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12:01 AM
aka how people are probably feeling
 
12:48 AM
On the online documentation, can we please have a previous and next button ・ Documentation problem ・ #81402
 
1:13 AM
@Danack Tbh, implicit nullability should be deprecated, T = null being equivalent to ?T = null makes no sense. I understand it is there for BC reasons (since nullable T was introduced in 7.1). It should be deprecated in 8.x and removed in v9 imho
One can argue even ?T should be deprecated in favour of T|null considering it is from the time when we had no union types, but that sounds a bit more extreme.
 
@FaizanAkramDar I'd disagree on the 2nd bit, as I find ?Foo easier to read - at least in the sense of my eyes don't need to move as far.
3 hours ago, by Danack
Because having to scan across more characters to read the type keeps your eyes moving, which helps them get exercise.
 
JRL
@FaizanAkramDar from an abstract perspective i agree, however, the presence of things like the null-safe object accessor and the null coalesce operator make that particular syntax more acceptable within the language as a whole, and in reality, somewhat consistent
 
Though smallish chance that might be related to a nervous system problem I have....
As to the deprecation, I actually just started writing a few words down. But more as an exercise in trolling.
 
JRL
that episode was great, especially for how early it was in Bartlett's character building for the audience
 
I mean the discussion of deprecating this was already discussed for 7.4 but considered too early
So I would be surprised this doesn't land in a 8.x release cycle
 
JRL
1:22 AM
honestly, it should probably be part of 8.2 if the idea is to actually remove it in 9.0
 
@JRL apparently he was meant to be an occasional character, and the show was meant to be more around Rob Lowe's character.
 
JRL
@Danack but rob lowe wasn't even in the show until like season 3
 
@Danack Right
 
JRL
err wait
 
@Girgias So it could have been considered for 8.1? You mean it's an oversight it wasn't ?
 
JRL
1:23 AM
i was thinking of his replacement
lol
 
@Danack Exactly
 
JRL
well if its an oversight lets just ring up the RMs
:)
 
@JRL also, he's not in the first sequences of the show in the shows time line I think.
so he feels later.
 
I knew there was a PR for this: github.com/php/php-src/pull/3535
@Danack might want to ping the author in question
 
@Girgias Or not. Can you see deleted comments on github.com/php/php-src/pull/5313#issuecomment-616224193
singular actually.
 
1:34 AM
I can't see the deleted revision no
But now that I see the comment I remember this episode
Didn't remember it was the same person
 
 
1 hour later…
2:38 AM
I am wondering about destructuring within a foreach in PHP... Can anyone tell me if there is a "hard-fast" reason why there could never be foreach ($array as $index => [$key => $value]) { in PHP as a means to destructure an array of single-element arrays without needing to make any function calls? 3v4l.org/m6tLb
 
 
1 hour later…
4:08 AM
@mickmackusa This is permitted, but the form is a bit different: 3v4l.org/QG3E6.
To be useful they would probably need to have consistent keys. If they aren't consistent then there will be warnings, as this shows.
 
@LeviMorrison yeah, that's not the same though. and still a function call. I like the clean-look of destructuring without list().
 
@mickmackusa You can use [] instead: 3v4l.org/pEspS. They are interchangeable.
 
I want to destructure without knowing the keys.
 
JRL
@mickmackusa you dont need to know the keys to use [] destructuring
 
Well, you do, kinda: 3v4l.org/lnZ61
 
4:12 AM
I want to assign the lone key in the array as $key.
(this is all theoretical, of course. just a thought experiement. I don't actually have an XY Problem to solve using this.)
 
You are out of the realm of what PHP provides today, at least in compact form.
 
JRL
oh, i didnt see that. you want to use destructuring but also want the nested key?
 
Yes, I want the keys. I can already destructure one or more values from subarrays, but I cannot get the keys in the same way.
So again, my first question is/was: is there a fundamental reason why this kind of syntax would/could never been entertained?
 
The trouble is it (intentionally or not) already means something.
 
JRL
@mickmackusa because it's only useful in the highly suspect situation where you KNOW that the array has one element, but you DON'T know what the key name is
 
4:16 AM
In destructuring, [$key => $value] doesn't make a binding for $key -- it actually evaluates the $key and uses the result as the key for the lookup for the binding.
 
