This API handles the common case of calling a userland function and passing a return value pointer.
This allows to remove the 'incorrect' usage of zend_fcall_info_call(fci, fcc, retval, NULL)
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>
Add libxml_get_external_entity_loader(), which returns the currently
installed external entity loader, i.e. the value which was passed to
libxml_set_external_entity_loader() or null if no loader was installed
and the default entity loader will be used.
This allows libraries to save and restore the loader, controlling entity
expansion without interfering with the rest of the application.
Add macro Z_PARAM_FUNC_OR_NULL_WITH_ZVAL(). This allows us to get the
zval for a callable parameter without duplicating callable argument
parsing.
The saved zval keeps the object needed for fcc/fci alive, simplifying
memory management.
Fixes#76763.
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.
Implements https://wiki.php.net/rfc/partially-supported-callables-expand-deprecation-notices
so that uses of "self" and "parent" in is_callable() and callable
type constraints now raise a deprecation notice, independent of the
one raised when and if the callable is actually invoked.
A new flag is added to the existing check_flags parameter of
zend_is_callable / zend_is_callable_ex, for use in internal calls
that would otherwise repeat the notice multiple times. In particular,
arguments to internal function calls are checked first based on
arginfo, and then again during ZPP, so the former suppresses the
deprecation notice.
Some existing tests which raised this deprecation have been updated
to avoid the syntax, but the existing version retained for maximum
regression coverage until it is made an error.
With thanks to Juliette Reinders Folmer for the RFC and initial
investigation.
Closes GH-8823.
A slight imperfection in https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/7443.
As a zend_API, we should also consider other extensions that may call it in methods. This change will not break the behavior of php-src.
It introduces a single function to check file paths passed to OpenSSL
functions. It expands the path, check null bytes and finally does
an open basedir check.
https://wiki.php.net/rfc/strtolower-ascii means that these functions no longer
depend on the current locale in php 8.2. Before that, this was unsafe to
evaluate at compile time.
Followup to GH-7506
Add strcmp/strcasecmp/strtolower/strtoupper functions
Add bin2hex/hex2bin and related functions
Update test of garbage collection using strtolower to use something else to create a refcounted string
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
This API had rather peculiar behavior in case the provided function
is not callable. For some types of failures, it would silently
return FAILURE (e.g. a function does not exist), while for others
(e.g. a class does not exist) it would generate a warning. Depending
on what the calling code does, this can either result in silent
failure or duplicate errors.
This commit switches the contract such that zend_call_function()
always (*) succeeds, though that success might be in the form of
throwing an exception. Calling a non-callable will now consistently
throw an exception.
There are some rare callers that do want to ignore missing methods,
for legacy APIs that are specific with optional methods. For these
use cases a new zend_call_method_if_exists() API is provided.
Calling code generally does not need to explicitly check for and
report zend_call_function() failures -- it can rely on
zend_call_function() having already done so. However, existing
code that does check for failure should continue to work fine.
(*) The only exception to this is if EG(active) being false during
late engine shutdown. This is not relevant to most code, but code
running in destructors and similar may need to be aware of the
possibility.
This adds support for internal enums with the same basic approach
as userland enums. Enum values are stored as CONSTANT_AST and
objects created during constant updating at runtime. This means
that we need to use mutable_data for internal enums.
This just adds basic support and APIs, it does not include the
stubs integration from #7212.
Closes GH-7302.
MSVC doesn't support __attribute__((unused)), so this can cause
a lot of warnings for extensions. Use the (void) trick instead.
However, this requires us to initialize the variable as well,
to ensure that ubsan does not read a trap representation.
This PR corrects misspellings identified by the check-spelling action.
The misspellings have been reported at jsoref@b6ba3e2#commitcomment-48946465
The action reports that the changes in this PR would make it happy: jsoref@602417c
Closes GH-6822.