When performing an RW modification of an array offset, the undefined
offset warning may call an error handler / OB callback, which may
destroy the array we're supposed to change. Detect this by temporarily
incrementing the reference count. If we find that the array has been
modified/destroyed in the meantime, we do nothing -- the execution
model here would be that the modification has happened on the destroyed
version of the array.
Add ZVAL_CHAR/RETVAL_CHAR/RETURN_CHAR as a shortcut for using
ZVAL_INTERNED_STRING and ZSTR_CHAR.
Add zend_string_init_fast() as a helper for the empty string /
one char interned string / zend_string_init() pattern.
Also add corresponding ZVAL_STRINGL_FAST etc macros.
Closes GH-5684.
From now on, we always display the given object's type instead of just reporting "object".
Additionally, make the format of return type errors match the format of argument errors.
Closes GH-5625
There was some confusion going on here regarding the original
value vs the copied value.
I've dropped the needs_copy variable, because this code is not
inlined, so it would always be true anyway.
What we need to do is perform a move-assignment of the copied
value (in which case we don't care about performing the assignment
before destroying garbage), and destroying the original value
for the VAR/TMP cases. This is a bit complicated by the fact that
references are passed in via a separate ref variable, so we can't
just ptr_dtor the original variable.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/static_return_type
The "static" type is represented as MAY_BE_STATIC, rather than
a class type like "self" and "parent", as it has special
resolution semantics, and cannot be cached in the runtime cache.
Closes GH-5062.
Internal constants can be marked as CONST_DEPRECATED, in which
case accessing them will throw a deprecation warning.
For now this is only supported on global constants, not class
constants. Complain to me if you need to deprecate a class
constant...
Closes GH-5072.
Instead of having a completely independent encoding for type list
entries. This is going to use more memory, but I'm not particularly
concerned about that, as type unions that contain multiple classes
should be uncommon. On the other hand, this allows us to treat
top-level types and types inside lists mostly the same.
A new ZEND_TYPE_FOREACH macros allows to transparently treat list
and non-list types the same way. I'm not using it everywhere it could be
used for now, just the places that seemed most obvious.
Of course, this will make any future type system changes much simpler,
as it will not be necessary to duplicate all logic two times.
Convert the empty string assignment to an Error as per RFC [1]
Add a warning that only the first byte will be assigned to the offset if provided
a needle that is longer than one byte.
[1] https://wiki.php.net/rfc/engine_warnings