re2c version 4 enabled some warnings by default. This fixes re2c code
for the `-Wuseless-escape` warnings.
There are two same issues reported.
Issue: GH-17523
Closes: GH-17204
DL_LOAD now doesn't use RTLD_DEEPBIND deepbind anymore on platforms
where dlmopen with LM_ID_NEWLM is available:
this means shared library symbol isolation (if needed) must be enabled on
the user side when requiring libphp.so, by using dlmopen with LM_ID_NEWLM
instead of dlopen.
RTLD_DEEPBIND is still enabled when the Apache SAPI is in use.
Closes GH-10670.
This hack not only breaks the handling of custom allocators, but also
breaks if zend_alloc is compiled with USE_CUSTOM_MM.
This hack is just no good, if you want leak information then use ASAN.
Closes GH-18813.
It's possible to return a reference from __toString(), but this is not
handled and results in a (confusing) error telling that the return value
must be a string.
Properly handle this by unwrapping the reference.
Closes GH-18810.
This fixes null dereference error when calling fpm_get_status() and one
of the children is just being created.
Closes GH-18662
Co-authored-by: Jakub Zelenka <bukka@php.net>
This allows us to avoid a call to `zend_ini_str` which took 6% of the
profile on my i7-4790 for a call to `http_build_query`. Now we can just
grab the value from the globals.
In other files this can avoid some length recomputations.
* Move glob to main/ from win32/
In preparation to make the Win32 reimplementation the standard
cross-platform one. Currently, it doesn't do that and just passes
through the original glob implementation. We could consider also having
an option to use the standard glob for systems that have a sufficient
one.
* Enable building with win32 glob on non-windows
Kind of broken. We're namespacing the function and struct, but not yet
the GLOB_* defines. There are a lot of places callers check if i.e.
NOMATCH is defined that would likely become redundant.
Currently it also has php_glob and #defines glob php_glob (etc.) - I
suspect doing the opposite and changing the callers would make more
sense, just doing MVP to geet it to build (even if it fails tests).
* Massive first pass at conversion to internal glob
Have not tested yet. the big things are:
- Should be invisible to userland PHP code.
- A lot of :%s/GLOB_/PHP_GLOB_/g; the diff can be noisy as a result,
especially in comments.
- Prefixes everything with PHP_ to avoid conflicts with system glob in
case it gets included transitively.
- A lot of weird shared definitions that were sprawled out to other
headers are now included in php_glob.h.
- A lot of (but not yet all cases) of HAVE_GLOB are removed, since we
can always fall back to php_glob.
- Using the system glob is not wired up yet; it'll need more shim
ifdefs for each flag type than just glob_t/glob/globfree defs.
* Fix inclusion of GLOB_ONLYDIR
This is a GNU extension, but we don't need to implement it, as the GNU
implementation is flawed enough that callers have to manually filter it
anyways; just provide a stub definition for the constant.
We could consideer implementing this properly later. For now, fixes the
basic glob constant tests.
* Remove HAVE_GLOBs
We now always have a glob implementation that works. HAVE_GLOB should
only be used to check if we have a system implementation, for if we
decide to wrap the system implementation instead.
* We don't need to care about being POSIXly correct for internal glob
* Check for reallocarray
Ideally temporary until GH-17433.
* Forgot to move this file from win32/ to main/
* Check for issetugid (BSD function)
* Allow using the system glob with --enable-system-glob
* Style fix after removing ifdef
* Remove empty case for system glob
In #18527, I accidentally swapped the values. This is before my modification:
```
zend_printf("Configuration File (php.ini) Path: %s\n", PHP_CONFIG_FILE_PATH);
zend_printf("Loaded Configuration File: %s\n", php_ini_opened_path ? php_ini_opened_path : "(none)");
zend_printf("Scan for additional .ini files in: %s\n", php_ini_scanned_path ? php_ini_scanned_path : "(none)");
```
- "Loaded Configuration File" should be `php_ini_opened_path`
- "Scan for additional .ini files in" shoudl be `php_ini_scanned_path`
When a config var has whitespace (especially trailing whitespace) it is hard to see. This commit wraps the values (if they exist) in double quotes, so the difference is visually observable:
Before:
```
$ export PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR="/opt/homebrew/etc/php/8.4/conf.d "
$ ./sapi/cli/php --ini
Configuration File (php.ini) Path: /usr/local/lib
Loaded Configuration File: /opt/homebrew/etc/php/8.4/conf.d
Scan for additional .ini files in: (none)
Additional .ini files parsed: (none)
```
> Note
> The above output has trailing whitespace that is not visible, you can see it if you copy it into an editor:
After:
```
$ ./sapi/cli/php --ini
Configuration File (php.ini) Path: "/usr/local/lib"
Loaded Configuration File: "/opt/homebrew/etc/php/8.4/conf.d "
Scan for additional .ini files in: (none)
Additional .ini files parsed: (none)
```
Above the whitespace is now visible `/opt/homebrew/etc/php/8.4/conf.d `.
