on. However, I'm stumped on dynamically creating classes at runtime, which as it is I'm basing on YAML files.
@Mike, yes, but I really don't want to use eval() or {} or anything like that.
So if that's the only technically available option I'm going with another approach, but I was wondering if you guys had clues.
I mean the usual approach in PHP would be making some sort of tree structure but that still disallows static functions as I just described. I'd really like to make a class named after the model entity.
I mean I could emulate all the needed features but one thing I really dig about Ruby is how creating such classes allows for far more semantic code.
So I'm looking at options.
So if I can get away with recreating it in PHP and writing "$user = Users.find($id);" I'll definitely take that over for example "$user = $model->users->find($id);"
I've had this issue before and I cannot remember how to go about it. I have an array of stdClass objects, each with a name and a category - basically I want to display them in unordered lists by category. how would I go about "organizing" this?
Well, one approach would be to catch the class-lookup in your own Autoloader. That will get invoked when you try to use a non-existant class. Once in the autoloader you can prototype out your class and get it into PHP's internal class index
@PeeHaa I suppose, i'm probably making this harder than it needs to be. right now my idea is to group them all in arrays based on their 'category' then use those arrays to produce the list.
well it's sorted from the SQL return. however I do need to work with each 'list' a few times on the page - would this approach be considered "harmful" or "wrong"??