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08:58
@IluTov I got it working :^)
Only for plain `default` expressions (not complex expressions... still didn't resolve the Bison grammar thing yet).
And only for functions, not methods yet. I know how to do it for methods, though, just need to handle that case.
function f($x = 'You win', $y = null) {
var_dump($x);
var_dump($y);
}
echo f(default, default);

---

string(7) "You win"
NULL
I think my code is probably leaky as hell though. The thing that stresses me out the most about C programming is having no idea if I'm managing memory properly
 
2 hours later…
10:29
@Girgias Making the output consistent between little-endian and big-endian platforms. It's used for serialization I believe.
@QuolonelQuestions zend_string_release() if you have a bare zend_string.
@TimWolla Right, the thing is the default string versions don't do that, which might be a problem? It should work to pass the same string on a big and little endian machine and get the same result :thinking:
 
1 hour later…
11:43
@Girgias The difference is that the regular variant encodes a sequence of bytes, whereas for ext/random you encode uint64_t.
The former is not reordered according to endianness, but the latter is.
Ah right, okay that makes sense
 
2 hours later…
13:39
Thanks. Makes sense. But I just struggle generally with,
1. Does this need to be freed?
2. When can I free it?
3. How do I free it?
And, similarly,
1. Does this need to be copied?
2. Is the owner going to free it before I'm finished with it?
3. How can I copy it?

Things like that perplex me about C generally, and the Zend engine only complicates matters
I couldn't even figure out how to turn a zend_string into an actual string (char *). In the debugger it only shows the pointer to the first character so that's not very helpful. I tried the classic strcpy_s and strcat_s but it either didn't work or crashed lol
The only thing that does actually work, is during a debug session, for some reason you can inject code whilst the program is running. How that is even possible in a compiled language I have no idea but I can use that to emit, one character at a time, each index of the string xd
 
1 hour later…
15:12
@QuolonelQuestions Turning into a C string aka char * is just ZSTR_VAL(zstr) where zstr is the zend_string *. HOWEVER, it could be truncated, nothing stops zend strings from having interior null bytes.
Honestly, knowing whether to copy/delref something is harder than it should be in php-src. Things around such side effects are not documented. It sucks.
Tell me about it x3
But it makes me feel better knowing that even the pros have some difficulty
@QuolonelQuestions There's a gdb macro for it: print_zstr s
 
4 hours later…
19:23
When will we know whether the next version of PHP will be 8.5 or 9?
 
2 hours later…
21:11
Extremely unlikely to be 9.0 IMHO
How do you know?
Because there isn't a good motivation for 9.0 atm
Remind me, what is a motivation? Breaking changes are allowed in point releases, so just how breaking does it have to be for a major (if that's even a criterion at all)
Major engine changes are the main motivations
PHP 7 was an engine rewrite
PHP 8 was the JIT addition
21:50
It doesn't seem like those things necessarily have a major (or even any) noticeable impact for end-users
 
2 hours later…
23:25
7 had a big big impact

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