ID: 13236
Updated by: yohgaki
Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Old Status: Open
Status: Suspended
Bug Type: Session related
Operating System: Linux
PHP Version: 4.0.6
New Comment:

This may not be fixed. Even if it is fixed, it will not be done in near
future.

Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2001-12-19 22:26:52] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

May be we should change Status to 
Suspended 
or change Type to
Feature request?

--
Yasuo

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2001-10-23 14:05:17] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

========== [EMAIL PROTECTED] ==========
The references the currently open Bug id #13236.  I have confirmed this
bug.

I tried to add my comments to that bug, but apparently only the creator
of the bug can do
that.

I don't have time to look at the PHP source code, but generally the way
serialization of
objects is done (taken from C++ foundation classes I've worked with) is
on write build a
hash table of object pointers/addresses as key, and a unique id (auto
increment) as value.
 Write the id and class on first instance, and then serialize only the
id on subsequent
references to same object.

Then on read serialization (unserialization), build the same hash table
with the key and
value reversed roles, i.e. the key is the id, and the value is the
pointer to the
object.

AFAIK, this method will support cyclical references.  From the number of
bugs I've seen
reported about storing objects and/or references in sessions, I am
guessing that PHP is
not using this general algorithm.

I've seen other object and/or referenence bugs in sessions in past
releases of PHP
(starting with PHP4.0.3pl1), and haven't had time to go back and test to
see what has been
fixed, what has been broken, and what has not been fixed.  It gets quite
confusing and
arduous to track.

I add this suggestion here if it may be of assistance, as a general way
to kill all these
bugs.  I'd really like to see the serialization of objects and
references work correctly
in a general way, as it is a very powerful tool, vs. using other
bandaids such long
if-else constructs or redundant arrays to achieve the equivalent of
persistant object
references.

Please take my input constructively.
=============================================

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2001-09-10 13:01:17] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

If you use session_register on an object that contains references to
other objects, that each contain a reference to the first object, these
objects will not be restored correctly.

This is a huge limitation in PHP!!!


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Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=13236&edit=1


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