We must not reuse per-request memory across multiple requests, so this
check triggered during RINIT makes no sense. As explained in the bug
report[1], it can be even harmful, if some request startup fails, and
the pointers refer to already freed memory in the next request.
[1] <https://bugs.php.net/76167>
Closes GH-7604.
mb_ereg()/mb_eregi() currently have an inconsistent return value
based on whether the $matches parameter is passed or not:
> Returns the byte length of the matched string if a match for
> pattern was found in string, or FALSE if no matches were found
> or an error occurred.
>
> If the optional parameter regs was not passed or the length of
> the matched string is 0, this function returns 1.
Coupling this behavior to the $matches parameter doesn't make sense
-- we know the match length either way, there is no technical
reason to distinguish them. However, returning the match length
is not particularly useful either, especially due to the need to
convert 0-length into 1-length to satisfy "truthy" checks. We
could always return 1, which would kind of match the behavior of
preg_match() -- however, preg_match() actually returns the number
of matches, which is 0 or 1 for preg_match(), while false signals
an error. However, mb_ereg() returns false both for no match and
for an error. This would result in an odd 1|false return value.
The patch canonicalizes mb_ereg() to always return a boolean,
where true indicates a match and false indicates no match or error.
This also matches the behavior of the mb_ereg_match() and
mb_ereg_search() functions.
This fixes the default value integrity violation in PHP 8.
Closes GH-6331.
This is a default destructor for mbfl_convert_filter structs. The thing is: there
isn't really anything that needs to be done to those structs before freeing them.
The default destructor just zeroed out some fields, but there's no reason why
we should actually do that.
Man, I can be pedantic sometimes. Tiny little things like misspelled words just
hurt me inside. So while it's not really a big deal, I couldn't leave these typos
alone...
These were unused, and almost certainly will never be used:
- MBFL_ENCTYPE_MWC4BE
- MBFL_ENCTYPE_MWC4LE
- MBFL_ENCTYPE_SHFTCODE
- MBFL_ENCTYPE_ENC_STRM
For the latter two, there were some encodings which were marked with these flags;
but nothing ever _checked_ these particular flags.
This is just a very silly feature of mbstring -- you can compile the source files with
HAVE_MBSTRING undefined, and it will all just compile to (almost) nothing. What is the
use of this? Why compile the source files and link against them if you don't want the
mbstring extension? It doesn't make any kind of sense.
Very interesting... it turns out that when Valgrind support was enabled,
`#include "config.h"` from within mbstring was actually including the file "config.h"
from Valgrind, and not the one from mbstring!!
This is because -I/usr/include/valgrind was added to the compiler invocation _before_
-Iext/mbstring/libmbfl.
Make sure we actually include the file which was intended.
This function uses various subfunctions to convert case of Unicode wchars.
Previously, these subfunctions would store the case-converted characters in
a buffer, and the parent function would then pass them (byte by byte) to
the next filter in the filter chain.
Rather than passing around that buffer, it's better for the subfunctions to
directly pass the case-converted bytes to the next filter in the filter chain.
This speeds things up nicely.
Rather than using a magic boolean parameter to choose different behavior of
the subfunction, inline it. The code size doesn't really grow anyways. And
soon these will be trimmed down more.
All memory allocation and deallocation for mbstring bounces through a table of
function pointers before going to emalloc/efree/etc. But this is unnecessary.
The allocators are never swapped out. Better to just call them directly.
Voidification of Zend API which always succeeded
Use bool argument types instead of int for boolean arguments
Use bool return type for functions which return true/false (1/0)
Use zend_result return type for functions which return SUCCESS/FAILURE as they don't follow normal boolean semantics
Closes GH-6002