Close#18390
The ctrl_handler is never destroyed. We have to destroy it at request
end so we avoid leaking it and also avoid keeping a reference to
previous request memory in a next request. The latter can result in a
crash and can be demonstrated with this script and `--repeat 2`:
```php
class Test {
public function set() {
sapi_windows_set_ctrl_handler(self::cb(...));
}
public function cb() {
}
}
$test = new Test;
$test->set();
sleep(3);
```
When you hit CTRL+C in the second request you can crash.
This patch resolves both the leak and crash by destroying the
ctrl_handler after a request.
Closes GH-18231.
This changes the signature of opcode handlers in the CALL VM so that the opline
is passed directly via arguments. This reduces the number of memory operations
on EX(opline), and makes the CALL VM considerably faster.
Additionally, this unifies the CALL and HYBRID VMs a bit, as EX(opline) is now
handled in the same way in both VMs.
This is a part of GH-17849.
Currently we have two VMs:
* HYBRID: Used when compiling with GCC. execute_data and opline are global
register variables
* CALL: Used when compiling with something else. execute_data is passed as
opcode handler arg, but opline is passed via execute_data->opline
(EX(opline)).
The Call VM looks like this:
while (1) {
ret = execute_data->opline->handler(execute_data);
if (UNEXPECTED(ret != 0)) {
if (ret > 0) { // returned by ZEND_VM_ENTER() / ZEND_VM_LEAVE()
execute_data = EG(current_execute_data);
} else { // returned by ZEND_VM_RETURN()
return;
}
}
}
// example op handler
int ZEND_INIT_FCALL_SPEC_CONST_HANDLER(zend_execute_data *execute_data) {
// load opline
const zend_op *opline = execute_data->opline;
// instruction execution
// dispatch
// ZEND_VM_NEXT_OPCODE():
execute_data->opline++;
return 0; // ZEND_VM_CONTINUE()
}
Opcode handlers return a positive value to signal that the loop must load a
new execute_data from EG(current_execute_data), typically when entering
or leaving a function.
Here I make the following changes:
* Pass opline as opcode handler argument
* Return next opline from opcode handlers
* ZEND_VM_ENTER / ZEND_VM_LEAVE return opline|(1<<0) to signal that
execute_data must be reloaded from EG(current_execute_data)
This gives us:
while (1) {
opline = opline->handler(execute_data, opline);
if (UNEXPECTED((uintptr_t) opline & ZEND_VM_ENTER_BIT) {
opline = opline & ~ZEND_VM_ENTER_BIT;
if (opline != 0) { // ZEND_VM_ENTER() / ZEND_VM_LEAVE()
execute_data = EG(current_execute_data);
} else { // ZEND_VM_RETURN()
return;
}
}
}
// example op handler
const zend_op * ZEND_INIT_FCALL_SPEC_CONST_HANDLER(zend_execute_data *execute_data, const zend_op *opline) {
// opline already loaded
// instruction execution
// dispatch
// ZEND_VM_NEXT_OPCODE():
return ++opline;
}
bench.php is 23% faster on Linux / x86_64, 18% faster on MacOS / M1.
Symfony Demo is 2.8% faster.
When using the HYBRID VM, JIT'ed code stores execute_data/opline in two fixed
callee-saved registers and rarely touches EX(opline), just like the VM.
Since the registers are callee-saved, the JIT'ed code doesn't have to
save them before calling other functions, and can assume they always
contain execute_data/opline. The code also avoids saving/restoring them in
prologue/epilogue, as execute_ex takes care of that (JIT'ed code is called
exclusively from there).
The CALL VM can now use a fixed register for execute_data/opline as well, but
we can't rely on execute_ex to save the registers for us as it may use these
registers itself. So we have to save/restore the two registers in JIT'ed code
prologue/epilogue.
Closes GH-17952
This changes make FPM always decode SCRIPT_FILENAME when Apache
ProxyPass or ProxyPassMatch is used. It also introduces a new INI
option fastcgi.script_path_encoded that allows using the previous
behavior of not decoding the path. The INI is introduced because
there is a chance that some users could use encoded file paths in
their file system as a workaround for the previous behavior.
Close GH-17896
This fixes a ZEND_RC_MOD_CHECK() assertion failure when building with
"-DZEND_RC_DEBUG=1 --enable-debug --enable-zts". php_dl() is called after
startup, and manipulates the refcount of persistent strings, which is not
allowed at this point of the lifecycle.
The dl() function disables the ZEND_RC_MOD_CHECK() assertion before calling
php_dl(). This change applies the same workaround in FPM.
Closes GH-18075