On Tue, 2005-11-29 at 19:42, Robert Cummings wrote:
> On Tue, 2005-11-29 at 19:22, Adam Atlas wrote:
> > So... I have this script (being called in a perfectly typical way by  
> > PHP 4.4.1 through mod_php in Apache 2.0.55) which sometimes runs  
> > perfectly, and sometimes chooses, totally haphazardly, to seemingly  
> > run itself twice, which of course causes it to die with a fatal error  
> > after it tries to redefine some functions.
> > 
> > As mysterious as that is, it turns out it must be something  
> > altogether more sinister. I tried putting die() at the end of the  
> > script, on the assumption that it was for some reason executing  
> > twice, yet behold: the problem is still present, and the PHP error  
> > log still complains about constants and functions being redefined!  
> > The problem, I therefore thought, cannot be that the script is being  
> > run twice. (In retrospect, this was the most likely possibility,  
> > because the page doesn't actually output anything if it dies with  
> > this error.) So for debugging, I added a bit that logs one message to  
> > a file immediately before the die() at the end of the file, and a  
> > different message after the die(). The die() seems to be working  
> > normally, in that it only logs the first message...
> > 
> > But wait a second! WTF? If the PHP error log is to be believed, then  
> > the script should be dying with a fatal error before it even *gets*  
> > to that point in the script, isn't it?
> > 
> > And the greater WTF is the fact that, as I mentioned above, every  
> > time the page is requested, it unpredictably either does this or  
> > works flawlessly. Oh my. How do I even *begin* to debug something  
> > like this?
> 
> I think you mean heisenbug...
> 
>     http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisenbug
>     http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schr%C3%B6dinger%27s_cat

Hmmm, you learn something new every day:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schroedinbug

But the problem you're having seems better represented as a heisenbug :)

Cheers,
Rob.
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