Without this, I cannot input UTF-8 characters, no matter what I set `LANG` to, but this fixes it such that `LANG=C.UTF-8` works again for inputting UTF-8 characters like `💩`.
After looking/comparing at the output of `./configure` for our i386 and amd64 builds against that of Debian's i386 build, our i386 build was the only one of the three to include `checking whether to force non-PIC code in shared modules... yes` (the other two were `no`).
Debian includes `--with-pic`, and we do not.
Looking at the upstream PHP code for this configure check (313a56add0/configure.ac (L241-L256)), this makes total sense, and explains why i386 is the only architecture we see this issue on:
```m4
dnl Disable PIC mode by default where it is known to be safe to do so, to avoid
dnl the performance hit from the lost register.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to force non-PIC code in shared modules])
case $host_alias in
i?86-*-linux*|i?86-*-freebsd*)
if test "${with_pic+set}" != "set" || test "$with_pic" = "no"; then
with_pic=no
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
else
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
fi
;;
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
;;
esac
```
This was probably already implied by our `CFLAGS` (and the compiler) on Alpine, but I figured it doesn't hurt to be explicit / consistent.
These are the URLs listed on https://www.php.net/downloads (and the URLs Homebrew is using), so they seem more appropriate/correct than these older URLs we've been using.
It turns out that --hash-style=gnu is considered better than either of --hash-style=both or --hash-style=sysv, assuming your environment/platform supports it.
On amd64 with both Debian's and Alpine's linkers, --hash-style=gnu is the default.
This is especially relevant on MIPS (mips64le), where "ld: .gnu.hash is incompatible with the MIPS ABI" (so the linker sanely defaults to --hash-style=sysv there, as it should).