I added the opcode for ZEND_IS_LARGER and ZEND_IS_LARGER_OR_EQUAL, and the JIT for ARM64 has assembly optimizations for all the ZEND_AST_BINARY_OP opcodes, which I didn't add
@JRL just turn JIT off. tbh the PR's for RFCs don't need to be absolutely complete, and don't need opcache or stuff to be done, otherwise only 2.5 people would be able to do any RFCs.
well if this is a problem that can be solved during stabilization by someone more equipped that would be better, but i cringe at the idea of just dumping two new opcodes on the RMs for 8.2
it'll fail all the builds on travis until it's resolved though
well, on all the CI pipelines
actually... i think JIT would still screw up this RFC even if i did parser magic
I'm thinking about nominating this year as well, but not sure if i have the time, need to see if my employer will pay me for it, if so, i will definitely go for it
i find hilarious that in phpstorm, writing new stdClass and Alt+Enter autocompletes in new \stdClass
obviously writing "\" is a lot more effort than hitting "Alt+Enter"
so like people that liked new \stdClass() already wrote that without phpstorm's help. but I'd like to have use stdClass; and i still have no autocompletion for that
also the use of non fully qualified symbols (ie fallback to root scope) is still not an inspection
@SaifEddinGmati that's not it, I know that, was trying with the simplest command to localise the issue, dunno which bundle does something that it takes 5m
IIRC, "mock" is also available in some other distro (debian), some build RPM there using it (but don't know if provided configuration are updated for recent versions)
is proc_open really the only way to execute subsequent shell commands from within another shell, such as mysql -uroot -pwhatever then a bunch of source some_file.sql and various alter stuff?
I am confused by this line. $this->assertInstanceOf(ProcessOutputStream::class, $process->getStdin()); I would expect something named getStdin to return a ProcessInputStream::class instance? Is there some kind of inverted design around child / parent process' input and output I don't know about?
@kelunik i think so, maybe v3 is a good chance to do it, but might wanna keep the old ones there as well for BC ( but agian, the next major of Amphp has too many BC breaks, so interface name change is not that major ).
So if I understand correctly, the idea is to rename ProcessOutputStream to WritableStream so that eg heregetStdin() would return a WritableStream (and its stdout/readable counterpart)? Can I open a PR for that? Is it too trivial? What would it branch from?
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier should be done in v3 branch of amp/byte-stream, and all packages using v3 ( there's a branch for every package using the new revolt event loop ), needs to be updated as well, including amp/process v3 branch ( a PR to amp/byte-stream v3 is a good start )
@Trowski meh, imo. Even for common stuff like 'Request', if someone is only importing one version of that into their code, then the short version is fine. If someone is importing two things that are named the same into their code, then they can alias it themselves:
use Amp\Http\Request as HttpRequest;
use Foo\Bar\Request as BarRequest;
for PHP storm you can use the context! if you type "PISReadHandleInterface" it will show you Psl\IO\Stream\ReadHandleInterface, while there's Psl\IO\ReadHandleInterface, and Psl\File\ReadHandleInterface
the latter won't be show as options, since they don't match PIS
hey @Danack i know you were saying to just start over with the RFC doc, but i'm at least trimming/reorganizing first so that i have an outline of researched info to pull from. i'm curious what oyu think of the current organization.
I know I'm a bit opinionated about how to phrase RFCs, but there's both structural and phrasing issues that make it really hard to give individual bits of advice to make it better. Just a tiny examples Binary Operator Methods would probably be read by most internals contributors as operators that do binary stuff, and not as operators which operate on two operands......
@JRL fair enough, I will do a rough draft that might be a better starting place.
@JRL one thing, any particular feeling on why InvalidOperator doesn't end in Error? Which appears to be the standard used in core. Also, wouldn't it make more sense to extend TypeError, as it's a kind of TypeError, and is possibly a smaller BC break.
@Danack I didn't see it as a form of type error, though I guess I can see the argument. the lack of Error at the end of the name is purely arbitrary, so I'm happy to add that as well. InvalidOperatorError will tend to signify that the method is unimplemented, not that a type mismatch occurred, which is why I didn't see it extending TypeError.
On the other hand, a PHP dev may see it as signifying that that type Foo\Bar\SomeClass produces a type error with that operator.
so i can see the argument, that's just why i didn't think of it on my own.
@Danack Stuff like this is valuable insight for me. I titled that section Binary Operator Methods since in internals those are all some form of ZEND_AST_BINARY_OP
@JRL Why does function __compareTo(mixed $other): int; have that signature and then do * -1 when it's the right operand, rather than function __compareTo(mixed $other, bool $left): int; ?
to prevent PHP devs from implementing different comparison logic depending on which side its on. By doing * -1, no matter what the implementation is from the PHP, the >, >=, ==, <=, < comparisons are all guaranteed to be consistent regardless of whether the operand is on the left or right side.
this avoids situations where both $obj1 > 5 and 5 > $obj1 can return true
@Trowski did revolt drivers at some point call Driver::run() when they where being destructed? cause i have to call run() manually now, but it didn't need to do this before 🤔 i could be mistaken ( see: github.com/azjezz/psl/commit/… )
@Danack Both of those 'completely different strings' are urls with which the current page is accessible(via different domains), but at this point I'm dealing with a variable with a type of string where either one should have been copied. Somehow they both have been? It's all very strange
anyone can explain what is happening in the loop here? the number being added should be great enough to be seen, regardless of the loss in precision that floats have at that range.