What about: 1. Push out meh code to deliver some value. 2. Learn about the value we thought was there, and push out meh code to increase the value. 3. Repeat 2 until value is maximized. 4. Move on to next value add. 5. When you get too slow, use the value you shipped in 1-4 to hire a team to worry about it. 6. Repeat
@ircmaxell 5 years, 3 years, 1 year, 2 years, 2 years, 3 years so far... You must be happy with what you're doing or getting paid a lot for it. Hopefully both.
@Crell I'm 16 years and 2 months with my current job. I have changed roles a number of times. I have a Vice President opportunity coming up next that I believe I am in line for... time will tell.
@Crell You "may" be in same boat as me in one aspect... maybe not. The longer I am at this job, titles change but I don't always completely shift roles. Sometimes I just end up picking up more responsibilities that I tow behind me on my journey.
@MarkR I finally got Director (current) after 14.5 years.
@MarkR ...and maybe. Maybe not. I'm actually in a good spot right now. The problem is if I don't take the next opportunity then they could hire someone that I don't like the direction of which would make this job bad... so I will probably take it so I can control my own destiny.
I can really recommend saying "yes", I believe being able to discuss my RFC with Derick helped polishing it and uncovering some of the remaining issues and points I didn't think about. Of course that works better if the RFC is not yet in voting.
@Derick I'm debugging why PhpStorm is not stoping at breakpoints while running phpunit in a docker container. Does <response xmlns="urn:debugger_protocol_v1" xmlns:xdebug="https://xdebug.org/dbgp/xdebug" command="breakpoint_set" transaction_id="8" id="10001" resolved="unresolved"></response> imply the breakpoint wasn't set? There's then thousands of debug messages afterward checking if at that breakpoint.
Seems when the breakpoint is hit there are requests to get the stack and context afterward.
Does being able to trigger "Warning: Leaked XXX hashtable iterators in Unknown on line 0" qualify as a security bug or can this be reported in the regular bug tracker? It's not a leaking on a C language level, but I don't know whether this might allow for other shenanigans such as memory corruption.
What did you mean by "There's then thousands of debug messages afterward checking if at that breakpoint." though? It's not parsable English :-)
Is that with log_level=10 perhaps? Because then you get a lot of debug messages. But if a breakpoint is not resolved, it shouldn't try to match it against the current file/line.
But if you say it does eventually get resolved, then I don't udnerstand the problem. Is there actual code on the line? Is opcache enabled with optimisations? JIT on?
so er, when an extension is almost certainly present in the ext/ file, that the extension_dir command is set to the right folder, that all other extensions do load, hinting to the fact that the config is generally correct, that to the best of one's abilities, it has been confirmed that we've chosen the correct thread safety dll files to add, what is next in terms of making php recognize an extension?
that is, the extension is enabled in the ini file, the file is in the folder, it's not recognized when we run php whatever
> PHP Warning: PHP Startup: Unable to load dynamic library 'decimal' (tried: C:\tools\php80.18-ts\ext\decimal (The specified module could not be found), C:\tools\php80.18-ts\ext\php_decimal.dll (The specified module could not be found)) in Unknown on line 0
there is a file at C:\tools\php80.18-ts\ext\php_decimal.dll
yeah. it's a bit over my head, I think I understand that even if the file exists, php will look at some specific "stucture" inside any dll file? is there a way to get a more specific error message than "The specified module could not be found"?
@ircmaxell fyi: pushed my current progress to ffime
The question is now, how accurrate the translation needs to be I think. Like operations on a short obviously have two's complement overflowing. Integer divisions in C always result in integers. If a stack value is taken by ref - unwrapping it immediately after the call means that changes to the pointer would not be respected etc.
the actual clean way probably is always using a CData object for each declared C variable… aggressively casting after integer operations
uint64_t has probably shortcomings when doing e.g. divisions
There might be problems when having an int32_t and then doing bitwise operations with (1 << 31) on it.
But I think that sort of correctness can be ignored for now (the last two sentences I mean)