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13:00
@Gordon You'd have to crawl the review ids - I'd assume knowing the current max is a good starting point to crawl for new ones though.
@Gordon You mean you get paid for /review? ;)
@Leigh Is it really review id instead of q id?
Yep, it's independent of question id
yep looks like it
:(
@PeeHaa well, there is a ladder for reviewers and it gets you badges
Didn't know about the ladder
13:13
Well, cursory glance, it uses CSRF and an ajax call to load the content, so crawling tasks to find the latest on the list (to subsequently find your latest close) is a bit more complex than just incrementing the id
@PeeHaa Problem is that the id in the URL slug is not the question ID, and the stack API doesn't provide any access to review stuff, that I can see. It would theoretically be doable to the fetch the review page and parse the question ID from it as long as the browser extension architecture allows you ignore access control like that - although I have a horrible feeling you'd have to <shudder> regex for the URL.
@Gordon luckily I'm already Steward with suggested edits, because those tend to run out.
@DaveRandom Yeah. Just noticed
@DaveRandom Dave, it'd be better done with an "anonymous" crawler, you don't want them analysing logs and banning you ;) - You need to do one full request to a review page, extract the "fkey" from the embedded json, then use that to access the ajax scripts via posts until you get to your desired review
if you always know the current maximum review number, and you initiate the close vote, you should be able to find the new one quite quickly
@Leigh In a weird, slightly convoluted way actually you've just given me and idea. You could run another script within the extension on the review page, and hook into the close button click event, extract the URL from the currently viewed page and bounce it through local storage.
I think
I will have a play
Que?
That will only work for things you are reviewing, not new closures.
13:36
Hang on, can we define in English what the end goal is here? Is it to relay posts you are reviewing (as in, the current user is looking at the review page) into cv requests, or is it to actually pull all cv requests out of review? Because if the latter I think the room would be filled with nothing but cv requests very quickly...
Well, I just did a test proper, I found the latest review id, I clicked close on a question, then advanced to the next latest. Question not present
@DaveRandom It was to turn cv-pls into the related review link, so you could get credit for reviewing
but the review ids are not question ids
stackoverflow.com/review-beta/close/753510 bingo - that was one I just hit close on, it's delayed
@Gordon that will probably break the backlog? :x
@Leigh Oh right. Hmm... that is going to be difficult without getting booted I suspect, it requires properly crawling the site. Unless there's a feed?
No feed that I can see :/
Crawling is not a problem ;) thats why one of my servers has 8 copies of TOR running ;)
It's a question of.. is it really worth it?
@Leigh nope. link wont be considered. the crawler currently checks for tag + link in a certain format
so i'd have to change that first before those show up in the cv backlog
Got some brute forcing stats done...
## Brute Forcing - Perspective
* *All* 6 Char Passwords (md5):
    * CPU: 5 Hours
    * GPU: 45 Seconds
* *All* 7 Char Passwords (md5):
    * CPU: 22 Days
    * GPU: 1 Hour 12 Minutes
* Entire English Language (all cases)
    * CPU: 0.166 Seconds
    * GPU: 0.000365 Seconds
## "Strong Passwords":
* "correct horse battery staple" (md5):
    * CPU: 80 Years
    * GPU: 64 Days
* *All* 10 Char Passwords (md5):
    * CPU: 51755 Years
    * GPU: 113 Years
* *All* 26 Char Passwords (md5):
    * GPU: 4e33 Years
        * 300,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
        * Times The Age Of the Universe
## Brute Focing Bcrypt:
* All 6 Char Passwords:
    * CPU: 243 Years, EC2: 7 Years
* All 7 Char Passwords:
    * CPU: 22k Years, EC2: 642 Years
* Entire English Language (all cases)
    * CPU: 11 Hours, EC2: 20 Minutes
* "correct horse battery staple":
    * CPU: 29B Years, EC2: 827M Years
* All 26 Char Passwords:
    * CPU: 7e41 Years, 2e40 Years
13:46
@ircmaxell You brute forced the entire english language? O_o that doesn't really make much sense to me :)
@ircmaxell didnt you say you have a daytime job? ;)
;-)
@Leigh dictionary attack
That makes more sense
"password", "Password", "pAssword", "PAssword", etc...
