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16:01
Please, don't use mysql_* functions in new code. They are no longer maintained and are officially deprecated. See the red box? Learn about prepared statements instead, and use PDO or MySQLi - this article will help you decide which. If you choose PDO, here is a good tutorial. — Madara Uchiha 6 secs ago
First official use of the new comment :)
By the way, how did we (I?) miss the vote on the ext/mysql deprecation?
Was it a closed vote? Or no one here seemed to notice?
@LeviMorrison Wasn't me
@PeeHaa I already confessed, it's OK :)
@MadaraUchiha 23/12 or something like that
@PeeHaa 26
And yes you are the only one who missed it
:)
16:05
:(
Seems like Anthony voted against it
@MadaraUchiha He wanted it moved straight to PECL.
Which was not a bad option.
Except, it wasn't a voting option :(
@MadaraUchiha So did @NikiC. Traitor.
@LeviMorrison As in, removing it from Core?
@MadaraUchiha Yeah, no deprecation notice or anything.
It would just move to PECL.
@LeviMorrison I think that should be done at a later stage
16:07
@MadaraUchiha Then what's the point of deprecating it?
But I think the point is to educate people, it's not their fault their code is crappy, it's a lack of awareness and education.
@LeviMorrison Deprecating it officially gives a way to tell new authors:
It might not be their fault, but it still is problematic. Instead of a depcrication warning in terms of the educational effect, it might be better to display a big fat disclaimer warning for british and us-american users visiting these pages ;)
@MadaraUchiha Problem is, the sort of people who still use ext/mysql are the sort of people who have error reporting turned off/down in dev.
This function in PHP is pretty old. Developers are normally interested in the new and more modern stuff, so we just leave a friendly reminder that you should not be shocked and convert to stone when you hear some day using these functions is actually a bad idea.
@hakre "This site was developed by an idiot. We recommend you go somewhere else."
16:16
@DaveRandom This is a website from the internet. Don't trust anything, only read it for entertaining purposes but we can not take any liabilities that it will fit this usage.
> This site is using ext/mysql and probably has SQL injection vulnerabilities. Go ahead; give it a shot. We warned them.
^ That would be a lovely banner.
hi
i have been trying to use mysqli and ran into some problems
@techno Such as...?
if ($mysqli->query("SELECT 1 FROM users WHERE k1='$string1' AND k2='$string2'"))
{
if($mysqli->num_rows==0)
{
printf("Sorry");
}
}
this what im trying to do
What im trying to do is checking if a value exists in the table.If it does not exist a sorry message should be displayed.
im getting this notice Undefined property: mysqli::$num_rows
@LeviMorrison How do you survive living in a country full of stupid people? newantifederalists.com - I can see the news article now. The final words will be "before turning the gun on himself".
16:26
@techno You are accessing num_rows on the mysqli object instead of the mysql_result object.
The mysql_result object comes from mysqli->query.
@techno You need to capture the result of $mysqli->query like $result = $mysqli->query() and then do $result->num_rows
im a novice
@techno We all were once upon a time.
16:27
let me try
Also please don't use printf() for outputting simple strings with no formatting placeholders
Also, do $string1 and $string2 come from the user?
If so you have a SQL injection possibility.
(That's bad in case you didn't know)
@Leigh :P
@LeviMorrison it comes from http post
@LeviMorrison I think you are mispresenting @ircmaxell here
16:29
@NikiC Maybe so. How would you have worded it?
@techno Yeah, that's not good.
@techno Please see bobby-tables.com and learn about prepared statements
If you have any questions or don't understand anything, feel free to come here and ask
@LeviMorrison how to secure this?
@LeviMorrison In particularly emphasizing that he does not want to move it to PECL in 5.5, rather later. And also pointing out that he'd like to see more lobbying to move people off it, before taking further actions ;)
Fair points.
@techno Give me a few moments and I can help you.
16:32
@DaveRandom Thanks
@MikeB It's probably closer to breaking the window than opening the door
This article actually reminds me `in` operator I've done some time ago in Perl 6.

multi infix:(Str $a, Str $b --> Bool) { so $b ~~ / $a / }
multi infix:(Str $a, @b --> Bool) { so $a eq any @b }
multi infix:(Str $a, %b --> Bool) { %b{$a}:exists }
Dafuq is Perl 6?!
Can somebody read that shit?
