Hi,
There is a bug in #6 of README.PHP4-TO-PHP5-THIN-CHANGES. It should read:
-
Starting PHP 5.0.0 the T_ML_COMMENT constant is no longer defined by
the ext/tokenizer extension. If error_reporting is set toE_ALL
notices will be produced. Instead of T_ML_COMMENT for /* / the
T_COMMENT
constant is used, thus both // and / */ are resolved as
theT_COMMENT
constant.However, a phpdoc-style comment /** */ will resolve as the new
T_DOC_COMMENT
constant.
In addition, I noticed that argv and argc don't appear to be registered
in $_SERVER in the cli version any more - is this expected behavior? If
so, it should be added to THIN-CHANGES as well. It does seem planned,
since both $argv and $argc exist.
Thanks,
Greg
In addition, I noticed that argv and argc don't appear to be registered
in $_SERVER in the cli version any more - is this expected behavior?
I reported this as a bug in November: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=26206
It doesn't seem to be intentional.
It does seem planned, since both $argv and $argc exist.
WOW! That's a very interesting observation.
Thanks,
--Dan
--
T H E A N A L Y S I S A N D S O L U T I O N S C O M P A N Y
data intensive web and database programming
http://www.AnalysisAndSolutions.com/
4015 7th Ave #4, Brooklyn NY 11232 v: 718-854-0335 f: 718-854-0409
This has been discussed on internals before.
See http://www.zend.com/lists/php-dev/200310/msg00026.html and
follow-ups.
--
Regards,
Stefan Walk
<swalk@prp.physik.tu-darmstadt.de
Hi,
Stefan Walk wrote:
This has been discussed on internals before.
See http://www.zend.com/lists/php-dev/200310/msg00026.html and
follow-ups.
Thanks for pointing out this discussion.
Andrey
Indeed, this was very helpful.
Perhaps the best path is to add Rasmus's words to THIN-CHANGES:
$_SERVER should be populated with argc and argv if variables_order
includes "S". If you have specifically configured your system to not
create $_SERVER, then of course it shouldn't be there. The change was to
always make argc and argv available in the CLI version regardless of the
variables_order setting. As in, the CLI version will now always populate
the global $argc and $argv variables.
Greg
Andrey Hristov wrote:
Hi,
Stefan Walk wrote:This has been discussed on internals before.
See http://www.zend.com/lists/php-dev/200310/msg00026.html and
follow-ups.Thanks for pointing out this discussion.
Andrey
$_SERVER should be populated with argc and argv if variables_order
includes "S".
Unfortunately, this isn't working on my system with the
php5-win32-200401161930 snapshot. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding something?
My variables_order has "GPCS" and register_argc_argv is "On" but
$_SERVER['argv'] isn't there.
Test script:
<?php
echo "$_SERVER\n";
var_dump($_SERVER);
echo "\n$_SERVER['argv']\n";
var_dump($_SERVER['argv']);
echo "\n$argv\n";
var_dump($argv);
echo 'register_argc_argv = ' . ini_get('register_argc_argv') . "\n";
echo 'variables_order = ' . ini_get('variables_order') . "\n";
?>
Regardless of the register_argc_argv and variables_order settings in the
php.ini file, the following happens:
$_SERVER is filled with loads of stuff
$_SERVER['argv'] is not set
$argv is set
register_argc_argv says 1
The right .ini file is being read, because changing variables_order shows
up in the ini_get()
output.
So, what am I forgetting?
--Dan
--
T H E A N A L Y S I S A N D S O L U T I O N S C O M P A N Y
data intensive web and database programming
http://www.AnalysisAndSolutions.com/
4015 7th Ave #4, Brooklyn NY 11232 v: 718-854-0335 f: 718-854-0409
Greetings:
The following message got overlooked over the past few days. It'd be
really nice if someone could answer this please so PHP 5 will work...
Thanks!
----- Forwarded message -----
From: Daniel Convissor danielc@analysisandsolutions.com
To: PHP Internals List internals@lists.php.net
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2004 15:40:47 -0500
Subject: Re: [PHP-DEV] README.PHP4-TO-PHP5-THIN-CHANGES
$_SERVER should be populated with argc and argv if variables_order
includes "S".
Unfortunately, this isn't working on my system with the
php5-win32-200401161930 snapshot. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding something?
My variables_order has "GPCS" and register_argc_argv is "On" but
$_SERVER['argv'] isn't there.
Test script:
<?php
echo "$_SERVER\n";
var_dump($_SERVER);
echo "\n$_SERVER['argv']\n";
var_dump($_SERVER['argv']);
echo "\n$argv\n";
var_dump($argv);
echo 'register_argc_argv = ' . ini_get('register_argc_argv') . "\n";
echo 'variables_order = ' . ini_get('variables_order') . "\n";
?>
Regardless of the register_argc_argv and variables_order settings in the
php.ini file, the following happens:
$_SERVER is filled with loads of stuff
$_SERVER['argv'] is not set
$argv is set
register_argc_argv says 1
The right .ini file is being read, because changing variables_order shows
up in the ini_get()
output.
So, what am I forgetting?
--Dan
----- End forwarded message -----
--
T H E A N A L Y S I S A N D S O L U T I O N S C O M P A N Y
data intensive web and database programming
http://www.AnalysisAndSolutions.com/
4015 7th Ave #4, Brooklyn NY 11232 v: 718-854-0335 f: 718-854-0409
There's open bug about 'register_long_arrays', if it's
'Off', some of the super-globals won't work.
--Jani
Greetings:
The following message got overlooked over the past few days. It'd be
really nice if someone could answer this please so PHP 5 will work...Thanks!
----- Forwarded message -----
From: Daniel Convissor danielc@analysisandsolutions.com
To: PHP Internals List internals@lists.php.net
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2004 15:40:47 -0500
Subject: Re: [PHP-DEV] README.PHP4-TO-PHP5-THIN-CHANGES$_SERVER should be populated with argc and argv if variables_order
includes "S".Unfortunately, this isn't working on my system with the
php5-win32-200401161930 snapshot. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding something?My variables_order has "GPCS" and register_argc_argv is "On" but
$_SERVER['argv'] isn't there.Test script:
<?php
echo "$_SERVER\n";
var_dump($_SERVER);echo "\n$_SERVER['argv']\n";
var_dump($_SERVER['argv']);echo "\n$argv\n";
var_dump($argv);echo 'register_argc_argv = ' . ini_get('register_argc_argv') . "\n";
echo 'variables_order = ' . ini_get('variables_order') . "\n";
?>Regardless of the register_argc_argv and variables_order settings in the
php.ini file, the following happens:
$_SERVER is filled with loads of stuff
$_SERVER['argv'] is not set
$argv is set
register_argc_argv says 1The right .ini file is being read, because changing variables_order shows
up in theini_get()
output.So, what am I forgetting?
--Dan
----- End forwarded message
There's open bug about 'register_long_arrays', if it's 'Off', some of the super-globals won't work.
BINGO! That's why $_SERVER['argv'] was unpopulated for me.
THANK YOU! I'll update the bug reports.
--Dan
--
T H E A N A L Y S I S A N D S O L U T I O N S C O M P A N Y
data intensive web and database programming
http://www.AnalysisAndSolutions.com/
4015 7th Ave #4, Brooklyn NY 11232 v: 718-854-0335 f: 718-854-0409