When casting a `variant` to `int`, we need to heed the proper `zval`
type, which is an signed 64bit integer on x64, while `VT_INT` is only
a signed 32bit integer.
Closes GH-8779.
We substitute the construction magic with standard constructors, move
the ZPP checks to the beginning of the ctors, and also let the function
entries be generated from the stubs.
variant objects have no (declared) properties, so the `get_properties`
handlers returns a pointer to constant storage for efficiency reasons.
This pointer must not be returned from the `get_gc` handler, though;
instead we set up an own `get_gc` handler and return NULL from it, to
signal that there are no properties to collect.
We now store the pointer payload and the type mask separately. This
is in preparation for union types, where we will be using both at
the same time.
To avoid increasing the size of arginfo structures, the
pass_by_reference and is_variadic fields are now stored as part of
the type_mask (8-bit are reserved for custom use).
Different types of pointer payloads are distinguished based on bits
in the type_mask.
`write_dimension` object handlers have to be able to handle `NULL`
`offset`s; for now we simply throw an exception instead of following
the `NULL` pointer.
As of PHP 7.4.0, the `get_property_ptr_ptr` handler is mandatory; we
implement it to always return `NULL`, which is equivalent to not
setting the handler in former versions.
We add a portable and faster test case than what has been presented in
the bug ticket.
Use value 0 instead. To compensate we check in ReflectionParameter
allowsNull() whether the type is set at all: If it isn't, it always
allows null.
This removes a discrepancy between internal&userland functions:
For userland functions allowsNull() on untyped parameters returned
true, but for internal functions it returned false.
This switches zend_type from storing a single IS_* type code to
storing a MAY_BE_* type mask. Right now most code still assumes
that there is only a single type in the mask (or two together
with MAY_BE_NULL). But this will make it a lot simpler to introduce
union types.
An additional advantage (and why I'm doing this separately), is
that a number of special cases no longer need to be handled
separately: We can do a single mask & (1 << type) check to handle
all simple types, booleans (true|false) and null.
Now that set() is gone, there is little point in keeping get(), as
it is essentially just a different way of writing cast_object()
now.
Closes GH-4202.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/typed_properties_v2
This is a squash of PR #3734, which is a squash of PR #3313.
Co-authored-by: Bob Weinand <bobwei9@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joe Watkins <krakjoe@php.net>
Co-authored-by: Dmitry Stogov <dmitry@zend.com>
Firstly, we avoid returning NULL from the get_property handler, but
instead return an empty HashTable, which already prevents the crashes.
Secondly, since (de-)serialization obviously makes no sense for COM,
DOTNET and VARIANT objects (at least with the current implementation),
we prohibit it right away.
The $Id$ keywords were used in Subversion where they can be substituted
with filename, last revision number change, last changed date, and last
user who changed it.
In Git this functionality is different and can be done with Git attribute
ident. These need to be defined manually for each file in the
.gitattributes file and are afterwards replaced with 40-character
hexadecimal blob object name which is based only on the particular file
contents.
This patch simplifies handling of $Id$ keywords by removing them since
they are not used anymore.
convert_scalar_to_number() will now call cast_object() with an
_IS_NUMBER argument, in which case the cast handler should return
either an integer or floating point number, whichever is more
appropriate.
Previously convert_scalar_to_number() unconditionally converted
objects to integers instead.
Fixes bug #53033.
Fixes bug #54973.
Fixes bug #73108.