JRL
i mean it could maybe be done, im just saying that's probably part of why it isn't done yet
 
I suppose I don't need it to be a locked-in count in the subarrays. I would also be interested in destructuring multi-element subarrays -- all with unknown keys.
 
As JRL says, though, the behavior you were suggesting would only be useful for a very specific form; I think what we have probably does make more sense as it's more applicable.
I think what you'd really want is generator/array comprehensions :)
 
So versatile to be able to drill down many levels with destructuring, but I cannot make assignments from the keys. 3v4l.org/1MRQK
 
JRL
yes you can, just not in a one line built in syntax
i write code that gets unknown keys all the time though
 
4:25 AM
I never bothered to try to target specific deep values like this: 3v4l.org/mKKOd but I like it. I'd like to more like this, I think.
 
4:46 AM
[I'd like to see more like this]
 
 
2 hours later…
7:10 AM
\o
 
7:29 AM
o/
 
8:08 AM
Morning peeps. I've some questions about PHP-FPM's processing "model", or perhaps, lack thereof. I remember from ye olden times that Apache (prefork), did MINIT/MSHUTDOWN for the main process, and then MINIT/GINIT, GSHUTDOWN/MSHUTDOWN for each worker process, with a RINIT/RSTUTDOWN per request.
However, PHP-FPM seems to do: MINIT/GINIT for the "main" process, and then in each forked worker process, do RINIT/RSHUTDOWN per request, but when it shutsdown either main process, or worker process GSHUTDOWN/MSHUTDOWN. Which makes it impossible to have a per-worker process setup/teardown routine. Is this expected? Do I misunderstand something?
 
 
4 hours later…
12:20 PM
@NikiC I got a segfault on a buggy code when I was working on gen_stub.php. Fortunately, I managed to create a simple reproducer: 3v4l.org/sd5mX Is this issue only new to me?
 
@MateKocsis yes ^^
@MateKocsis This is bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=64196
 
12:37 PM
I'm not complaining, but which change was it that made 3v4l.org/TLbYk give a different result? aka
function test(array $param = VAL) {
    var_dump($param);
}

const VAL = null; // Could be in a different file
test();
@Derick your understanding matches my understanding. Unless you have something that checks per request in the process worker.
 
@Danack I'd have to find the change, but feel free to blame me ;)
 
12:50 PM
@NikiC Well. I'm not going to insinuate that you deliberately half-broke a 'feature' so that it's easier to justify removing the rest of it. But I might be thinking it pretty loudly.
 
1:47 PM
@NikiC You just keep on nudging implicit nullability toward the cliff. Don't forget to tie ReflectionType::allowsNull() to it before the final push.
 
@Trowski although that's an artefact of past choices, is it actually worth breaking that and forcing people to go through the getType() code?
 
@Danack Yeah, I know… you just can't actually get rid of it. I think it would make sense to return a ReflectionUnionType for ?T, and have allowsNull return false for everything except union types with null.
Since code needs to handle union types now, that should be a reasonable thing to do for 9.
 
2:03 PM
I mean we're doing a bunch of extra processing to keep this legacy behaviour
 
@Trowski Yeah..........but at the same time, my guess is that there's a lot of code that only checks to see if null is allowed or not.
 
But I'm not sure how we can deprecate it? Because you need to change the type representation before the method, but the method becomes useless the moment you change it, except if we do some more stuff with it
Oh wait maybe not
As it's on the parent class
 
@Danack Which should continue to work if ?T gives a ReflectionUnionType instead of a ReflectionNamedType.
 
2:21 PM
ugh.
 
it's a union, between null and T
 
Currently it apparently has some legacy behaviour: 3v4l.org/2ahqm vs 3v4l.org/5OKuj vs 3v4l.org/Uqm3Y
so the union type doesn't kick in until you have something more than nullable.
 
At the moment, yes, but that should probably change to be a union always.
Unless there's some reason I'm not seeing as to why T|null is treated specially. I think that should have changed with union types before but was probably maintained for better immediate BC for 7.x -> 8.
Nullability being a "flag" seems to have perpetuated because of that choice.
 
@Trowski I have a horrible suspicion I'm about to find out why. Probably was just less work and less BC break that way.
 
Ugh, Pierre never changes, does he. externals.io/message/115897#115900
 
2:34 PM
IMO, allowsNull() seems like a reasonable shortcut function to include on union types. "Is one of the things this supports null?" is a fair question to ask even in compound cases with unions and intersections in the future.
 
