Instead of allocating, using, and then releasing a zend_string for every
property name unconditionally, only do so when the minimum supported version of
PHP does not have that string in its known strings (ZEND_KNOWN_STRINGS). If the
string is already known, just use the known version directly. This is already
done for some non-generated class registrations, e.g. in
`zend_enum_register_props()`.
To match other capitalized strings like `ZEND_STR_UNKNOWN_CAPITALIZED` and
`ZEND_STR_ARRAY_CAPITALIZED`. Since this known string was only added in PHP
8.4, no backwards compatibility alias is needed.
This abstracts away, and cleans up, the flag handling for properties of
strings that hold when concatenating two strings if they both hold that
property. (These macros also work with simply copies of strings because
a copy of a string can be considered a concatenation with the empty
string.) This gets rid of some branches and some repetitive code, and
leaves room for adding more flags like these in the future.
These macros are designed only for literals. This is a
standards compliant trick to ensure they are literals.
For example, these are the same:
"Hello" " world"
"Hello world"
Shift header include
In the C file, include the header first so missing #includes are
detected by the compiler, and use lighter header dependencies in the
header, to speed up compile times.
This does a compile time transformation of ``iterable`` into ``Traversable|array`` which simplifies some of the LSP variance handling.
The arginfo generation script from stubs is updated to produce a union type when it encounters the type ``iterable``
Extension functions which do not regenerate the arginfo, or write them manually are still supported by mimicking the compile time transformation while registering the function.
Type Reflection is preserved for single ``iterable`` (and ``?iterable``) to produce a ReflectionNamedType with name ``iterable``, however usage of ``iterable`` in union types will be converted to ``array|Traversable``
* ext/oci8: use zend_string_equals()
Eliminate duplicate code.
* main/php_variables: use zend_string_equals_literal()
Eliminate duplicate code.
* Zend/zend_string: add zend_string_equals_cstr()
Allows eliminating duplicate code.
* Zend, ext/{opcache,standard}, main/output: use zend_string_equals_cstr()
Eliminate duplicate code.
* Zend/zend_string: add zend_string_starts_with()
* ext/{opcache,phar,spl,standard}: use zend_string_starts_with()
This adds missing length checks to several callers, e.g. in
cache_script_in_shared_memory(). This is important when the
zend_string is shorter than the string parameter, when memcmp()
happens to check backwards; this can result in an out-of-bounds memory
access.
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
Trying to allocate a `zend_string` with a length only slighty smaller
than `SIZE_MAX` causes an integer overflow; we make sure that this
doesn't happen by catering to the maximal overhead of a `zend_string`.
Closes GH-7597.
Add a new interned string handler that fetches an interned string
if it exists, but does not create one if it does not (and instead
returns a non-interned string).
This fixes bug #81142, by preventing the creating of new interned
strings for unserialized array keys.
Closes GH-7360.
Trying to allocate a `zend_string` with a length only slighty smaller
than `SIZE_MAX` causes an integer overflow, so callers may need to
check that explicitly. To make that easy in a portable way, we
introduce `ZSTR_MAX_LEN`.
Closes GH-7294.
The never type can be used to indicate that a function never
returns, for example because it always unwinds.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/noreturn_type
Closes GH-6761.
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.
mysqlnd already creates interned zend_strings for us, so let's
make use of them.
This also required updating the PDO case changing code to work
with potentially shared strings. For the lowercasing, use the
optimized zend_string_tolower() implementation.