Revision tags: php-7.3.13RC1, php-7.2.26RC1, php-7.4.0, php-7.2.25, php-7.3.12, php-7.4.0RC6, php-7.3.12RC1, php-7.2.25RC1, php-7.4.0RC5, php-7.1.33, php-7.2.24, php-7.3.11, php-7.4.0RC4, php-7.3.11RC1, php-7.2.24RC1, php-7.4.0RC3, php-7.2.23, php-7.3.10, php-7.4.0RC2, php-7.2.23RC1, php-7.3.10RC1, php-7.4.0RC1, php-7.1.32, php-7.2.22, php-7.3.9, php-7.4.0beta4, php-7.2.22RC1, php-7.3.9RC1, php-7.4.0beta2, php-7.1.31, php-7.2.21, php-7.3.8, php-7.4.0beta1 |
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d59aac58 |
| 18-Jul-2019 |
Nikita Popov |
Report errors from stream read and write operations The php_stream_read() and php_stream_write() functions now return an ssize_t value, with negative results indicating failure. Function
Report errors from stream read and write operations The php_stream_read() and php_stream_write() functions now return an ssize_t value, with negative results indicating failure. Functions like fread() and fwrite() will return false in that case. As a special case, EWOULDBLOCK and EAGAIN on non-blocking streams should not be regarded as error conditions, and be reported as successful zero-length reads/writes instead. The handling of EINTR remains unclear and is internally inconsistent (e.g. some code-paths will automatically retry on EINTR, while some won't). I'm landing this now to make sure the stream wrapper ops API changes make it into 7.4 -- however, if the user-facing changes turn out to be problematic we have the option of clamping negative returns to zero in php_stream_read() and php_stream_write() to restore the old behavior in a relatively non-intrusive manner.
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