@DaveRandom The level of stupidity gummed-up my creative juices
@NikiC perl6.org
@LeviMorrison I know. I just realized that they seem to have managed to make it even more (a lot more) unintelligible
16:34
@techno Start by reading this: Prepared Statements
I find it interesting how a question that already has like 7 answers all pretty much saying the same thing keeps accruing more and more answers with the same information. Do people not read that 7 other people have already all said the same thing before repeating the answer?
It's called rep whoring.
@GoogleGuy More rep-whoring tactics. There are users who just upvote every correct answer regardless, some people are desperate for that extra 10 rep.
16:46
I see. I must be a harsh critic then. I only upvote answers that provide something of substantial value. Like an answer that actually goes above and beyond something I'd just find on Google or in the manual. At least that's what I try to provide in every one of my answer. If I'm just copy/pasting stuff they can find somewhere else I'm not really adding any value to the OP's question.
@GoogleGuy No, that's not harsh. That's the right way to do it. The problem is that others are not harsh enough.
@DaveRandom That
I was called names for being honest.
@GoogleGuy Remember, especially the PHP tag but also a few others (jQuery/JS are quite bad as well) are so full of this kind of behaviour that it was deemed necessary for this to exist.
16:52
@webarto Link?
@webarto I'll beat the snot out of that guy if you let me know who he is.
@MadaraUchiha "back in the days", majority is always right, even if they are wrong.
I'm gonna do something like this:
`print file_get_contents($_GET['filename']);`
how could I avoid that the user couldn't go to other paths (like ../ etc.) just to stay in the folder where the php file is placed
@LeviMorrison It is :drumrolls: @DaveRandom :D
@DaveRandom That's probably because everyone and their mother uses PHP and they all think that makes them experts in PHP. Despite this fact I find that PHP is actually one of the most well documented OSS languages out there in its class.
16:53
@Olli You can't. Don't rely on user input.
but how can I do that then
I need to rely on user input
@GoogleGuy Fighting the masses can be tough.
Give an ID to each directory, only allow numeric IDs
@Olli Whitelist.
Or whitelist.
16:54
yes...
that would be good suggestion
but why I cannot remove all harmful characters using some function
is there those?
@Olli That's called "blacklisting", and someone would always find a way around it
ok
@Olli Not a foolproof one, no. There is always some zero-day edge case exploit.
is md5 good choose for file IDs?
i think about creating array where i place file name and MD5 of it
@LeviMorrison This is true.
@Leigh ok ,but I think I'm still going to do the whitelist to be sure
i have tried the code
@Olli Why not just incrementing integers? Zero collision risk, minimal processing to map identifiers to files.
@DaveRandom md5 is cooler :)
16:57
@DaveRandom predictable
@Olli md5 hasn't been cool since 1996
by using the result set
@Leigh ...and that is definitely a problem because...?
if ($result=$mysqli->query("SELECT 1 FROM `users` WHERE `k1`='$string1' AND 'k2'='$string2'"))
{

if($result->num_rows == 0)
{
printf("Failed2");
}
<?php
$files = array();
$files["1e6134544abcdb677b27f4d4ad1432b7"] = "somefilename.css";

print file_get_contents($files[$_GET['id']]);
?>
something like that
is that safe enough
@DaveRandom If I saw files numerically ordered, I'd definitely try and guess other files I may not supposed to be able to access.
16:58
@techno Tell me that $string1 = $_REQUEST['string1'];?
INTRUDER ALERT
:)
so is my suggested code good
or would you do it better way
@GoogleGuy No arguments there. Unfortunately a lot of users don't seem to have heard of that... oh you know, that thing, that really popular thing that gives you answers to things.
4
Google, that was it.
@ircmaxell Hello :)
the earlier problem was fixed,but the value with string 1 and string 2 exists in the db
shalom
17:00
@ircmaxell Hey there. Enjoy your visit :)
the code is always showing failed
@ircmaxell relapse? ;)
@webarto $string1=$_POST['value1']
@Leigh Depends if there are any things that I'm not supposed to be able to access. But point taken.
@ChrisWilson please read up on what a "server" is and how PHP and javascript work... — Neal 7 secs ago
...
17:01
@LeviMorrison Except that misses the point entirely. ext/mysql is EXACTLY as safe as PDO. Or actually more so depending on the use-case involved (especially when setting charset after connection). And that's the problem here. 26 people voted to remove it on the understanding that it's less secure. It's not. It's just as secure as mysqli or PDO when used correctly, and just as insecure when not.
