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PHP RFC: Change Directory class to behave like a resource object
- Version: 0.1
- Date: 2024-09-14
- Author: Gina Peter Banyard girgias@php.net
- Status: Under Discussion
- Target Version: PHP 8.5
- Implementation: https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/15886
- First Published at: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/directory-opaque-object
Introduction
The Directory
class is probably the first instance of what we now call a “resource object”
(and in its stricter sense an “opaque object”).
Resource/Opaque objects are usually the result of converting resources to objects,
which in general implies, being final
, being not serializable,
not constructible via new
, cannot be cast, and to not implement any methods.
However, as this class has existed since PHP 4 none of these things are formally implemented.
Valid instances of this class are created by calling the dir()
function.
But one can create a broken instance by just using new Directory()
,
which is visible if one tries to call one of its methods.
As it seems likely that we will repurpose this class when converting directory resources to objects; we think it makes sense to already convert this class to behave like a resource object.
Proposal
We propose to make the following changes to the Directory
class:
- Make it
final
- Throw an
Error
when doingnew Directory()
- Prevent cloning instances of
Directory
- Ban serialization of it via the
@not-serializable
doc comment on the class stub - Ban creating dynamic properties on an instance of
Directory
via the@strict-properties
doc comment on the class stub
Rationales
Preventing initialization via new
The stream layer of PHP emits warnings and may result in uninitialized streams.
Constructors must always either throw an exception, or create a valid object.
As these semantics are not straightforward to implement when creating streams we continue to rely on dir()
to create instances of this class as it does not have the above constraints.
Making the class final
As this class is a wrapper around an internal stream resource,
and cannot be properly initialized without it being returned by dir()
.
Extending it doesn't make any sense.
Preventing cloning
As this class is a wrapper around an internal stream resource, and there is no capability to duplicate streams, there is no reasonable way to implement cloning.
Preventing serialization
Trying to serialize (and unserialize) the state of a given file system doesn't make any sense.
Preventing the creation of dynamic properties
Creating a dynamic property on an instance of this class points to a definite bug.
Backward Incompatible Changes
It will no longer be possible:
- to extend the
Directory
class - clone, serialize, or create dynamic properties on an instance of
Directory
- instantiate
Directory
directly via thenew
keyword
Version
Next minor version, i.e. PHP 8.5.
Vote
As per the voting RFC a yes/no vote with a 2/3 majority is needed for this proposal to be accepted.
Voting started on 2024-XX-XX and will end on 2024-XX-XX.
Future scope
- Add support to initialize the class via
new
- Add support for cloning