We destroy classes of dl()'ed modules in clean_module_classes(), during
shutdown. Child classes of a module use structures of the parent class (such as
inherited properties), which are destroyed earlier, so we have a use-after-free
when destroying a child class.
Here I destroy classes in reverse order, as it is done in zend_shutdown() for
persistent classes.
Fixes GH-17961
Fixes GH-15367
When observer is enabled, we normally add an extra temporary to all
functions, to store the previously observed frame. However, this is done in
zend_observer_post_startup() so it doesn't happen to dl'ed() functions.
One possible fix would be to move that from zend_observer_post_startup()
to zend_register_functions(), but this would be too early: Observer may
not be enabled when zend_register_functions() is called, and may still be
enabled later.
However, when zend_register_functions() is called at run-time (during dl()),
we know definitively whether observer is enabled.
Here I update zend_register_functions() to add a temporary to dl'ed()
functions when observer is enabled.
Fixes: GH-17211
Closes: GH-17220
We should only attempt to fetch the current filename for user constants. dl()
may attempt to register internal constants after execution has already started,
thus incorrectly linking the user file invoking dl().
See GH-16663
Using php_info_print_table_header() for "Foo: bar" looks odd and out of place,
because the whole line is colored. It is also questionable from a HTML
semantics point of view, because it does not described the columns that follow.
The use of this across extensions is inconsistent. It was part of the skeleton,
but ext/date or ext/json already use a regular row.
Add clean_module_functions() to clean functions which are registered by zend_register_functions().
The general logic of clean_module_functions() is consistent with clean_module_classes().