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115 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
115 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
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Constant expression evaluation
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==============================
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Initializers for constants, properties, parameters, etc. have limited support for expressions. For
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example:
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```php
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<?php
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class Test {
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const SECONDS_IN_HOUR = 60 * 60;
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const SECONDS_IN_DAY = 24 * self::SECONDS_IN_HOUR;
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}
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```
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PHP-Parser supports evaluation of such constant expressions through the `ConstExprEvaluator` class:
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```php
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<?php
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use PhpParser\{ConstExprEvaluator, ConstExprEvaluationException};
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$evalutator = new ConstExprEvaluator();
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try {
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$value = $evalutator->evaluateSilently($someExpr);
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} catch (ConstExprEvaluationException $e) {
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// Either the expression contains unsupported expression types,
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// or an error occurred during evaluation
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}
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```
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Error handling
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--------------
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The constant evaluator provides two methods, `evaluateDirectly()` and `evaluateSilently()`, which
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differ in error behavior. `evaluateDirectly()` will evaluate the expression as PHP would, including
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any generated warnings or Errors. `evaluateSilently()` will instead convert warnings and Errors into
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a `ConstExprEvaluationException`. For example:
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```php
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<?php
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use PhpParser\{ConstExprEvaluator, ConstExprEvaluationException};
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use PhpParser\Node\{Expr, Scalar};
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$evaluator = new ConstExprEvaluator();
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// 10 / 0
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$expr = new Expr\BinaryOp\Div(new Scalar\LNumber(10), new Scalar\LNumber(0));
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var_dump($evaluator->evaluateDirectly($expr)); // float(INF)
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// Warning: Division by zero
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try {
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$evaluator->evaluateSilently($expr);
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} catch (ConstExprEvaluationException $e) {
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var_dump($e->getPrevious()->getMessage()); // Division by zero
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}
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```
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For the purposes of static analysis, you will likely want to use `evaluateSilently()` and leave
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erroring expressions unevaluated.
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Unsupported expressions and evaluator fallback
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----------------------------------------------
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The constant expression evaluator supports all expression types that are permitted in constant
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expressions, apart from the following:
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* `Scalar\MagicConst\*`
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* `Expr\ConstFetch` (only null/false/true are handled)
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* `Expr\ClassConstFetch`
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Handling these expression types requires non-local information, such as which global constants are
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defined. By default, the evaluator will throw a `ConstExprEvaluationException` when it encounters
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an unsupported expression type.
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It is possible to override this behavior and support resolution for these expression types by
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specifying an evaluation fallback function:
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```php
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<?php
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use PhpParser\{ConstExprEvaluator, ConstExprEvaluationException};
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use PhpParser\Node\Expr;
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$evalutator = new ConstExprEvaluator(function(Expr $expr) {
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if ($expr instanceof Expr\ConstFetch) {
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return fetchConstantSomehow($expr);
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}
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if ($expr instanceof Expr\ClassConstFetch) {
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return fetchClassConstantSomehow($expr);
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}
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// etc.
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throw new ConstExprEvaluationException(
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"Expression of type {$expr->getType()} cannot be evaluated");
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});
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try {
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$evalutator->evaluateSilently($someExpr);
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} catch (ConstExprEvaluationException $e) {
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// Handle exception
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}
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```
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Implementers are advised to ensure that evaluation of indirect constant references cannot lead to
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infinite recursion. For example, the following code could lead to infinite recursion if constant
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lookup is implemented naively.
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```php
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<?php
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class Test {
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const A = self::B;
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const B = self::A;
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}
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```
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