Is it possible to see if two array variables point to the same memory location? (they are the same array)

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Why is this tagged zend-engine by someone else? – Harmen Nov 5 '10 at 23:45
I have no idea. – Kirk Nov 5 '10 at 23:47
5  
@Harmen Because for a qualified answer that goes beyond a mere Yes or No, you will have to have some knowledge of how the Zend Engine, e.g. the thing that drives PHP, handles variables and memory. – Gordon Nov 6 '10 at 0:34
Why do you want to do that? Maybe we can help if you explain your concrete problem. – c0rnh0li0 Nov 23 '10 at 18:25
1  
Actually sometimes what is required is fixing someones thinking. Programmers spend a lot of time reinventing wheels that others have solved. Not sure if thats the case here, but often is. – Toby Allen Nov 25 '10 at 21:43
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7 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

Actually, this can be done. Through a php extension.

File: config.m4

PHP_ARG_ENABLE(test, whether to enable test Extension support, [ --enable-test   Enable test ext support])

if test "$PHP_TEST" = "yes"; then
  AC_DEFINE(HAVE_TEST, 1, [Enable TEST Extension])
  PHP_NEW_EXTENSION(test, test.c, $ext_shared)
fi

File: php_test.h

#ifndef PHP_TEST_H
#define PHP_TEST_H 1

#define PHP_TEST_EXT_VERSION "1.0"
#define PHP_TEST_EXT_EXTNAME "test"

PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress4);
PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress);

extern zend_module_entry test_module_entry;
#define phpext_test_ptr &test_module_entry

#endif

File: test.c

#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif

#include "php.h"
#include "php_test.h"

ZEND_BEGIN_ARG_INFO_EX(func_args, 1, 0, 0)
ZEND_END_ARG_INFO()

static function_entry test_functions[] = {
    PHP_FE(getaddress4, func_args)
    PHP_FE(getaddress, func_args)
    {NULL, NULL, NULL}
};

zend_module_entry test_module_entry = {
#if ZEND_MODULE_API_NO >= 20010901
    STANDARD_MODULE_HEADER,
#endif
    PHP_TEST_EXT_EXTNAME,
    test_functions,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
#if ZEND_MODULE_API_NO >= 20010901
    PHP_TEST_EXT_VERSION,
#endif
    STANDARD_MODULE_PROPERTIES
};

#ifdef COMPILE_DL_TEST
ZEND_GET_MODULE(test)
#endif

PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress4)
{
    zval *var1;
    zval *var2;
    zval *var3;
    zval *var4;
    char r[500];
    if( zend_parse_parameters(ZEND_NUM_ARGS() TSRMLS_CC, "aaaa", &var1, &var2, &var3, &var4) == FAILURE ) {
      RETURN_NULL();
    }
    sprintf(r, "\n%p - %p - %p - %p\n%p - %p - %p - %p", var1, var2, var3, var4, Z_ARRVAL_P(var1), Z_ARRVAL_P(var2), Z_ARRVAL_P(var3), Z_ARRVAL_P(var4) );
    RETURN_STRING(r, 1);
}

PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress)
{
    zval *var;
    char r[100];
    if( zend_parse_parameters(ZEND_NUM_ARGS() TSRMLS_CC, "a", &var) == FAILURE ) {
      RETURN_NULL();
    }
    sprintf(r, "%p", Z_ARRVAL_P(var));
    RETURN_STRING(r, 1);
}

Then all you have to do is phpize it, config it, and make it. Add a "extension=/path/to/so/file/modules/test.so" to your php.ini file. And finally, restart the web server, just in case.

<?php
  $x = array("123"=>"123");
  $w = $x;
  $y = $x;
  $z = &$x;
  var_dump(getaddress4($w,$x,$y,$z));
  var_dump(getaddress($w));
  var_dump(getaddress($x));
  var_dump(getaddress($y));
  var_dump(getaddress($z));
?>

Returns(at least for me, your memory addresses will probably be different)

string '
0x9efeb0 - 0x9effe0 - 0x9ef8c0 - 0x9efeb0
0x9efee0 - 0x9f0010 - 0x9ed790 - 0x9efee0' (length=84)

string '0x9efee0' (length=8)

string '0x9f0010' (length=8)

string '0x9ed790' (length=8)

string '0x9efee0' (length=8)

Thanks to Artefacto for pointing this out, but my original code was passing the arrays by value, so thereby was recreating arrays including the referenced-one, and giving you bad memory values. I have since changed the code to force all params to be passed by reference. This will allow references, arrays, and object, to be passed in unmolested by the php engine. $w/$z are the same thing, but $w/$x/$y are not. The old code, actually showed the reference breakage and the fact that the memory addresses would change or match when all variables were passed in vs multiple calls to the same function. This was because PHP would reuse the same memory when doing multiple calls. Comparing the results of the original function would be useless. The new code should fix this problem.

