It's possible for CE_CACHE slots to be populated during compilation
(e.g. due to an early binding attempt). When opcache then persists
the class, it clears the CE_CACHE slot for the class name as declared,
but not for different spellings (that only differ in case). As such,
a pointer to the old, non-persistent class entry may be retained.
Fix this by not populating CE_CACHE if in_compilation is set.
Closes GH-7542.
preloading currently reimplements parts of shutdown_executor(),
so it's easy for that code to go out of sync.
Extract this into an zend_shutdown_executor_values() API function
and use it as part of the preloading pre-shutdown.
Instead always use the unlinked_uses table, which is already used
if opcache is used. Not much point in having a different mechanism
for the non-opcache case.
If fast_shutdown is used, then we don't need to destroy static
members at all. If fast_shutdown is not used, then we already
loop over classes to destroy static members and static variables
in methods.
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
Now that inheritance can throw deprecations again, these may be
converted to exception by a custom error handler. In this case
we need to convert the exception to a fatal error, as inheritance
cannot safely throw in the general case.
Since 3e6b447979 it is again possible to have
warnings (deprecations) during inheritance, and more such functionality is
likely in the future. This is a problem, because such warnings will only be
shown on the first request if the opcache inheritance cache is used. This
currently causes test failures in --repeat builds.
Fix this by uplifting the error recording functionality from opcache to Zend,
and then using it to persist a warning trace in the inheritance cache, which
can then be used to replay the warnings on subsequent executions.
Now similar "fake" frames now materialized when fetching debug
backtraces. The patch also fixes few incorrect backtraces for generators
in *.phpt tests.
This is generalization of idea, that was previously usesd for caching
resolution of class_entries in zend_type. Now very similar mechanizm is
used for general zend_string into zend_class_entry resolution.
Interned zend_string with IS_STR_CLASS_NAME_MAP_PTR GC_FLAG uses its
refcount to adress corresponding zend_class_entry cache slot.
The refcount keeps an offset to this slot from CG(map_ptr_base).
Flag may be checked by ZSTR_HAS_CE_CACHE(str), cache slot may be read by
ZSTR_GET_CE_CACHE(str) and set by ZSTR_SET_CE_CACHE(str, ce).
We have separate flags for non-autoloading class fetches and
silent class fetches. There's no reason why NO_AUTOLOAD should
be special-cased to be implicitly silent.
Now that constants can contain objects (currently only enums),
we should destroy them before we free the object store, otherwise
there will be false positive leak reports.
This doesn't affect the fast_shutdown sequence.
Currently, dynamically declared functions and closures are inserted
into the function table under a runtime definition key, and then later
possibly renamed. When opcache is not used and a file containing a
closure is repeatedly included, this leads to a very large memory leak,
as the no longer needed closure declarations will never be freed
(https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=76982).
With this patch, dynamic functions are instead stored in a
dynamic_func_defs member on the op_array, which opcodes reference
by index. When the parent op_array is destroyed, the dynamic_func_defs
it contains are also destroyed (unless they are stilled used elsewhere,
e.g. because they have been bound, or are used by a live closure). This
resolves the fundamental part of the leak, though doesn't completely
fix it yet due to some arena allocations.
The main non-obvious change here is to static variable handling:
We can't destroy static_variables_ptr in destroy_op_array, as e.g.
that would clear the static variables in a dynamic function when
the op_array containing it is destroyed. Static variable destruction
is separated out for this reason (we already do static variable
destruction separately for normal functions, so we only need to
handle main scripts).
Closes GH-5595.
When a method is inherited, the static variables will now always
use the initial values, rather than the values at the time of
inheritance. As such, behavior no longer depends on whether
inheritance happens before or after a method has been called.
This is implemented by always keeping static_variables as the
original values, and static_variables_ptr as the modified copy.
Closes GH-6705.
This is a new transparent technology that eliminates overhead of PHP class inheritance.
PHP classes are compiled and cached (by opcahce) separately, however their "linking" was done at run-time - on each request. The process of "linking" may involve a number of compatibility checks and borrowing methods/properties/constants form parent and traits. This takes significant time, but the result is the same on each request.
Inheritance Cache performs "linking" for unique set of all the depending classes (parent, interfaces, traits, property types, method types involved into compatibility checks) once and stores result in opcache shared memory. As a part of the this patch, I removed limitations for immutable classes (unresolved constants, typed properties and covariant type checks). So now all classes stored in opcache are "immutable". They may be lazily loaded into process memory, if necessary, but this usually occurs just once (on first linking).
The patch shows 8% improvement on Symphony "Hello World" app.
We're starting to see a mix between uses of zend_bool and bool.
Replace all usages with the standard bool type everywhere.
Of course, zend_bool is retained as an alias.
Like Cygwin, this platform needs to use a real-time timer.
This was based on a patch by @kadler, but it didn't handle unsetting
the timer, so the timeout would continue to be active, triggering
`hard_timeout` unexpectedly. The patch is fixed to handle unsetting.
Closes GH-6503.
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