@Tiffany Meanwhile we have 16 year olds arrested for cutting down famous trees with chainsaws bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-66957589 ... so I'd say society ain't looking great
I was investigating a performance issue in a third-party library when encoding data as JSON, and looking at json_encode I found some nice optimisations. However, there's something where I really don't quite understand what it does. Is there somebody here that could explain ZEND_BIT_TEST and specifically its use in php_json_escape_string (see github.com/php/php-src/blob/master/ext/json/…) to me?
@alcaeus My suspicion was that it checks for ASCII characters which do not need special handling and can simply be emitted and the commit taken from git blame seems to confirm this: github.com/php/php-src/commit/…
Though why exactly this works is beyond me as well :-)
@TimWolla yep, that's pretty much how far I got. I could tell what it does, but I don't understand it enough to sanity-check my adapted implementation of the algorithm. In my implementation, the assertion in github.com/php/php-src/blob/… trips, which makes no sense to me...
I removed some cases in that switch since we don't need to escape them, and re-adding them fixes the issue. I still haven't quite figured out how the bit masks play into this and what change this needs.
I tracked the optimisation down to this commit: github.com/php/php-src/commit/…. Now I just have to figure out what Dmitry was thinking 6 years ago. I better do this in silence before I say something stupid.
Ok, now I got it. It took me some time to do the math, but essentially it's reducing all characters and checking in a bitmap to see which ones need escaping
Doing the math "by hand" allowed me to remove the bits for the characters that don't need escaping on our end
@Tiffany My knowledge of modern version control is very basic, so I can't complain too much. Git was a baby and sccs was horrible when last I developed in a professional environment. I really need to spend some quality time with theory and best practices of practical git, because it's becoming apparent that as far as the programming, I am god, here :) (that is I have free reign for the most part)
It's beautiful, and it's freaking fast. I just wish there were some comments in it that explained what it does, or how those magic numbers are computed.
@bwoebi Any idea why the Observer API wouldn't trigger for internal functions such as dirname / strrev, but does for things like xdebug_start_trace and uniqid ?
@bwoebi Also, I had hoped that I could get rid of my zend_execute_ex override, but I can't, as observers are also not called for script bodies (ie: include, require, eval).
Thanks Tiff, I'm not dumb, I know the value of a safe and sane environment, but I'm realistically drowning in information. Your coaching (and a few others) has been greatly appreciated!
@Jimbus FWIW, that's how it was for me when I first joined this room, back in 2016, and hanging out in here more consistently in 2017... there was a lot for me to take in, and there was a lot I wasn't able to apply because of where I was employed, and the expectations of that job... it has taken me several, several years from where I started to get to where I am now
Can't reproduce. It complains on your end about the constness I think. Probably version related, the typedef in libxml2 was changed long ago: https://github.com/GNOME/libxml2/commit/e03f0a199a67017b2f8052354cf732b2b4cae787 If you're on < 2.9.8 then it probably reproduces? I'll check with an old libxml2 version
My only question is: should this be backported to all versions still taking bug fixes? Since clang-16 enables this error by default, it will likely cause problems before these other PHP versions go EOL.
Normally for -W fixes we don't backport, but this one may make sense.