We remove the arbitrary restriction to `INT_MAX`; it is superfluous on
32bit systems where `ZEND_LONG_MAX == INT_MAX` anyway, and not useful
on 64bit systems, where larger files should be readable, if the
`memory_limit` is large enough.
Closes GH-6648.
Check open_basedir after the fallback to the system's temporary
directory in tempnam().
In order to preserve the current behavior of upload_tmp_dir
(do not check explicitly specified dir, but check fallback),
new flags are added to check open_basedir for explicit dir
and for fallback.
Closes GH-6526.
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.
Normalize the behavior between the file functions and those on
SplFileObject.
Be consistent about throwing regardless of whether the delimiter etc
is empty or has too many characters. I don't think it's worthwhile
to distinguish these cases.
Back when we looked into this originally, there was some hope that
we might want to add support for multiple-character delimiter etc,
but after a cursory look, I really don't think this is going to
happen (for fputcsv maybe, but for fgetcsv this just makes an already
broken function much more complicated.)
Closes GH-6188.
This fixes a way it was possible to trigger an Internel Error
by disabling function (via the INI setting) when SPL was acting
as a proxy to the function call.
Fix flock_compat layer as it needs to used in SPL now.
Use macro to check if object is initialized
Closes GH-6014
The php_stream_read() and php_stream_write() functions now return
an ssize_t value, with negative results indicating failure. Functions
like fread() and fwrite() will return false in that case.
As a special case, EWOULDBLOCK and EAGAIN on non-blocking streams
should not be regarded as error conditions, and be reported as
successful zero-length reads/writes instead. The handling of EINTR
remains unclear and is internally inconsistent (e.g. some code-paths
will automatically retry on EINTR, while some won't).
I'm landing this now to make sure the stream wrapper ops API changes
make it into 7.4 -- however, if the user-facing changes turn out to
be problematic we have the option of clamping negative returns to
zero in php_stream_read() and php_stream_write() to restore the
old behavior in a relatively non-intrusive manner.