Object handlers being separate from class entries is a legacy inherited from PHP 5. Today it has little benefit to keep them separate: in fact, accessing object handlers usually requires not-so-safe hacks.
While it is possible to swap handlers in a custom installed create_object handler, this mostly is tedious, as well as it requires allocating the object handlers struct at runtime, possibly caching it etc..
This allows extensions, which intend to observe other classes to install their own class handlers.
The life cycle of internal classes may now be simply observed by swapping the class handlers in post_startup stage.
The life cycle of userland classes may be observed by iterating over the new classes in zend_compile_file and zend_compile_string and then swapping their handlers.
In general, this would also be a first step in directly tying the object handlers to classes. Especially given that I am not aware of any case where the object handlers would be different between various instances of a given class.
Signed-off-by: Bob Weinand <bobwei9@hotmail.com>
This reverts commit d0527427be.
This patch makes Swoole/Swow can not work anymore, because Coroutine will yield to another one during socket operation, EG(record_errors) assertion will always fail, and zend_begin_record_errors() was only used during compile time before.
Note: zend_emit_recorded_errors() and the typo fix are reserved.
This is not actually related to SSL handshake but stream socket creation
which does not clean errors if the error handler is set. This fix
prevents emitting errors until the stream is freed.
This doesn't have an effect really, but humans and IDEs can struggle to see through the macro soup when they first interact with PHP's source code.
Moreover, this reduces some of the macro expansion hell when they appear in compiler warnings.
Previously, code such as subclasses of SplFixedArray would check for method
overrides when instantiating the objects.
This optimization was mentioned as a followup to GH-6552
Currently, classes that can't be linked get moved back into the original script
and are not preloaded. As such classes may be referenced from functions that
did get preloaded, there is a preload autoload mechanism to load them at
runtime.
Since PHP 8.1, we can safely preload unlinked classes, which will then go
through usual lazy loading. This means that we no longer need the preload
autoload mechanism. However, we need to be careful not to modify any hash
table buckets in-place, and should create new buckets for lazy loaded classes.
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.
This is needed by both fibers and opcache (and GH-6903 also uses it),
so make it a common structure that can be used by any functionality
storing warnings/errors.
As debug_print_backtrace() is not performance-critical, this
implements it by formatting the zend_fetch_backtrace() result.
This means there is only one place implementing the backtrace
construction logic, and they cannot go out of sync.
zend_fetch_backtrace() has much better test coverage, because
it is used by exceptions.
Closes GH-6869.
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.
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