You used OpenCL for your GPU stuff?
13:48
@ircmaxell The Brute "Focing" Bcrypt section, which load factor does it use?
And 11 hours to dictionary crack isn't that long :/
but proves the point that you should mix up your passwords with symbols, letters, etc
@NikiC 10
@ircmaxell And with 10 it took only 11 hours?
@Leigh Well, it proves that you still shouldn't use stupid weak passwords, but even with a seemingly weak 6 char password, it's pretty safe...
I may have screwed up the analysis...
It seems like very low
How many words does the english language have?
13:51
60k english language words. average word length is 6, therefore there are 60k * 2^6 permutations...
@ircmaxell Oh, so it was dictionary up to 6 chars?
@Leigh no, meaning that a non-dictionary 6 char password is still pretty safe...
actually, that's not right, because i need to use the RMS length, not the mean length
@Leigh Well we'd need someone to donate a server for the crawler (which probably wouldn't be that bad) but there's a lot of JS that make that whole thing work - and since it's current still officially /review-beta I think that if we were going to attempt it it would be best to at least wait until it's no longer a moving target. I also think that the whole is already a bone of contention, so we should play within the rules.
@DaveRandom Pretty much what I was hoping to get as a response, when I said "is it worth it". My opinion was already "no, it is not" :)
13:54
@ircmaxell How are tehre 60k * 2^6 permutations?
60k words, 2^6 permutations of each word (on average)
Based on upper/lower case (for the 2)
60k words I get, why 2^6 permutations of each word?
each letter can be lower or upper case
actually, it should be RMS, in which case it'll be 2^10
13:58
@Leigh It would be an interesting technical exercise, but I tend to agree with "no, it is not"
Oh, okay, but a rainbow table can easily contain all english words and all permutations of them
@MadaraUchiha You're not really going to rainbow table bcrypt - due to the salt, if you're generating a table, you might as well be brute forcing instead
Also take note that some words can be too long or too short to be put in a password
@MadaraUchiha No, this has nothing to do with a rainbow table
and that's not how rainbow tables work anyway
I meant a brute force attack
I'm seeing rainbows everywhere lately :(
14:01
You <3 unicorns
For MD5, that raises it to:
* Entire English Language (all cases)
    * CPU: 1.8 Seconds
    * GPU: 0.004 Seconds
and Bcrypt:
* Entire English Language (all cases)
    * CPU: 8 Days, EC2: 5 Hours
It's still not that secure (of course it depends on what's on the other side of that password)
That's why my password is and always will be ************ :D
That's the point. A dictionary password will always be insecure. But for bcrypt, something simple like passw0rd will actually take a retarted long time to crack...
Or more recently: ••••••••••••
@ircmaxell That's why you don't use a dictionary to generate a password
I think I saw a blog post recently that claimed using words from a Dictionary is fine as long as you dont use just one word but a phrase. it took longer to crack than a mishmash of chars, including special chars. cant recall the url though.
@Gordon xkcd.com/936 ? :)
Well, based on my analysis, that's wrong
because it doesn't have 2^44 bits of entropy
@tereško you might want to inform the guy about ext/mysql: stackoverflow.com/questions/12729113/…
@cHao ah yes. it wasnt a blog post. it was an xkcd :D
@ircmaxell Well, but you would have that 60k^4*6^2 permutations :)
there are only about 17k "common" words. So if you take random permutations of that, it's approximately 17000^4 combinations (8e16). Which is less than a random 10 char password at 94^10 (5e19)
@MadaraUchiha the average college graduate only knows 17k words...
and 17k is assuming perfect randomness
14:11
94?
in reality, people aren't going to pick that well. For example, "search searching searched searches" is 100% valid, but someone won't pick it because it "feels" wrong...
There are 94 characters on the keyboard?
a-zA-Z0-9 = 36
but you also have to take into account that someone might use those random 10 char passwords.