FYI - I'm using php 5.3.2.

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interesting answer, i was always curios about how php extensions work. I dont thee the getaddress() function body in here – Quamis Nov 26 '10 at 9:21
It's in test.c, use the scroll back to get to see all the text. – Jeremy Walton Nov 26 '10 at 13:55
Considering the simple request by the OP, I really don't see this practical since (as in my code) it can be found via PHP code as well. However, +1 for getting us some nice C code on how PHP extensions work :) – Christian Nov 27 '10 at 1:17
2  
@Jeremy If you did $x = array(); $z = $x;, then $z and $x would indeed point to the same zval * until a separation would be forced (copy-on-write mechanism). Your example is slightly different -- when you do $w = $x;, $w and $x point to the same zval * (refcount=2, is_ref=0). But when you do $z =& $x;, you're forcing a separation because $z and $x are references and $w is not and a zval cannot have two different values for the is_ref field. So the 1st zval ($w/$x) is copied and its refcount decremented. The new copy ($z/$x; after) has refcount set to 2, and is_ref=1. – Artefacto Nov 27 '10 at 21:10
1  
Yes, you are correct with my current code. I'm going to update my code so that it is correct then. – Jeremy Walton Nov 28 '10 at 0:20
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References in PHP are a means to access the same variable content by different names. They are not like C pointers; for instance, you cannot perform pointer arithmetic using them, they are not actual memory addresses, and so on.

Conclusion: No, you can not

From: http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.references.whatare.php

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You also might wanna have a look at: php.net/manual/en/function.spl-object-hash.php – Mr. Pallazzo Nov 24 '10 at 23:52
on another note with this, php (lang) dose not have access to the Engine Memory you have to remeber php(lang) is parsed by the engine so at no point is your script machine code it just runs the Engine machine code so your script file does not use memory like a program only the engine does and i doubt they will ever give access for a script to access raw memory as you could trash server or right a virus into a server and then seared host could not use it. – Barkermn01 Nov 25 '10 at 10:11
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This is totally the correct answer and Enrico deserves the points... – frak Nov 25 '10 at 16:05
-1: The answer is incorrect. Although references are not pointers, and one cannot do pointer arithmetic, they still have a feature which make them references, so the "no, you can not" is incorrect, and in fact, "you can". See my response on how it works. – Christian Nov 26 '10 at 8:17
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Your question is actually a bit misleading. "point to the same memory location" and "are the same array" (which to me means is a reference to, at least in PHP) are not the same thing.

Memory locations refers to pointers. Pointers are not available in PHP. References are not pointers.

Anyway, if you want to check if $b is in fact a reference of $a, this is the closest you can get to an actual answer:

function is_ref_to(&$a, &$b) {
    if (is_object($a) && is_object($b)) {
        return ($a === $b);
    }

    $temp_a = $a;
    $temp_b = $b;

    $key = uniqid('is_ref_to', true);
    $b = $key;

    if ($a === $key) $return = true;
    else $return = false;

    $a = $temp_a;
    $b = $temp_b;
    return $return; 
}

$a = array('foo');
$b = array('foo');
$c = &$a;
$d = $a;

var_dump(is_ref_to($a, $b)); // false
var_dump(is_ref_to($b, $c)); // false
var_dump(is_ref_to($a, $c)); // true
var_dump(is_ref_to($a, $d)); // false
var_dump($a); // is still array('foo')
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Good point, updated the answer. Just a clarification, PHP5 objects are references, not pointers (because pointer actually points to a memory address, while a reference doesn't). – netcoder Nov 24 '10 at 18:47
The ONLY way to see if two array variables point to the same memory location is by using pointer arithmetic. PHP does NOT support this, so it's NOT possible. And this script does NOT prove that the same memory location is used. As Hamish already explained.. @stereofrog, your link has also nothing to do with memory locations. It only shows whether 2 variables are aliases or not. This does NOT prove anything about their memory locations, in fact.. aliases can use different memory blocks. – Inga Johansson Nov 24 '10 at 20:02
2  
Yes.. Basically the question should be: Is it possible to see if two array variables point to the same memory location? without the (they are the same array)-remark. And then the answer is; no. – Inga Johansson Nov 24 '10 at 20:35
2  
@stereofrog: you might also take php5 objects (which are pointers), no, they are not pointers. – Inga Johansson Nov 24 '10 at 20:36
1  
@stereofrog: Objects are not references, they are objects. Objects are passed by reference. – netcoder Nov 24 '10 at 21:22
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First, your question is vague. It can mean several different things:

  • Do the variables have the same content? For this, you can use ===.
  • Do the variables use internally the same memory?
  • Are these variables in the same reference set? I.e., given two variables, $a and $b, if I change $a, will it change $b?