@Crell Fine, but we find ourselves in a situation where the method is on all types.
 
Which is also fine? It's a higher-level method, but a useful one. "Could I pass null to this and have it work" is a valid question.
And a potentially complicated one to compute myself in user space depending on the type def.
 
Well, if it's not a union type, it's not going to allow null.
Unless we make null a standalone type that is :P
But fine, leave it on all ReflectionType classes. It's not like it's hard to implement on the others.
 
@Derick in this very specific case, he could have just missed which repo that PR is against. But yeah, people not contributing for years and turning up and then acting as if they are 'in charge' is....something.
 
And pattern matching (if we get around to finishing that) is going to need a generic "will this value be accepted by this type definition" operation anyway. I think @IluTov has something working for that in the patch last time he was messing with it.
 
2:41 PM
@Danack And nothing knowing what he's actually talking about.
 
@Crell Was there an RFC in the works for that already?
 
Not proposed yet, but: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/pattern-matching

@IluTov had it partially working; we still needed to decide how to handle complex type defs, what to do with `match()` syntactically, and how to do object destructuring. I don't know what his time availability is, if anything.
 
3:03 PM
@Crell Pattern matching against objects makes me want shapes even more in PHP.
 
An object with public RO properties is a shape.
 
"object destructuring"?
 
@Crell But another object with the same shape cannot be implicitly used as the same shape.
 
See RFC link above.
@Trowski I... don't understand what that means.
 
In other words, an object with properties matching the declaration of another object cannot be implicitly used as an instance of that declared class.
Think JSON decoding an object and using it as an instance of a class you've declared as long as the properties of that object could be copied to the properties of the declared class.
Implied interfaces is a similar concept, though limited to methods, not properties.
 
3:13 PM
@Trowski Doesn't that depend on your equals() implementation?
 
Hmm? Not sure what you mean.
 
@Derick ext/date/tests/bug80998.phpt is failing
 
I... didn't add that test?
oh, I did. hmm, what did I mess up... I'll go have a look.
 
cmb
but you updated to timelib 2021.08 :)
 
@Derick git blame says you did :P
 
3:16 PM
I had already fixed 80998... but I might have unfixed it
 
@Derick It looks to me like the test expectation is just wrong?
 
yeah, should be :00.000001, not?
 
3:29 PM
@Trowski That... is literally what a deserialization library does. :-) Symfony Serializer, or I've been experimenting with alternate implementations.
Given JSON string, get matching object tree.
 
@Trowski Physical vs structural equality.
 
@Crell I'm aware you can do this in PHP already with reflection, etc, but it would be nice if it could just work like in TypeScript.
 
I cannot speak for Typescript.
 
@Derick Should github.com/derickr/timelib/pull/99/files#r657502415 have been applied? (I'm never certain with these off-by-one-maybe things)
 
@salathe Maybe - no test has been provided.
 
3:40 PM
No failing tests? All's well! :-)
 
@Trowski Isn't that because TS is structurally typed compared to PHP being nominally typed?
 
@Girgias Yes. Comparing types at runtime makes structural typing untenable I'm sure, so I'll have to stick with my transformation/serialization libs. :)
 
If someone wants to give me an estimate $ figure on what it would cost to add TS-like shapes to PHP, I eventually want to bother my CEO with it.
 
A syntax like JS for declaring an object would be helpful. It would have to differ from JS I'm assuming since { property: $value; } is already valid PHP code :P
 
kind of a lazy question, I didn't get enough sleep, any hints are appreciated. I'm looping through a DOMNodeList and making changes to nodes within the loop, which seems to be causing the loop to terminate earlier than expected, given the dynamic nature of DOMNodeList. Is there a way to make a DOMNodeList static? I'll provide an obfuscated code sample... gist
not necessarily make a DOMNodeList object static... but be able to statically change nodes within it
curious if there's a "right" way to do this before I scrap what I have and switch to Xpath...
 
3:53 PM
@Trowski Looks like... a PHP array? ;)
 
PHP arrays are not shaped.
 
What you want is maybe a type-hint of the exact array structure?
 
I just watched a talk yesterday from Rich Hickey on his Closure spec library, which is basically partial shapes by a different name. I think.
 