~!@#$%^&*()_+ = 13
@ircmaxell Read the mouseover text.
14:12
@MadaraUchiha No, a-z=26. a-zA-Z0-9 = 62
meaning you can't just check dictionary words.
Right
That's still not 94
That's 75
No, because there are far more special chars that exist than that
There are well over 10,000 characters
Doesn't mean you can (or will) use any of them
14:13
`~!@#$%^&*()_+-={}[]|\;:'",<.>/?
that's 32 right there
☟♀※}®✄∞◑±✖»❤♦♣♠↑
Easily typeable on an english keyboard
Can be a valid password as well, but you likely won't use any of these characters
Which is why I chose all characters that can be typed directly from a keyboard
14:14
@ircmaxell Aight, looks ok
@Gordon I did it based upon studies...
@ircmaxell However, which is more easily rememberable?
That's also a factor that your users will consider
Eih...
I'm not saying not to do it. I'm just saying to say it's stronger than a 10 character password is flat out false. And to say it's as strong as it he does REALLY depends upon the 4 words being truely random (which we humans suck at picking)
@ircmaxell Well, that's why they made the dictionaries :D
@Gordon Your total vocabulary size is estimated to be: 27,800 words
German girlfriend got 15100
14:21
@Leigh :)
I blame a lot of the obscure ones I know on watching old TV shows (like blackadder), and playing RPGs
Your total vocabulary size is estimated to be: 28,500 words
Most of the ones towards the end were especially french looking. I expect I pronounced them in my head completely differently to how they are supposed to be.
@ircmaxell œ∑´®†¥¨^øπåß∂ƒ©˙∆˚¬`Ω≈ç√∫~µ all easily typable on a Mac keyboard (and that was just a mash while holding alt)
@Gordon I've seen that, too. It's one us-american-guy, promoted that on tv as well. rules do exist for that pattern, works well to creak easily.
can not suggest to follow that pattern.
14:32
@hakre no, it actually really was the xkcd :)
@Gordon okay, I might fetch that other guy then
@Leigh eih
crap lost the login, need to go to office first. will take its time.
14:50
$windowsXPHome === $biggestPileOfShitEverCreated
that's saying something
@ircmaxell, so when will you start implementing SHA3 into PHP core? :)
yeah...i mean, you're including WinME in the piles of shit it's worse than... :)
Someone else is already implementing it
Just transplanted an HDD out of a dead laptop into an identical model and it's instant BSoD. Do the same thing with an XP Pro install from completely different hardware (which I just did as a sanity check) and it boots, no questions asked, just moans about drivers.
14:54
Am I just not getting internals mails or something?
I would just chuck it on a skip but it has some bit of software on it for which (predictably) the owner does not have a disk and the software company will not provide without paying them £500
No, there are no mails on internals lately
I know someone else is implementing it because we talked about it yesterday
I'm behind, catching up on yesterdays news at the minute :/
Sup guys
How's every little thing?
I quit my job, am currently serving my notice and am therefore in "don't give a shit" mode.
"serving my notice" ?
15:05
@GordonM You should make sure every line of code you write contains eval()
That would be an improvement :)
I'm currently completing the vital priority 1 project of "watch as many videos on youtube of cats falling in water as possible"
hello people... my php script works fine on my localhost but its giving me this errror "GET pakhoklohan.com/uploads/5/19.jpg 403 (Forbidden)" when I run it on my server
@PeeHaa Yeah. As in "I'm resigning, as per the terms of my contract I'll serve a 4 week notice period"
@GordonM Ah right
You already got another job?
@JesusAdolfo Server problem, not a coding problem, contact the server administrator
(probably)
15:10
@PeeHaa Natch.
15:35
I'm bored
@NikiC implement runtime applyable traits
@NikiC Come help the hamster on the wheel that's powering the computer I'm trying to fix, maybe it will take less than 15 years to do anything that I ask it to.
Implement Mixins
What PHP has now are not traits
implement Scala Traits
Oh, you're still using FTP? Do you wanna borrow my 300 baud modem for that?
