Our CPU detection code currently only checks whether hardware
support for AVX exists. However, we also need to check for operating
system support for XSAVE, as well as whether XCR0 has the SSE and
AVX bits set.
If this is not the case, unset the AVX and AVX2 bits in the cpuinfo
structure.
Hopefully this resolves our issues with CPU support detection.
Closes GH-6460.
Make sure the $PHP_THREAD_SAFETY variable is always available
when configuring extensions. It was previously available for
phpized extensions, but for in-tree builds it was being set
too late.
Then, use $PHP_THREAD_SAFETY instead of $enable_zts to check for
ZTS in bundled extensions, which makes sure these checks also
work for phpize builds.
For a division like [1..1]/[2..2] produce [0..1] as a result, which
would be the integer envelope of the floating-point result.
The implementation is pretty ugly (we're now taking min/max across
eight values...) but I couldn't come up with a more elegant way
to handle this that doesn't make things a lot more complex (the
division sign handling is the annoying issue here).
Export the zend_is_callable_impl() function as
zend_is_callable_at_frame() for use by extension. As twose pointed
out, an extension may want to retrieve fcc for a private method.
For x ? y : z style structures, the live range starts at z, but
may also hold the value of y. Make sure that the refcounting check
takes this into account, by checking the type of a potential phi
user.
Failure to rebind such closures is not necessarily related to them
being created by `ReflectionFunctionAbstract::getClosure()`, so we fix
the error message.
Closes GH-6424.
Let's test the current behavior here. It might not be right, but
it's long-standing behavior.
Nearly missed an assertion failure here because the test was
XFAILed...
We should use normal function renaming if the function is declared
during preloading itself, rather than afterwards.
This fixes a regression introduced by
68f80be9d1.
We should only disable early binding during the opcache_compile_file()
calls, not inside the preloading script or anything it includes.
The right condition to check for is whether we compile the file
without execution, as declaring classes is "execution".
This is a bit annoying: When preloading is used, types might be
resolved during inheritance checks, so we need to deal with CE
types rather than just NAME types everywhere.
While fixing bugs in mbstring, one of my new test cases failed with a strange
error message stating: 'Warning: Undefined array key 1...', when clearly the
array key had been set properly.
GDB'd that sucker and found that JIT'd PHP code was calling directly into
`zend_hash_add_new` (which was not converting the numeric string key to an
integer properly). But where was that code coming from? I examined the disasm,
looked up symbols to figure out where call instructions were going, then grepped
the codebase for those function names. It soon became clear that the disasm I
was looking at was compiled from `zend_jit_fetch_dim_w_helper`.
A recent bug fix regarding symlinks claimed:
> After resolving reparse points, the path still may be a reparse
> point; in that case we have to resolve that reparse point as well.
While that is basically correct, some reparse points may point to
inaccessible system folders (e.g. `IO_REPARSE_TAG_DEDUP` points to
"\System Volume Information"). Since we don't know details about
arbitrary reparse points, and are mainly interested in nested symlinks,
we take a step back, and only resolve `IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK` for now.
Close GH-6354.
While the initial threshold is set to 10001 roots, the threshold
adjustment logic may then set it to 10000. The exact value really
doesn't matter, but we should make it consistent.