@Tiffany had to delete gist, because I missed redacting something, updated gist
 
It was interesting, even if I don't 100% agree with him this time.
 
gist.github.com/markrandall/3efc280bcdeb35a6cd6eae84edb75427 would be nice, even nicer if it could safely imply something without a keyword
Yes Tiffany
 
@MarkR I already mentioned Psalm's support for this, I think?
Wait, you use Psalm already.
 
Yes I do, but every time I have to resort to psalm I feel like PHP has a hole in it.
 
But yeah, in PHP I guess it would be foo(): [foo: 10, bar: "something", ...] { ... }
The object system in OCaml is structurally typed, too, so you can say "I want an object with this method and this property, and then anything else/and the nothing else".
 
[ ] syntax would be for something else e.g. typescript you can do: foo(): [ int, int] { return [ 1, 2 ]; }
 
4:00 PM
@MarkR Yes, but that's because JS has actual arrays. :)
 
@PatrickAllaert ping
 
you want to jump on a video thing and we'll do this thing ?
 
yep
started a stackoverflow room with you, not sure you noticed
 
do me an invite, I'm sorting wires
yeah, I don't really feel like typing everything ... too fingery
 
4:02 PM
Right, in OCaml the syntax would be val x : < get : int > = <obj> for an object with a get method returning int.
And they use double dots to annotate if anything else is allowed, ..
 
They're very powerful features to be sure. It took a little getting used to when going heavy into TS but I love the flexibility they offer
 
cmb
@Tiffany did you try to build an array from the node list first?
 
@cmb I did not... that would make sense
loop through the DOMNodeList, assign the nodes to an array, then loop through the array?
 
@MarkR The important part would be to only allow coercion in one direction, to the more general type.
But yeah
 
@Tiffany this worked. cheers @cmb
 
cmb
4:07 PM
yw
 
I guess union and intersection types add some of that flexibility.
By combining interfaces.
Just add one interface for each method and property :D
 
4:25 PM
@OlleHärstedt That's kind of what Hickey's video was describing.
 
@Crell "Spec-ulation Keynote - Rich Hickey" - this one?
 
He somewhat misrepresents Monads, but the rest of the talk is valid.
 
If very map/associative-array centric, which means I dislike it. :-)
Though, in a way, he's reinventing Go interfaces.
 
Reinventing the wheel is the modus operandi of SE.
 
4:30 PM
Does anyone have experience with installing an extension for multiple versions of PHP at once? Quite a few times customers have upgraded their PHP and then reported our extension doesn't load, or work, etc. If we knew they used --with-layout=GNU, for instance, then we could install for all PHP versions based on the GNU layout, so if they do an in-place upgrade (which has happened multiple times) then it would work. Anyone tried this?
 
mailparse_rfc822_parse_addresses not handling escaped quoted strings properly ・ mailparse ・ #81403
 
4:58 PM
... am I missing something obvious, or is there no one-call way to get either a ReflectionFunction or ReflectionMethod from a passed callable?
yes yes I know 'callable is broken'.
 
rename() does not keep extended file attributes ・ *General Issues ・ #81404
 
cmb
@Stephen Closure::fromCallable($callable)?
 
@cmb that might work for my purposes - getting the return type(s) - but on a more basic level you'd then just be creating a ReflectionFunction, so you wouldn't actually know if it was a method callable or not.
 
5:20 PM
@JoeWatkins Can you review my PHP-8.1 branch on my fork? (https://github.com/patrickallaert/php-src/commits/PHP-8.1)
As well as this commit (https://github.com/patrickallaert/php-src/commit/1c33ddb5e5598c5385c4c965992c6e031fd00dd6) that prepares master for 8.2?
 
I think the month and day are supposed to be reversed in the build numbers
 
oh, really?
 
1009 is old number and 0902/3 is new, I'd stick to the former, in case anyone out there is relying on that for something
 
1009 has "2020" before it
0902/3 ha "2021"
*has
/* The first number is the engine version and the rest is the date (YYYYMMDD).
* This way engine 2/3 API no. is always greater than engine 1 API no.. */
#define ZEND_EXTENSION_API_NO 420210903
 
oh so 8.0 done it wrong then ?
 
5:26 PM
why is it wrong?
 
or because 8 was delayed, I was assuming it was released in september
 
they aren't necessarily the exact date of release
 
okay whatever, lgtm then, ship it ...
 