That if statement will always be true. Because both != 'on' and != 'off' can never be false at the same time. Therefore, your if becomes a tautology... — ircmaxell 9 secs ago
@TimPost please have a look at stackoverflow.com/users/1678517/bugmenot. Username hints at shared account from bugmenot.com/view/stackoverflow.com. Not sure what the policy on those is.
ah, I'll just flag the guy
hakra is back
@hakre since yesterday already
was in here for some time but iirc he was "tame"
@Gordon just spotted her/him and needed to ask if he didn't want to delete the account.
I thought you wanted to see your account deleted. — hakre 2 mins ago
15:52
@hakre chat list says he's in here atm. not saying you should ask though.
we need real traits in PHP.
@NikiC get going ;)
@NikiC Get a beer and a pizza and watch Season 5 of Breaking Bad...
(assuming you watched the first 4, which you should have)
Go read the Dark Tower series...
I'm up to book 3...
@Leigh Incidentally I started Breaking Bad recently
@NikiC That's not incidental, that's exactly the point!
And I'm watching rather a lot of it ^^
I blame Breaking Bad for making me so unproductive ^^
16:08
I'm afraid to touch it for exactly that reason...
@NikiC ok, so, beer and pizza, unbored yourself, then go build me a meth lab.
I was that way with Arrested Development
tbh Breaking Bad is not that good, but there is just some quality that makes you want to keep watching it.. it is, itself like meth.
My ultimate expression of boredom: github.com/nikic/Phlexy/blob/master/examples/…
I plan to watch Continuum shortly, has good reviews
16:12
Though I wrote that two months ago, so it's not directly related :/
@NikiC Do you know FORTH?
yes
well, don't go and learn that for fun then.
Recently read about it in a blog post on using C as an intermediate language for compilation
Oh, when I said "know". I meant can you use it, not have you heard of it :)
Annnnnnd my first answer on SO with 100 votes:
101
A: define() vs const

NikiCAs of PHP 5.3 there are two ways to define constants: Either using the const keyword or using the define() function: const FOO = 'BAR'; define('FOO', 'BAR'); The fundamental difference between those two ways is that const defines constants at compile time, whereas define defines them at run ti...

Well done :)
@NikiC "do you prefer to do and why" is not constructive
@NikiC congrats, never made it ;)
16:23
Same here :(
@NikiC: Don't you want to add grammar and AST to your Phlexy ? :D
Will get there sometimes <sub>hopefully</sub>
@NikiC rephrased wording. Now it's constructive
hello @hakre sorry for last time ..... stackoverflow.com/questions/12730787/…
@hakre It's called Phlexy... :P
grammar and AST are Pharsy :)
16:28
yes and not Phastatstic
@hakra I want to understand though, what made you choose this specific nickname?
Phastgrammary
I like Ph...y names :)
its not about the user @hakre .. i have shorten the "har karma" means evey task/work ---hakra
@NikiC Should really ping the guy to get the accepted answer changed.
well, someone other than you should :p
16:33
@NikiC I know, they are PhuckingSexy
stackoverflow.com/q/12731721/367456 probably as not constructive?
evening
Woop SO chat on my mobile as I walk to the bus stop
@ircmaxell have a nice flight, see you at the weekend for a beer or two.
definitely
16:48
can someone help me out here: stackoverflow.com/questions/12731687/…
@hakre thanks
@ircmaxell -1 we might be borg on our way for world domination but I think we are a gentle bunch, not a mad world eating elephpant
I thought it was funny
@ircmaxell or im just not aggressive enough ;)
@ircmaxell what does the elephant when the world is over? I mean 4-5 more bytes and gone.
Jupiter?
16:59
First the world. Then, the Universe!
If you see four black holes fighting with an elephant. which color has the elephant?
so can anyone help me fix my problem in my post?
@hakre depends on the arrangement of the holes. It could be black, or white...
Morals of the story: 1. Drupal will look like Drupal for a long time. 2. Haters going to hate. 3. Don't ask for help on Tiwtter.
