When functions' or class methods' availability is based on some preprocessor
condition, the generated arginfo header files wrap the declarations in the
preprocessor `#if` conditional blocks, one per declaration, even if they are in
the same conditional block based on comments in the stub file. Instead of
having multiple conditional blocks one after the other with the same condition,
combine them into a single conditional block.
Currently, internal classes are registered with the following code:
INIT_CLASS_ENTRY(ce, "InternalClass", class_InternalClass_methods);
class_entry = zend_register_internal_class_ex(&ce, NULL);
class_entry->ce_flags |= ...;
This has worked well so far, except if InternalClass is readonly. It is because some inheritance checks are run by zend_register_internal_class_ex before ZEND_ACC_READONLY_CLASS is added to ce_flags.
The issue is fixed by adding a zend_register_internal_class_with_flags() zend API function that stubs can use from now on. This function makes sure to add the flags before running any checks. Since the new API is not available in lower PHP versions, gen_stub.php has to keep support for the existing API for PHP 8.3 and below.
* ext/intl: Small extension cleanup
* ext/intl: Normalize cloning error handling behaviour
Always throw a Error exception as we cannot progress from here
* ext/intl: idn.c use ValueErrors where appropriate
Drive-by refactoring
* ext/intl: Remove some unused headers
Probably more cleanup can be done
This reverts commit 94ee4f9834.
The commit was a bit too late to be included in PHP 8.2 RC1. Given it's a massive ABI break, we decide to postpone the change to PHP 8.3.
As it is now, `IntlTimeZone`, `IntlCalendar` and `IntlDateFormatter`
and some other intl class instances can be serialized, but the
representation is meaningless, and unserialization yields uninitialized/
unusable objects. To prevent users from noticing this too late, we deny
serialization of such objects in the first place.
Closes GH-7945.
GMT+00:00 is recognized by ICU, and is normalized to GMT. There are no
issues when GMT+00:00 is passed to `IntlTimeZone::createTimeZone()`,
but passing it to IntlDateFormatter::__construct() causes a failure,
since there is an additional check regarding the validity. While
checking the validity of the result of `TimeZone::createTimeZone()`[1]
is a good idea, comparing the IDs is overly restrictive. Instead we
just check that the timezone is supported by ICU.
[1] <https://unicode-org.github.io/icu-docs/apidoc/dev/icu4c/classicu_1_1TimeZone.html#a35da0507b62754ffe5d8d59c19775cdb>
Closes GH-7190.
Both of these just forward to the default implementation, so
just use that directly. This is simpler and benefits from the
special-casing of the default implementation.
1. Update: http://www.php.net/license/3_01.txt to https, as there is anyway server header "Location:" to https.
2. Update few license 3.0 to 3.01 as 3.0 states "php 5.1.1, 4.1.1, and earlier".
3. In some license comments is "at through the world-wide-web" while most is without "at", so deleted.
4. fixed indentation in some files before |
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.
Historically, the _ex variants separated the zval first, if a
conversion was necessary. This distinction no longer makes sense
since PHP 7.
The only difference that was still left is that _ex checked whether
the type is the same first, but the usage of these macros did not
actually distinguish on whether such an inlined check is valuable
or not in a given context.
Also drop the unused convert_to_explicit_type macros.
The hash is used to check whether the arginfo file needs to be
regenerated. PHP-Parser will only be downloaded if this is actually
necessary.
This ensures that release artifacts will never try to regenerate
stubs and thus fetch PHP-Parser, as long as you do not modify any
files.
Closes GH-5739.
This adds the following APIs:
void zend_call_known_function(
zend_function *fn, zend_object *object, zend_class_entry *called_scope,
zval *retval_ptr, int param_count, zval *params);
void zend_call_known_instance_method(
zend_function *fn, zend_object *object, zval *retval_ptr, int param_count, zval *params);
void zend_call_known_instance_method_with_0_params(
zend_function *fn, zend_object *object, zval *retval_ptr);
void zend_call_known_instance_method_with_1_params(
zend_function *fn, zend_object *object, zval *retval_ptr, zval *param);
void zend_call_known_instance_method_with_2_params(
zend_function *fn, zend_object *object, zval *retval_ptr, zval *param1, zval *param2);
These are used to perform a call if you already have the
zend_function you want to call. zend_call_known_function()
is the base API, the rest are just really thin wrappers around
it for the common case of instance method calls.
Closes GH-5692.
Closes GH-5353. From now on, PHP will have reflection information
about default values of parameters of internal functions.
Co-authored-by: Nikita Popov <nikita.ppv@gmail.com>
To explicitly indicate that objects are uncomparable. For now
this has no functional difference from the usual 1 return value,
but makes intent clearer.