Opcache inlines functions that only return a constant. Disable
optimizations to prevent differences in tests where such functions
are used (or rewrite the test to not depend on it).
JIT ignores that the `zend_write` callback is overwritten, so we define
our own callback and caller.
We also fix the "inconsistent DLL binding" warnings on Windows, by
introducing `PHP_ZEND_TEST_API`.
Closes GH-6391.
The motivation for this change is to prevent extensions from having to check executor globals for the current execute_data during function call init. A previous implementation of the observer API initialized the function call from runtime cache initialization before execute_data was allocated which is why zend_function was passed in.
But now that the observer API is implemented via opcode specialization, it makes sense to pass in the execute_data. This also keeps the API a bit more consistent for existing extensions that already hook zend_execute_ex.
Closes GH-6209
The hash is used to check whether the arginfo file needs to be
regenerated. PHP-Parser will only be downloaded if this is actually
necessary.
This ensures that release artifacts will never try to regenerate
stubs and thus fetch PHP-Parser, as long as you do not modify any
files.
Closes GH-5739.
We have to actually determine the proper `SIZEOF_OFF_T`.
Interestingly, it is `4` on Windows x64.
We also have to prevent the redefinition in pg_config.h. The clean
solution would likely be to not include pg_config.h at all, but that's
out of scope for BC reasons for now.
Closes GH-5353. From now on, PHP will have reflection information
about default values of parameters of internal functions.
Co-authored-by: Nikita Popov <nikita.ppv@gmail.com>
Internal constants can be marked as CONST_DEPRECATED, in which
case accessing them will throw a deprecation warning.
For now this is only supported on global constants, not class
constants. Complain to me if you need to deprecate a class
constant...
Closes GH-5072.
Instead of having a completely independent encoding for type list
entries. This is going to use more memory, but I'm not particularly
concerned about that, as type unions that contain multiple classes
should be uncommon. On the other hand, this allows us to treat
top-level types and types inside lists mostly the same.
A new ZEND_TYPE_FOREACH macros allows to transparently treat list
and non-list types the same way. I'm not using it everywhere it could be
used for now, just the places that seemed most obvious.
Of course, this will make any future type system changes much simpler,
as it will not be necessary to duplicate all logic two times.
We must not assume that the size of a function's return value is at
most `sizeof(ffi_arg)`, but rather have to use the size which already
has been determined for the return type if it is larger than
`sizeof(ffi_arg)`.
To be able to have a regression test, we export the required test
function from the zend-test extension, and make sure that the test
can be run on different platforms regardless of whether zend-tests was
built statically or dynamically.