@chx And that embodies my complaints about the designs of D8. Singleton methods? Global State? Same problems all over again...
What ? But we already added symfony , and you say is not good enough! Alrigth , D9 will be with Zend AND Symfony.
@ircmaxell it's such a pity. dependency injection is not that hard. they should be able to introduce some seams at least.
that was the point
@ircmaxell @chx Big ships turn slowly. It's improving bit by bit. I wish it were faster but there are only so many of us skilled in full DI.
I like how he says "only so many of us skilled in full DI"
He makes it sound like passing parameters to methods is hard
@NikiC dependency injection is hard, if you can only think "in globals"
LOL
3
A: T_Double_Arrow PHP Syntax Error

Ignacio Vazquez-AbramsYou accidentally the array declaration. $args = array( 'post_type' => array('post', 'showcase'), 'paged' => $paged );

@NikiC The concept isn't easily grasped.
I know it was one of my Ah-Ha! moments when I figured that out.
0
Q: HTML/PHP File Upload AJAX+Fancybox

Michael BennetonSo I have an upload feature on my website. So in my main page, the html looks like this: <iframe class="iframe" name="my_iframe" src="upload_file.php" style="display:none;"></iframe> <form id="uploadForm" action="upload_file.php" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data" target=...

@Gordon SO is not a crowd-sourced debugging tool
ircmaxell: Fabianx: Singleton method instead of using DI
chx: ircmaxell: that has been fixed already
Fabianx: ircmaxell: But isn't DIC implementing Singleton pattern?
17:21
well, the service locator in symfony2 (sadly) comes close
@SomeKittens Hi
Haven't seen you in a long time.
user895378
@hakre I know you've had input on dealing with gzip stream wrappers previously. Considering the contents of this answer on the subject, can I successfully inflate a gzip stream (holding a Content-Encoding: gzip http response entity body) by checking that the first two bytes match the gzip prefix and then building up the adler checksum manually? The goal obviously being to avoid buffering the entire stream in memory at once.
user895378
Or if you're not sure, that's fine too -- just hoping you might have some input :)
user895378
@ircmaxell Is that legit? This is sad.
17:33
yes
1
Q: Aligning large text and small text that includes a line break in HTML

jbeard4I'm currently slicing Illustrator assets from our graphic designer into HTML, and there is one part of the design which I'm not sure how best to represent: It's not too hard to imagine using table-based layout for this, e.g. <table> <tr> <td>TDC <br/> CHANNEL<...

@Alec hey. Yeah, I've been on and off
@rdlowrey I'm actually ill and having a cold. but I think it's possible, you need to have some flag so you can remove the first 2 bytes and the checksum at the end then. you can stack stream filters BTW.
it would be great to see a current version of this working on github in a repository with tests!
user895378
@hakre Sorry about the illness -- tough luck :( Yeah, I think I'm going to work on doing just that in the near future.
@SomeKittens I've been working on a new website and I need some advice on SEO, could I convince you to enter a private chat w/ me?
user895378
17:38
And now I get to read and understand RFC 1952 (gzip file format). Oh, joy.
@rdlowrey well maybe we get a stream filter into core, too.
I mean that is still missing, right?
user895378
@hakre Yup -- it's still missing. It's really annoying because gzip has totally overtaken DEFLATE as the most ubiquitous Content-Encoding: type in http messages.
@rdlowrey probably it's not used/needed if you compile in curl for HTTP stream wrappers
user895378
Yeah, most people "just use the cURL bindings," but if you want to use sockets having a gzip filter would be extremely helpful.
that is true. why don't we have one then is the question.
user895378
17:45
Hopefully I can get around to it sooner rather than later.
17:57
@Alec I don't know anything about SEO
Oh, I thought you did.
Nevermind then.
Yeah, sorry.
@Alec I know a bit about SEO, do you happen to know about vbscript?? :D
I'm still fairly noobish, as evidenced by:stackoverflow.com/questions/12681028/…
@AndyPerlitch Sorry but I don't.