6
@techno Which is the same shit (pardon me @ircmaxell)...
yep
@ircmaxell I just meant it would be a funny banner, that's all.
why is the code showing failed always
such a value is present in the db,i checked
<?php
$files = array();
$files["1e6134544abcdb677b27f4d4ad1432b7"] = "somefilename.css";

print file_get_contents($files[$_GET['id']]);
?>
is that safe
17:02
@techno If you are certain the values exist in the database then I am not sure what is going on.
I get that, but it also misses the bigger point that people voted based on flawed premises. It's groupthink. And that's what pisses me off. People jumped on the ext/mysql is bad train without thinking about what or why things where happening
@techno Your code is not safe, use prepared statements, mysqli won't protect you by itself: php.net/manual/en/mysqli.prepare.php#example-1726
@ircmaxell I think that's a bit of a generalisation to state they all voted based on security. I'd like to think the majority at least considered it's lack of maintenance.
@Leigh Only 2 people on that vote really know anything about a lack of maintenance.
@ircmaxell There was no "Move to PECL in PHP 6" option.
That's what I would have voted for.
17:03
could someone see my code now?
I honestly think there should be a revote.
Because the entire vote was a sham
@webarto security is not a concern,if the code does not work
4
the vote was on the details of the RFC. which weren't even up to date at the time of the vote
im trying to get the code worked first
17:04
@ircmaxell I'll back you if you push for revote.
I'm sure @NikiC would as well.
I'm not.
@techno That is what they all say.
because of shit like this
@ircmaxell get over it. Non issue. Time to focus on what comes, not the past.
@ircmaxell I don't. But it is over now. So get over it. Focus on the future. 5.5 is in the starting blocks and many intstg things to discuss
@LeviMorrison the table also contains another value
To tell you the truth, shit like that really makes me want to walk away
17:05
say string3,but the match is looked for only 2 values for SELECT query
@ircmaxell . . . I'm a little shocked to see that from Pierre.
woohoo
I see an @ircmaxell in here
@techno STAHP it, ask a proper question on main site, we are not going to guess what your table structure, or variables.
Is anyone seeing this site without a stylesheet?
17:06
@MadaraUchiha No, but all my google-related sites are having issues and Chrome keeps crashing.
This is the first time anything like this has happened to me.
@MadaraUchiha Remove http://localhost ... and just / them... Or change to real domain name in wp-config.php or whatever.
@MadaraUchiha Happened to me this morning, I reloaded and all was good. There's been a few hiccups today, I guess there's maintenance going on.
IDK if they've switched back to the NY servers yet
17:07
@LeviMorrison same here... Froze my entire computer (3 reboots in 20 minutes)
@NikiC ;-)
@MadaraUchiha I'm seeing it with 404s abound
@LeviMorrison haha, you clearly don't know Pierre :D that's the kind of stuff he usually says ^^
I see the problem, thanks @webarto
@NikiC I'd never seen him . . . quite that harsh.
@ircmaxell Lucky. I'm pleased if this piece of crap machine my work have provided does a complete reboot cycle in 20 minutes (including actually getting to a point where applications are usable).
17:09
@MadaraUchiha I think it would show up in network resources as unable to load, or such, like this... i.imgur.com/Gn6WR.png
Thing is, I see it fine, because my localhost files are fine :D
@ircmaxell On this macbook pro, every time I update chrome all of my network connections die and I have to manually disconnect/reconnect my wifi.
@LeviMorrison That RFC was a vote on whether or not to throw an E_DEPRECATED error in ext/mysql connect functions. Not whether or not to remove ext/mysql. That's something that will come later. That option makes no sense in that RFC.
@MadaraUchiha Environments and stuff :)
@Leigh That's what you get for using Apple products <runs away>
17:11
@DaveRandom Work issue
@GoogleGuy You are incorrect, sir. There is no point to throw E_DEPRECATED if it is moving to PECL.
@GoogleGuy Because both issues are totally unrelated. Right...
@LeviMorrison I am correct about the purpose of the vote. The opinion you have about whether or not to throw E_DEPRECATED is irrelevant.
@NikiC No, because the issue at hand is what to do now. We aren't voting on whether or not to remove the extension at this time.
How about now?
@GoogleGuy . . . can you really not see that throwing E_DEPRECATED is pointless if it moves to PECL?
