Problem is that the old php-json package conforms to the json standard,
and the new one does not. If someone went through the effort (we do not
have the resources, unfortunately) to make json-c conform to the json
standard with said flag, then yes - you could simply compile the package
with that flag enabled, and all would be good.

The impact of the bug? Json is used all over the place for many years,
since it's a very good lightweight format for exchanging data. All of
the services provided on a Ubuntu system will potentially break, since
it does not conform to the json standard that everyone else does. We had
to switch our servers that was running Ubuntu since 2010 to NetBSD to
get a modern PHP with proper json handling. Our unit tests broke
immediately when we switched to Ubuntu 13.10.

There's a good thread with proper comments about the thing here, which
shows several aspects of the thing:

http://www.reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/1ksnzw/php_json_removed_in_php_55/

Do not forget the fact, that the reason it was removed was that it had
this line together with its license: "The Software shall be used for
Good, not Evil." which makes it 'non-free' software. Have a look at the
entire license here, and see for yourself.

http://www.json.org/license.html

It's still a possibility to simply ship the php-json included in php,
instead of potentially breaking thousands of server setups that rely on
a php-json conforming to the json standard.

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Server Team, which is subscribed to php-json in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1287726

Title:
  Wrong evaluation whether json is valid or not

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