@TimWolla question, why is Random\Randomizer::__construct(null) a thing? The default could have just been Random\Randomizer::__construct(\Random\Engine $engine = new \Random\Engine\Secure()); (yes I just realized a weird design quick now...)
364 line sql upsert statement (each column name and variable assignment on it's own lie) This is either going to work gloriously or go K-Boom. Too bad this an MS shop and sql server doesn't support insert or replace....
@bwoebi I've been seeing Warning: uv_now(): passed UVLoop handle is already closed on shutdown of the Revolt loop. I'm guessing this is from the random destruct order where the handle object has been destroyed but something calls EventLoop::now(). Thoughts on how we could handle this?
I'm trying to upsert a array of objects into a sql server DB with a foreach loop. If I'm barking up the wrong tree, feel free to point me in the right direct. This is the 3rd different format of this query. it tests as valid on one validator site and another chokes on the word "set" the script re...
@TimWolla I've started coming up with a draft for the Date Exceptions and Errors — have a look at docs.google.com/document/d/… — suggestions welcome (also from others)
@Derick I'm not convinced that it makes much sense to have extension specific Errors (opposed to Exceptions), since these are not supposed to be caught anyway.
@cmb ext/random has ext-specific Errors and I think that is a good thing: I consider the Throwable class to also be part of the "human readable" error message. That's why ext/random specifically has BrokenRandomEngineError, even if that really should never happen.
I mean, we can also just choose to break BC on this in 8.3... I doubt people catch the ERrors for corrupt timezone databases for example. But a "invalid serialisation data" one seems more useful (currently an "Error")
The DatePeriodError ones should IMO become exceptions
@Derick Do you know any good article of how to set PHPStorm + xDebug + console execution? I already have it set for debugging when request comes from browser.
@Derick I'd drop DateSerializationError in favor of a plain Exception. After a certain recent hotly-debated RFC: Folks really should not rely on any specific type of Exception coming out of unserialize().
That also includes catching any internal errors (e.g. for @strict-properties) and wrapping them into a plain Exception like so: github.com/php/php-src/blob/…
@Derick Yeah, ext/date is the only thing that throws an Error currently. Leave it as plain Error then, don't give folks an ext-specific Throwable for unserialize(), because that's "not a good thing".
@Derick I think there is a small amount of value with having all of the specific exceptions be child classes of a generic DateException (and similarly all the specific errors be children of a generic DateError class), so people can catch any exception related to Date in one catch block.
Regarding the remainder: I believe having a DateException and DateError as "base Exceptions", similarly to ext/random makes sense. Everything else should inherit from either of the two. If there is a value-add (either programmatically or for Googling) then a sub-Exception may be created, otherwise simply using the base-Exception is fine.
The closest thing to a broken tzdb in ext/random would be a broken CSPRNG. I've opted to use Random\RandomException (i.e. the Exception hierarchy) for that.
@SaifEddinGmati If/When ext/random has a need for a finer granularity of Exceptions, those would inherit from Random\RandomException. RandomException is a catch-all for every "I don't have anything better for now".
@Danack so when you have an instance of DateTimeThrowable and use it, static analysis doesn't annoy you about undefined methods ;)
@TimWolla personally, i don't see myself catching DateException, matter of fact, i don't see myself catching any exception from datetime, but when an error happens, and i look at the logs, it would be really nice to be able to identify the error, and probably it's cause just from the exception name. MalformedDateIntervalStringException tells me: somewhere in my code, i tried to create a DateInterval from a string, containing invalid data, and that is all i need.
@bwoebi Ah yeah, that does cover other types I see. Unfortunately that's before I'd have the opportunity to remove that flag, so I'll have to expand that macro with an option to skip that check, then add another macro like UV_PARAM_LOOP_OBJ.
@TimWolla package exception interfaces are useful, let's say i have a service similar to sentry, that displays errors that caused your application to crash, the PHP function responsible for catching errors can identify the source of the error without diving in the stack trace simply by having a per-definded map containing base interfaces and the corresponding extensions/known packages 1/2
for an extension to have 10 exceptions with no base interfaces, that's just more work, while defining an interface is not really that complicated/expensive for extensions/packages. 2/2
@SaifEddinGmati Yes, but again: No need for interfaces. It's sufficient to have a base class that also acts as a catch-all for everything you don't have anything more specific for. Instead of using class DateException implements DateExceptionInterface, just use … class DateException.
And then you can further split the DateException by inheriting from it.
@bwoebi Can you have a look at github.com/php/php-src/pull/9810 You're more qualified than I am to see if that's a reasonable fix for the issue with generators.
@Derick Bah, BC really prevents a sane Exception hierarchy for ext/date. I just realized that DateTimeImmutable::createFromFormat does not throw, but returns false for inputs that do not match the format. That would've been a prime example of where specific subclasses provide a real value-add.
I'm so happy that ext/random did not need to concern itself with that.
Would love a version of the ext/date factories/constructors that throw. Also on "rollover dates" (30th Feb becomes March). Could a solution be a flags parameter similar to json_*?