17:58
crap
I got the domain name periodictable.me for $16, I made a online periodic table. It's rather ugly but it works. Trying to get it on the first page of Google for the keyword "periodic table". I'm failing horribly.
How long has it been?
I bought it because there's a daily google 'trend' for periodic table, 50k+ searches.
About two weeks.
@SomeKittens Thanks, I'll check it out.
18:03
I haven't read much of his blog, but what I have read is good. I haven't read that article yet.
SEO is a scam
5
@Alec , yes , it is extremely ugly , which is why people are not using it
and if people are not using it and linking to it , google does not care about it
@Alec you should focus on making it better, instead of trying to get permanently banned by google because of spamming the engine
@tereško I don't really see how I'm "spamming the engine", however yes I am going to work on making it better.
18:39
two weeks isn't really long enough to legitimately get something on the first page of google, is it?
@cHao depends on the search terms
19:06
well normally you get a bonus for just nowadays, so it's the question if you could hold it two week long.
@cHao To be fair, often you find a question on SO thats <1hour old, and you google the subject matter and the first result is already that question.
...and evening all
19:33
I can't really chat about this until tomorrow, but if anyone has a few minutes to throw some text at this question, I would really appreciate it. stackoverflow.com/questions/12719730/…
19:51
@Stephane +1
@DaveRandom SO is a bit different...it's been around for a while now and has gobs of content, and apparently some serious google juice along with it. But a new site? ain't gonna happen
rad
rad
20:18
hi guys
can anyone please tell me the regex to capture the name from this string?
Robert Marinaro</00570000001qGYP>
I did: /(\w+)<\//
it just captured "Marinaro" :(
and I did it
/(\w+)\s(\w+)<\//
I am so awesome! 8-)
and I refined it
/(\w+\s\w+)<\//
I am even more awesome! 8-)
XD
@DaveRandom hiya
@rad Seems fine. You may want:
/((?:(\w+)\s?)+)<\/.../
To capture more complicated names
Eg. Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore
rad
rad
@MadaraUchiha looks scary :(
let me try
Never read Harry Potter?
Oh, you meant the regex :D
rad
rad
not a fan
yeah, lol
works like a charm
you are awesome too! join the club 8-)
20:30
@rad This one is better: ~((?:\w+\s?)+)</.+>~
Basically the same, only cleaner
rad
rad
oh my
~
(               #Capturing Group: The name
    (?:         #None capturing group: Each word
        \w+     #One or more letters
        \s?     #Space (maybe?)
    )+          #One or more of those (words)
)
</.+>           #Rest of string
~x
With some explaining :)
rad
rad
well, again, works like a charm :)
thanks man!
woops, it broke for this string: Paola Cevallos-Hrasar</00570000001qGYP>
its got that hiphen in it
@PeeHaa Sorry was thoroughly distracted by new Red Dwarf. Which was predictably disappointing. But better than VIII.
rad
rad
@MadaraUchiha how do we get it to support a hiphen?
20:41
@rad Hold on
~((?:[\w.-]+\s?)+)</.+>~
Threw in a period too
rad
rad
@MadaraUchiha I attempted to modify your earlier version of the regex and got this working: /((?:(\w+)(\s|-)?)+)<\/.../
awesome!
@rad why not ^([^<]+) ?
it'll group everything up to the first <
rad
rad
@cHao wow
don't even really need the parens, really
what it matches will be $matches[0]
so, ^[^<]+
wrap that in delimiters, of course :)
Oh, and whoever is doing it, please don't star-spam
20:50
@NikiC huh?
Sorry, I meant star-spam ;)
@cHao Meh, depending if you want to validate it on the way or not
Somebody was starring the regex answers ;)
ahh
I usually do, so my pattern also validates there are words and spaces there
rad
rad
20:52
@NikiC that was me, I starred it because I liked those regexes
sorry about that
@MadaraUchiha not as well as you might think. \w doesn't match non-ASCII letters, last i checked
That's true, you'll need to make a character class for that.
But it works well for English only names.
in the us, english-only is broken :)
and hell..if it's broken here, it's probabl broken everywhere

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