17:12
@GoogleGuy The issue is that throwing a deprecation warning depends on what will happen with it later
@LeviMorrison No, because it is the purpose of E_DEPRECATED to inform the user that this function is now deprecated.
@GoogleGuy Yet the fubar part of that justification (which a lot of people have used) is that it completely ignores the fact that what to do now depends strongly on what we do later
we shouldn't be voting on a step, but instead on a roadmap
@GoogleGuy But if it moves to PECL it won't be deprecated.
That's the whole point.
We don't need to deprecate it if we move it out of the core.
@LeviMorrison There's a history of extensions that have been moved to PECL as part of deprecation. That doesn't mean they're no longer deprecated.
@LeviMorrison PECL has an override for that. It would still be deprecated from core. The fact that it is an extension being moved to PECL is a peculiar case. I agree with that part.
17:14
@Leigh Fair, but they don't emit E_DEPRECATED.
@Leigh And none of them emitted E_DEPRECATED first...
None of them were as heavily used as ext/mysql either.
Room feels balanced again..
right, which is why a thought out roadmap would be the right thing to do. Not just "let's throw errors"
@ircmaxell wow. Serioulsy Anthony, you take this thing and the whole story about it way too seriously. There was no offense in my reply...
@GoogleGuy Why do you think we need to emit E_DEPRECATED in ext/mysql?
I'm curious.
17:16
I think you guys are focusing way too much on the fact that its connect functions will now throw E_DEPRECATED and way too little on the important part. We should be informing users of the deprecation and helping them migrate -- of which throwing an E_DEPRECATED error is a part.
@GoogleGuy Why do they need to migrate?
"to get rid of the E_DEPRECATED errors" :D
@LeviMorrison One of the reasons I already made clear in my reply to the internals discussion. It's that a lot of the users who do use ext/mysql rarely ever look at the manual for functions they have been using for many years without needing a reference as to how they work. So providing this information in PHP is important to help get the message across to thuse users.
circular logic at its best
@GoogleGuy Yes, and I agree with that
just not now
@ircmaxell Right, that's your opinion. I feel the time is now. You feel different. That is why there was a vote.
I don't necessarily agree with all the votes in the past, but hey that's why we vote. If other people didn't vote my way I don't complain about it. I accept that this is the majority and move on.
17:20
No, we vote because the project is fucked up
healthy projects don't need to vote on shit like this
It is fucked up, but that's how all OSS projects are.
No, it's not
not by a long shot
@ircmaxell I beg to differ. I've been on the linux kernel mailing list and the Python lists... I've seen plenty of OSS projects where disagreement is settled by a BDFL simply saying "No, we're not doing that! End of discussion!"
You think that's healthy?
Actually, yes. I think that's a whole lot more healthy than voting
@GoogleGuy I don't know if you have noticed, but I voted for deprecation. I still feel like the whole premise of voting on this issue is flawed.
17:22
@ircmaxell And why do you think that?
@LeviMorrison Well, please suggest something better. I think it works OK.
@GoogleGuy I'm writing a draft to send to internals but Chrome keeps crashing.
It's taking forever.
How did options C and D make it into the vote if they didn't receive any votes.. how are these things nominated?
Is the entire thing at the mercy of the author?
@GoogleGuy Because it shows consistency, it shows process, it shows vision, and it shows values. Having a BDFL can go wrong, but in many cases it leads to a far more stable and healthy community
@MikeB Anyone with access to the rfc namespace in the wiki can edit the RFC, but generally the voting options are provided by the original authors of the RFC (the person(s) that propose it). Anyone participating in the discussion may suggest options for the vote if they feel they are necessary.
So why are people saying that they didn't like the options?
17:25
@ircmaxell It also shows biased, monolithic power, and dictatorship.
@GoogleGuy No, that misses the B point of that acronym. And those are the cases where it does go wrong...
@MikeB I don't know. I haven't really heard anyone raising that issue that had a justifiable reason for why those options shouldn't be acceptable to that vote.
@ircmaxell So you're saying you are in favor of dictatorship?
@MikeB We voiced our disagreement with the options and the general approach of the RFC, but I don't think the author took any notice.
in this case, it has significant advantages over a vote-based system like this
@ircmaxell Right, as long as that case works out to your favor, right ;)
17:27
No, fuck my favor
@NikiC Gotcha - just trying to understand how all this works.. I learn a lot by observing these 'discussions' :p
Someone needs to set a guiding vision for a project
hi @ircmaxell! Long time no see.
and someone needs to interpret proposals to see if they fit that vision
and the only person with the ability to do that is a BDFL...