What I applied:
[4]20210902 for PHP 8.1 branch
[4]20210903 for master (8.2) one
 
that seems reasonable
 
5:28 PM
I believe it just need to be higher for 8.2, by one day, one week, one month... doesn't really matter
 
technically we need to bump them in master any time we change the API :-)
 
too lazy to check: how do you do "make test" with multiple jobs in parallel?
 
add -j4 ?
doubt that works :-)
 
yeah, tried that...
but it something else, and don't see immediately where to look at
 
php run-tests.php -j4 tests
ought to work
 
5:36 PM
@PatrickAllaert make test TESTS="-j4"
 
I use -j40 ;-)
 
TESTS basically is for the run-tests.php options
 
JRL
i wonder what it would take to have a flag that just runs the compiler against some PHP
 
@Derick I can do -j24 on my main Desktop but I'm jelly
 
JRL
or does such a flag exist?
 
5:37 PM
oh, I knew for example: make test TESTS="Zend/tests/first_class_callable_0*.phpt"
didn't know this is where you can "-j xx"
 
TEST 15777/15664 [1/40 concurrent test workers running]
uh? it can't count
 
thanks @Girgias
 
@Derick PDO tests
As they are redirected tests it messes up the counting
 
cmb
@Derick where is PHP 7.4.0beta3? :p
 
Powers of two only
1 - 2 - 4
(I miscounted)
 
5:47 PM
Mhhh, how do we know if next version is 8.2 or 9.0?
 
just guess 8.2
unlikely to be 9.0, I think
 
it was a wild one I did
 
5:58 PM
Yeah we don't really have an official way of announcing a major release, other than, yeah seems about time?
 
@PatrickAllaert TEST_PHP_ARGS is the correct env var for make test, TESTS is meant to be path ...
 
@JoeWatkins huh TIL
 
ok, thanks Joe!
 
6:11 PM
@PatrickAllaert Forgot to merge PHP-8.1 into master?
 
6:43 PM
/me adds 8.1 to heap.space
6
 
@Ekin Thanks!
 
7:22 PM
Wow, the Symfony demo app on PHP 8.1 with JIT is around 38% faster than PHP 7.4 after Dmitry's timelib optimization: github.com/kocsismate/php-version-benchmarks/blob/main/docs/…
 
@MateKocsis awesome
 
8:09 PM
3v4l.org/HDWRu interesting
Would expect that the assignmed would also tell me that
"The first argument should be either a string or an integer"

Regarding 8, silently casts
 
8:37 PM
Maybe I'll start with adding a new keyword hello_world to PHP, and a belonging opcode that just prints "Hello, world".
Then build it from there. :)
Then I can post it on reddit and get that sweet, sweet karma.
 
8:55 PM
@ln-s It's because array_key_exists now follows array key coercion rules, rather than strict mode rules.
 
@JRL Catching up on Reddit, I saw you musing about an enum for Order::Less, Order::Greater, Order::Equals. YES PLEASE HOW CAN I HELP MAKE THAT HAPPEN! (It should probably be its own, smaller RFC.)
 
@brzuchal This all sounds great to me. I've currently got some local work that I haven't pushed yet that extracts metadata from each of the RFCs, converts the Dokuwiki format into RST, and orders them by date
I'll try to push that up soon
 
9:15 PM
@Crell youtube.com/watch?v=jHl5ADYJCjA become speaker of the house.
 
@MateKocsis I see
 
JRL
9:38 PM
@Crell Well, I have a pretty good starting point for what changes would need to be made. It's more the implementation of it that has made me hesitant. It would touch a LOT of things, but that can probably be simplified by being smart with some macros.
 
@JRL My attempts at working on the engine itself have all been abject failures, so I'm likely not much help there. My gut sense is that you would need a macro that checks "if the return value was an enum, read it's ->value and use that", and then stick that into all of the sort function locations. Which is only about a half dozen or so.
 
JRL
@Crell Hmmm. Well, then what would probably help is compiling some of the info that would be needed for the RFC, like what functions need to be updated, and whether a backed enum would be better or worse.
I could (probably) do the implementation while you could work on the research and RFC documentation if you wanted.
 
