To make things a bit less weird, split off the function name into
a zval stored separately from the arguments. This allows us to
use normal zpp and get standard behavior.
The 32-bit tests work on both 32-bit and 64-bit. I dropped the
64-bit variants as they only test one additional case that I don't
think adds particular value.
Make the behavior of substr(), mb_substr(), iconv_substr() and
grapheme_substr() consistent when it comes to the handling of
out of bounds offsets. substr() will now always clamp out of
bounds offsets to the string boundary. Cases that previously
returned false will now return an empty string. This means that
substr() itself *always* returns a string now (like mb_substr()
already did before.)
Closes GH-6182.
We have to log errors in `stream_opener` callbacks to the wrapper's
error log, because otherwise we may pick up an unrelated `errno` or a
most generic message.
Closes GH-6187.
Normalize the behavior between the file functions and those on
SplFileObject.
Be consistent about throwing regardless of whether the delimiter etc
is empty or has too many characters. I don't think it's worthwhile
to distinguish these cases.
Back when we looked into this originally, there was some hope that
we might want to add support for multiple-character delimiter etc,
but after a cursory look, I really don't think this is going to
happen (for fputcsv maybe, but for fgetcsv this just makes an already
broken function much more complicated.)
Closes GH-6188.
If restoring of any not registered built-in wrapper is requested, the
function is supposed to fail with a warning, so we have to check this
condition first.
Furthermore, to be able to detect whether a built-in wrapper has been
changed, it is not sufficient to check whether *any* userland wrapper
has been registered, but rather whether the specific wrapper has been
modified.
Closes GH-6183.
Cross checking implementations from other languages, empty strings
are always allowed. PHP's output is peculiar due to it's insistence
to encode a trailing \0, but otherwise sensible and does round-trip
as expected.
Return "0000" instead of false to have a consistent return type.
"0000" is already a possible return value if the string doesn't
contain any letters, such as with soundex(" "). We can treat the
case of soundex("") exactly the same.
The implementation here was pretty confused. In reality the only
error condition it has right now is that for a string input,
from & length cannot be arrays.
The fact that the array lengths are the same was probably supposed
to be checked for the case of array input, as it wouldn't matter
otherwise.
URIs with a 0 port are generally valid, so `parse_url()` should
recognize such URIs, but still report the port as missing.
Co-authored-by: twosee <twose@qq.com>
Closes GH-6152.
* The array "subject" of a function gets called $array.
* Further parameters should be self-descriptive if used
as a named parameter, and a full word, not an abbreviation.
* If there is a "bunch more arrays" variadic, it gets
called $arrays (because that's what was already there).
* A few functions have a variadic "a bunch more arrays,
and then a callable", and were already called $rest.
I left those as is and died a little inside.
* Any callable provided to an array function that acts
on the array is called $callback. (Nearly all were already,
I just fixed the one or two outliers.)
* array_multisort() is beyond help so I ran screaming.
A recent commit[1] which fixed a memory leak introduced a regression
regarding the formerly liberal handling of IP addresses to bind to. We
fix this by reverting that commit, and fix the memory leak where it
actually occurs. In other words, this fix is less intrusive than the
former fix.
[1] <http://git.php.net/?p=php-src.git;a=commit;h=0b8c83f5936581942715d14883cdebddc18bad30>
Closes GH-6104.
The second and third arguments are not always the sort_order and
sort_flags -- they can also be in reverse order, or be arrays
altogether. Move them into the variadic parameter to avoid awkward
error messages.
Both of these functions are well-defined when used with a single
array argument -- rejecting this case was an artificial limitation.
This is not useful when called with explicit arguments, but removes
edge-cases when used with argument unpacking:
// OK even if $excludes is empty.
array_diff($array, ...$excludes);
// OK even if $arrays contains a single array only.
array_intersect(...$arrays);
This matches the behavior of functions like array_merge() and
array_push(), which also allow calls with no array or a single
array respectively.
Closes GH-6097.
Currently we treat paths with null bytes as a TypeError, which is
incorrect, and rather inconsistent, as we treat empty paths as
ValueError. We do this because the error is generated by zpp and
it's easier to always throw TypeError there.
This changes the zpp implementation to throw a TypeError only if
the type is actually wrong and throw ValueError for null bytes.
The error message is also split accordingly, to be more precise.
Closes GH-6094.