@GoogleGuy The issue with voting (or maybe not that specifically, but rather the general lack of vision for PHP) is that there is a lot of people who want a lot of different things and it's hard to distinguish what is good for the project and what is not.
17:29
did you get my comment on the bcrypt alphabet mismatch?
@GoogleGuy That's also part of why PHP is such a mess. It tries to go in so many directions at the same time
@NikiC Right, democracy is messy.
@ircmaxell The only problem is PHP has no BDFL. So you're SOL.
No, pure democracy is not messy, it doesn't work
that's why we don't have a pure democracy in the US...
We elect representitives in a democratic process.
You were not elected by your peers?
17:31
the election of an individual is democractic, but what happens after (the day-to-day) is not
@ircmaxell sounds like you didn't. was here in chat some weeks ago.
and that's why I say that pure democracy does not work (at least at scale)
@ircmaxell How so?
@GoogleGuy If Rasmus had voted against this RFC, care to wager a guess how the rest of the votes would have fallen?
17:32
@LeviMorrison He did vote against it.
Nov 5 at 21:12, by hakre
@ircmaxell: FYI: The salt part of the salt of crypt SHA256 / SHA512 by Drepper does not use the base64 crypt alphabet. Just came to my attention. See PHP crypt: http://3v4l.org/IUurc & http://lxr.php.net/search?q=Drepper&project=PHP_5_4
@ircmaxell I thought that was the other rasmus?
@hakre that ^^ ?
No, the other rasmus doesn't have an svn account.
Ah, my mistake.
17:33
@DaveRandom ok...? and?
@Levi Do you think that the Rasmus wouldn't be called ... rasmus?
@NikiC I thought he used his last name, honestly.
@NikiC rlerdorf
Not sure why.
The name is listed in the vote guys.
17:34
But because he is BDFL he can use his name only (lol).
@DaveRandom thank for picking it out, yes, that one.
Mine just says rasmus (rasmus)
@webarto he isn't the BD...
Oh, wait it only lists your username. I forget.
17:35
why Chrome devconsole says text/html,even if I set content type to text/css in PHP? Is that normal behaviour?
@ircmaxell I know Dreppers code is in PHP, but with your library on github, you don't have that behaviour.
@hakre Which lib?
Is it just me finding even CSS basics so hard when my PHP is kinda ok.
@LeviMorrison You can always look up the account by username people.php.net/user.php?username=rasmus
git merge is getting complex for me, too many unresolved files..
may be I need to change workflow
17:36
@ircmaxell That one where you extend from a baseclass which has the wrong alphabet for the SHA algos.
@hakre PasswordLib?
stupid question , horrible answers
.. and welcome back to 8th circle of help , @ircmaxell
why Chrome devconsole says text/html,even if I set content type to text/css in PHP? Is that normal behaviour?
@ircmaxell I would need to check again. Let me close some tabs and then take a look.
17:38
@tereško LOL
damn .. i misspelled it .. then again , it might have been a freudian slip
I thought it was intentionally brilliant :p
@ircmaxell Oh, I see that is the word on the street, is there one, then?
@webarto No, we "vote" on everything
@ircmaxell Which leads us back to this discussion :)
17:49
@ircmaxell sorry to have disturbed your majesty, and I am by no mean an authority, more pushing new contributors and moves forward instead.
@ircmaxell Saw that.
@ircmaxell As blunt and opinionated as Pierre is, I get him. I understand why he does that and for the most part I think he does the right thing (i.e. focuses on the bigger picture to keep things moving).
I really believe that is a quality that is lacking in the project.
SELECT name FROM data ORDER BY id DESC LIMIT 0,5 This is only returning me name field of one row. When I try the same from phpmyadmin, I see all rows. Any idea why?

my code : http://pastie.org/5507440
Not cool.
@Kishor mysqli_fetch_assoc only returns one row at a time. You have to call it in a loop to get all the rows back. while($row = mysqli_fetch_assoc($run)) { /* do stuff with $row here */ }
17:58
@LeviMorrison @ircmaxell We should see this from the positive side of things
Ah, Crap.Missed it. Thanks @GoogleGuy
Thanks to the mysql incident @ircmaxell is back in this room
Word :P

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