The problem is that we're using the variable_ptr in the opcode handler
*after* it has already been destroyed. The solution is to create a
specialised version of zend_assign_to_variable which takes in two
destination zval pointers.
Closes GH-10524
The assertion failure was triggered in a debug code-path that validates
property types for internal classes.
zend_verify_internal_read_property_type was called with retval being a
reference, which is not allowed because that function eventually calls to
i_zend_check_property_type, which does not expect a reference.
The non-debug code-path already takes into account that retval can be a
reference, as it optionally dereferences retval.
Add a dereference in zend_verify_internal_read_property_type just before
the call to zend_verify_property_type, which is how other callers often
behave as well.
JIT contains a copy of this function that effectively only differs
by fetching current_execute_data from EG. We can do that in the VM
version as well, as this is just used to throw an error.
Export the VM function and reuse it in JIT.
Currently, resource IDs are limited to 32-bits. As resource IDs
are not reused, this means that resource ID overflow for
long-running processes is very possible.
This patch switches resource IDs to use zend_long instead, which
means that on 64-bit systems, 64-bit resource IDs will be used.
This makes resource ID overflow practically impossible.
The tradeoff is an 8 byte increase in zend_resource size.
Closes GH-7436.
Currently, CE_CACHE on strings is only used with opcache interned strings. This
patch extends usage to non-opcache interned strings as well. This means that
most type strings can now make use of CE_CACHE even if opcache is not loaded,
which allows us to remove TYPE_HAS_CE kind, and fix some discrepancies
depending on whether a type stores a resolved or non-resolved name.
There are two cases where CE_CACHE will not be used:
* When opcache is not used and a permanent interned string (that is not an
internal class name) is used as a type name during the request. In this case
we can't allocate a map_ptr index for the permanent string, as it would be
not be in the permanent map_ptr index space.
* When opcache is used but the script is not cached (e.g. eval'd code or
opcache full). If opcache is used, we can't allocate additional map_ptr
indexes at runtime, because they may conflict with indexes allocated by
opcache.
In these two cases we would end up not using CE caching for property types
(argument/return types still have the separate cache slot).
Convert zend_hash_find_ex(..., 1) to zend_hash_find_known_hash(...)
Convert zend_hash_find_ex(..., 0) to zend_hash_find(...)
Also add serializable changes to UPGRADING.INTERNALS summary
Add support for readonly properties, for which only a single
initializing assignment from the declaring scope is allowed.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/readonly_properties_v2
Closes GH-7089.
Deprecate automatically converting "false" into an empty array
on write operands. Autovivification continues to be supported
for "null" values, as well as undefined/uninitialized values.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/autovivification_false
Closes GH-7131.
Co-authored-by: Tyson Andre <tysonandre775@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikita Popov <nikita.ppv@gmail.com>
Static trait members may only be accessed through a class in which
the trait is used, not directly on the trait.
A complication here is that we should not store static
methods/properties for which a deprecation is triggered in a
cache slot. As the check for this is simple and cheap, I'm handling
this in the cache slot population code in the VM. The alternative
would be to pass the cache slot down into the fetching code.
Part of https://wiki.php.net/rfc/deprecations_php_8_1.