Refactor the zend_is_callable implementation to check callability
at a particular frame (this is an implementation detail for now,
but could be exposed in the API if useful). Pick the first parent
user frame as the one to check.
From an engine perspective, named parameters mainly add three
concepts:
* The SEND_* opcodes now accept a CONST op2, which is the
argument name. For now, it is looked up by linear scan and
runtime cached.
* This may leave UNDEF arguments on the stack. To avoid having
to deal with them in other places, a CHECK_UNDEF_ARGS opcode
is used to either replace them with defaults, or error.
* For variadic functions, EX(extra_named_params) are collected
and need to be freed based on ZEND_CALL_HAS_EXTRA_NAMED_PARAMS.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/named_params
Closes GH-5357.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/saner-numeric-strings
This removes the -1 allow_error mode from is_numeric_string functions and replaces it by
a trailing boolean out argument to preserve BC in a couple of places.
Most of the changes can be resumed to "numeric" strings which emitted a E_NOTICE now emit
a E_WARNING and "numeric" strings which emitted a E_WARNING now throw a TypeError.
This mostly affects:
- String offsets
- Arithmetic operations
- Bitwise operations
Closes GH-5762
Bug that regularly sneaks in: ZEND_ACC_FINAL is set before calling
zend_register_internal_class() and promptly gets ignored. Remove
this footgun by preserving flags from the original CE.
This is a private property, so we are allowed to add a type.
The new declaration of the property is:
private array $trace = [];
This ensures that Exception::getTrace() does indeed return an array.
Userland code that was modifying the property through refleciton
may have to be adjusted to assign an array (instead of null,
for example).
Closes GH-5636.
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
We have a bunch of APIs for getting type names and it's sometimes
hard to keep them apart ... make it clear that this is the one
you definitely do not want to use.
Currently, disabling a function only replaces the internal
function handler with one that throws a warning, and a few
places in the engine special-case such functions, such as
function_exists. This leaves us with a Schrödinger's function,
which both does not exist (function_exists returns false) and
does exist (you cannot define a function with the same name).
In particular, this prevents the implementation of robust
polyfills, as reported in https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=79382:
if (!function_exists('getallheaders')) {
function getallheaders(...) { ... }
}
If getallheaders() is a disabled function, this code will break.
This patch changes disable_functions to remove the functions from
the function table completely. For all intents and purposes, it
will look like the function does not exist.
This also renders two bits of PHP functionality obsolete and thus
deprecated:
* ReflectionFunction::isDisabled(), as it will no longer be
possible to construct the ReflectionFunction of a disabled
function in the first place.
* get_defined_functions() with $exclude_disabled=false, as
get_defined_functions() now never returns disabled functions.
Fixed bug #79382.
Closes GH-5473.
This is only used in reflection, where doing a simple string check
is acceptable.
I'm also dropping the "dtor" printing in the reflection dump.
Dtors are just one of many magic methods, I don't think there's
a point in explicitly highlighting them, when the name is already
unambiguous.
The callable name is provided also if it's not callable, in which
case it's basically "what it would be if it were callable", which
is ClassName::__invoke. The current behavior of casting the object
to string makes very little sense as this will just throw an
exception for most objects.