Writing English and doing logic problems I can do. :-)
 
JRL
first instinct is that a backed enum would be better to provide a BC path
 
9:43 PM
In practice, whether it's backed or not is mainly down to an implementation detail. I think a backed would be easier to implement (see previous macro comment), but if you find otherwise, do that.
 
JRL
or migration path
 
I don't think we'll be removing support for returning an int from a comparison function before PHP 12, so an enum is essentially just a lost constant list, effectively.
 
JRL
right, well, i don't think the implementation would be easier or harder really either way, i think it's a bigger question about what's better for the language itself
right, we'd be introducing the enum now, but i think we could maybe target PHP 9 for switching the spaceship operator
 
My gut sense is that it's a wash. The end user should only ever care about the 3 names, and ignore anything else.
 
JRL
4 names
Ordering::Uncomparable
 
9:45 PM
Ah.
Why would spaceship need to change? I've never used it except to return it from a usort() callback, which is still going to accept integers for basically forever.
 
JRL
oh it doesn't need to change
it would just be the next logical step if what we wanted was to push the use of this enum over integer representations
as in, move the language in that direction
 
Eh, I guess. It shouldn't hurt anything, but I don't see much value to it, either. Unless the internal engine logic changes to use the enums and upcast the integer versions to that, which I don't think is necessary. (But then, I've not seen that part of the engine.)
 
JRL
then for the operator overloads i'm also goign to take that other suggestion of having the left/right be an enum instead of bool
 
@JRL I support that as well. I'm actually disappointed in myself for not thinking of that, given that I've made that precise point before in presentations. :-)
 
JRL
it'll almost certainly be less performant to use enums for ordering unless it was the ONLY want ordering was done
only way*
some of the optimizations that could make it very fast would be hard to do while both are supported (enum and int)
 
9:49 PM
@JRL Right, which is why my thinking is to keep the engine working on the int flags, and just provide a backed enum as a nice readability sugar for when you're not using <=>.
 
JRL
but im also still a noob at the engine
yeah. that should just be mentioned in future scope probably.
 
Basically, a macro that does the C equivalent of

if ($ret instanceof Ordering) $ret = $ret->value;
 
JRL
might also want to chat with @LeviMorrison about it, since he mentioned this to me as part of the operator overloads as far back as 2 or 3 weeks ago.
might have some ideas
 
@Danack As usual, there's a lack of info of how it works for PHP.
 
Perhaps Mevi Lorrison could sign up for an account.
 
9:56 PM
@Danack I'm not very familiar with EBPF, but don't see how they can use that for PHP, but that's the only detail I could find on how they were doing things at a technical level.
 
@ramsey The timelib upgrade was a bug fix and a small performance enhancement. Just bug fixes, that never had, and shouldn't have interference by RMs, and definitely not by Pierre.
 
@Derick Did it get into the 8.1 branch?
 
@MateKocsis lolwat? :-)
@ramsey Yes.
 
@Derick Awesome! Just making sure, since it sounded like you were only merging to master
 
It was merged before you made PHP-8.1 branch.
 
9:57 PM
Got it
 
So, yes... it was only merged into master :-)
 
:-)
 
Seriously, that email from Pierre ticked me off.
 
I didn't know what he was talking about through half of it, and I wasn't sure why he was saying "it is late in the run to include it"
 
Maybe if --enable-dtrace is on then eBPF can hook into those.
 
10:00 PM
@ramsey Because he wasn't making any sense.
 
JRL
hey @NikiC which file would be the correct one to add a new internal enum to? zend_enum.c?
 
Condescending: Such improvements are more than welcome, especially for such obvious patch.

Can't happen, it's in the standard: One could argue that the length of the data may change in the
future but it can be increase then, or a macro can define it easily.

It's a bug fix, and you (Pierre) don't get to decided anything: It is late in the run to include it, but if RMs are OK, I would be all for applying it.

Work's been done continuously over the last years: The lib is bundled and whether the external repository applies it should not be relevant at this point (also no activity in 2 years t
 
@JRL I would guess zend_enums.{h,c} (plural) similar to zend_interfaces.h?
 
JRL
right, i just don't see a function in those files that actually gets executed during the engine initialization
maybe actually in the same place tha tinternal classes are registered
 
@JRL I'd stick it in zend_builtin_functions.stub.php or zend_enum.stub.php if nothing else fits right now
 
10:12 PM
Ah, the ebpf API does support the DTRACE_PROBEs. Neat.
 

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