Hmm, I think I worded that poorly.
A function registered with register_shutdown_function does execute when
the max_execution_time is exceeded.
What it doesn't let you do is to recover in the same way an error
handler would let you.

David

On 09/03/11 22:56, Hannes Landeholm wrote:
> I second making time limit reached catchable. All non catchable fatal errors
> are a problem for me. I need to handle problems gracefully to ensure the
> stability of production systems instead of PHP just killing itself without
> warning. I just reported a similar issue:
> http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=54195
>
> A simple way to implement this would be to register a function that would be
> called N seconds before the script would timeout.
>
> register_timeout_handler(2, function() { die("PHP timed out."); });
>
> It would be called just as a shutdown function - in fact I'd like to use the
> same function as my shutdown function and get the error with
> error_get_last(). Of course set_time_limit(0) could be used in this function
> to prevent the timeout of the timeout handler. This does not "prevent"
> timeout since set_time_limit could have been called by the script before the
> timeout anyway.
>
> On that note I also miss a function which returns the time the script can
> keep running for. If that calculate needs to be calculated to implemented to
> implement this, why not make the value available to the PHP script?
>
> ~Hannes
>
> On 9 March 2011 02:30, David Muir <davidkm...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Although it doesn't let you recover from a timeout, you could use
>> register_shutdown_function to gracefully exit after a fatal error.
>>
>> register_shutdown_function(function(){
>>    $error = error_get_last();
>>    if($error && $error['type'] === E_ERROR){
>>        echo 'PHAIL! Oh noes, something went wrong!';
>>        // do whatever else you need to do before quitting
>>    }
>> });
>>
>> Cheers,
>> David
>>
>> On 08/03/11 22:39, Pierre Joye wrote:
>>> hi,
>>>
>>> is not the goal of this setting to prevent that a script runs longer
>>> than a given time? A catchable error will prevent that to happen.
>>>
>>> On Tue, Mar 8, 2011 at 2:05 PM, Sebastian Bergmann <sebast...@php.net>
>> wrote:
>>>>  Could set_time_limit() be changed in such a way that it triggers a
>>>>  catchable fatal error instead of a fatal error? Thanks!
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Sebastian Bergmann                    Co-Founder and Principal
>> Consultant
>>>> http://sebastian-bergmann.de/
>> http://thePHP.cc/
>>>> --
>>>> PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
>>>> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
>> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
>>
>>


-- 
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to