Is the runtime_cache for user functions allocated proximate to anything, like the function itself? Or is it pretty much whatever is free next in the zend allocator?
I don't know. I'm soon going to start printing addresses in a debugger, if I can get this code worked out ^_^
If it's near or part of the op_array of the function, that would be fantastic. It would be more likely to be in CPU cache, and which makes sense, given its name, but you never know.
I'm faily sure it is as there is some weird ass bug that if you are in a namespace and call a function that doesn't exist in it but in the global namespace, and then define it with eval, the runtime cache will continue to call the global one
@LeviMorrison Nothing to be said about that at all. It might be near when there's just been an inclusion and that function is called immediately. It might be very far when a function is called first at the end of the process. And don't even get me started on opcache :-)
Maybe one day I'll implement some APIs to allow extensions to store things in opcache alongside the functions, and to "re-link" these when loaded from shared memory. Could be a nice caching strategy for a variety of things.
@Tiffany Apparently, "9% of the UK's GDP is generated by tourism" so yes, there are 'a few' souvenir shops. Though tea-towels can also make good gifts if that's what you're looking for.
I just had the horrible realisation that the JSON api I am using was originally built for XML and rather than create a native JSON version, they're obviously generating XML and then converting it to JSON, and anything that looks like an int is getting converted to one... leading to "09" and 10 as days with different types. RIP auto hydration of DTOs