In HHVM (and HPHPc before it) we've been piggybacking resources on the
KindOfObject machinery. At the language level, resource is considered to
be a different type than object, and there are a number of differences
in behavior between objects and resources (ex. resources don't allow for
dynamic properties, resources don't work with the clone operator, the
"(object)" cast behaves differently for resources vs. objects, etc).
Piggybacking resources on the KindOfObject machinery has some downsides.
Code that deals with KindOfObject values often needs to check if the value
is a resource and go down a different code path. This makes things harder
to maintain and harder to keep parity with Zend. Also, these extra branches
hurt performance a little, and they make it harder for the JIT to do a good
job in some cases when its generating machine code that operates on objects.
This diff prepares the code base for a new KindOfResource type by adding a
new "Resource" smart pointer type (currently a typedef for the Object smart
pointer type) and it updates the C++ code and the idl files appropriately.
This diff is essentially a cosmetic change and should not impact run time
behavior. In the next diff (part 2) we'll actually add a new KindOfResource
type, detach ResourceData from the ObjectData inheritence hierarchy, and
provide a real implementation for the Resource smart pointer type (instead
of just aliasing the Object smart pointer type).
C++11 cleanup (clean up easy enums)
This is for runtime/base/... and ended up touching a lot of files
because it turns out we have a lot of reasonably behaved enums.
Introducing `ZendParamMode` to as a idl flag. We are not consistent with zend on how they do their params for builtins. We cast to the expected data type. They do some checks, and if the checks don't pass they issue a warning and return (usually) `null`. This diff starts us down that path.
I'm introducing the param and using it in the places where we were emulating the calling convention in the `f_foo` functions. I'm going to follow up with converting as many as I can and then eventually this becomes the default. I also want this to be applied to php files in systemlib.
Many of the conversions are from https://github.com/php/php-src/blob/master/Zend/zend_API.c#L305
I was learning from @jdelong and he said that you should use
double quotes for local includes and angle brackets for library
includes. I asked why our code was the way it was, and he said he wanted
to clean it up. I beat him to it :)
Conflicts:
hphp/runtime/base/server/admin_request_handler.cpp
hphp/runtime/vm/named_entity.h
This is a partial step towards merging the HPHP::VM namespace
up into its parent. To keep it reviewable/mergeable I'm not doing
everything at once here, but most of the code I've touched seems
improved. I've drawn an invisible line around the jit, Unit and
its cohort (Class, Func, PreClass, etc.); we'll get back to them
soon.
The unserialization of random objects may be dangerous because the destructor of the object will be called when the unserialized objects are out of scope. However, the person who wrote the class may not be aware of the danger of unserialization. Therefore, we would like to require every users of the unserialize() to provide a whitelist of the class names that are authorized to be unserialized so that we can make sure the object is safe to be unserialized.
Add a parameter 'class_whitelist' to unserialize() function to determine whether to raise warnings for unsafe unserialization. If the class to be unserialized is not an instance of Serilizable or not in the whitelist, warnings will be raised. For the detailed reason why we need this, please see http://fburl.com/SafeSerializable for more information.
Add a parameter 'all_classes_enabled' to allow those hphp functions that need to unserialize any class. For example, fb_call_user_func_async() will need to serialize and nserialize the given parameters.
unserialize() and call_user_func_array() were straightforward. They were
called from all over the runtime, but I renamed those implementations
and codemodded the runtime.
The is_* functions were only ever being called by the CVarRef signature,
so I deleted all the other ones (same for f_gettype). Only some of the
is_* functions were being called from the runtime, so I made inline
versions of those without the f_ prefix.
Post-hphpc, declaring builtins as inline is useless, which obviates the
need for this layer.
This doesn't fully delete the file, because I wanted to keep mindless
parts and use-your-brain parts separate. This is the mindless part. The
remaining functions in noinline.cpp are no-inline wrappers around
(a) a function that isn't defined in an extension, call_user_func_array,
and (b) calling polymorphic is_* functions, which can probably mostly go
away now. But I wanted to exercise more care around those, so they'll
come in a followup diff.
This diff removes LVariableTable, RVariableTable, and getHphpBinaryType().
It also consolidates some of the include logic that was spread across
multiple files.
This change is mostly for FB internal organizational reasons.
Building is not effected beyond the fact that the target now
lands in hphp/hhvm/hhvm rather than src/hhvm/hhvm.