The answer to the second answer is not easy to determine. Jeremy Walton's answer has one significant problem -- his function receives by value, so if you pass it a reference, you force a separation and get the address of a new temporary value. You could make the function receive the parameter by reference, but then you'd have the opposite problem -- if you passed a value (with refcount >= 2), you would also force a separation.

More importantly, the second question is an irrelevant internal detail. Consider the following script:

$a = 1;
$b = $a; //addresses of $a and $b are the same
function force_sep(&$a) { }
force_sep($b);
//force_sep is a no-op, but it forced a separation; now addresses are not equal

So the important question is the third one. Unfortunately, there is no straightforward way to determine this. This has been requested several times; see e.g. this request.

However, there are a few options:

  • You could to receive the name of the variable and look it up in the symbol table. This is also what makes xdebug_debug_zval much more interesting than the flawed debug_zval_dump. This is a simple lookup in EG(active_symbol_table) for simple variables (but would get more complex if you wanted to include object properties and dimensions etc.), and this would also allow you to implement a solution for the 2nd question.
  • You could also modify Jeremy Walton's answer to make the function receive by reference (you'd need an arginfo structure) and receive the two values at the same time. Receiving them at the same time can avoid false positives due to reused memory addresses (though whether it's a problem depends on the usage of the function; on the other hand, Jeremy Walton's function always suffers from this problem when receiving references -- I can elaborate on this if necessary, but see my comment under his answer).
  • netcoder's answer, although hackish, also works. The idea is to receive two variables by reference, change one, and see if the other one changed, restoring the values in the end.
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function var_name(&$ref){
    foreach($GLOBALS as $key => $val){
       if($val === $ref) return $key;
    }
}

This is untested but what i know of php, vars are added to the GLOBALS as they are are loaded into the system, so the first occurance where they are identical should be the original var, but if you have 2 Variables Exactly the same i'm not sure how it would react

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This will not work. The === operator checks for type, but not for reference. Which means if you have $a = 1; $b = 1; $c = &$a, then the following is true: $a === $b === $c, even if $b is not a reference. The only ways to know if a variable is a reference is to a) look at the code; or b) modify it and see if the original variable changes. As for $GLOBALS, it doesn't have anything to do with this. A reference declared in a function is still a reference, but will not be part of $GLOBALS. – netcoder Nov 24 '10 at 18:57
Thanks for pointing out what i said numpty, but === does not check type, it check that its exactly the same, so type and content. but again i said i was not sure how it would work if you had 2 Exactly the same – Barkermn01 Nov 25 '10 at 10:05
@Barkermn01 - The identical operator works like that only when comparing objects. For the rest, "aaa"==="aaa" is true (eventhough they are different constant values). As to the GLOBALS idea you mentioned, that only works when in the global scope (afaik). – Christian Nov 27 '10 at 1:14
"aaa"==="aaa" is the same exactly the same what your trying to prove would be "1" === 1 or "1" === "hello" and both return false go learn php – Barkermn01 Nov 29 '10 at 11:49
Barkermn01 - I find it offensive that you rudely issue an answer without even verifying your own facts. Now go learn programming basics and how two different constants are actually stored in two different locations. The problem above isn't content and type, but location. The identical operator works using location on objects, but does not work the same way on other variables. Here's an example: $o1=new stdClass(); $o2=new stdClass(); var_dump($o1===$o2); <= that results in false. $s1="aaa"; $s2="aaa"; var_dump($s1===$s2); <= that results in true. – Christian Dec 2 '10 at 12:08
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        function check(&$a,&$b){
            // perform first basic check, if both have different values
            // then they're definitely not the same.
            if($a!==$b)return false;
            // backup $a into $c
            $c=$a;
            // get some form of opposite to $a
            $a=!$a;
            // compare $a and $b, if both are the same thing,
            // this should be true
            $r=($a===$b);
            // restore $a from $c
            $a=$c;
            // return result
            return $r;
        }

        $a=(object)array('aaa'=>'bbb'); $b=&$a;
        echo check($a,$b) ? 'yes' : 'no'; // yes
        $c='aaa'; $d='aaa';
        echo check($c,$d) ? 'yes' : 'no'; // no
        $e='bbb'; $f='ccc';
        echo check($e,$f) ? 'yes' : 'no'; // no

The function "check" was created in 2 mins or so. It assumes that if you change a reference's value, a second reference would have the newly add value as well. This function works on variables only. You can use it against constant value, function returns (unless by reference) etc.

Edit: During testing, I had some initial confusion. I kept reusing the same variable names ($a and $b) which resulted in all the conditionals being "yes". Here's why:

$a='aaa'; $b=&$a;     // a=aaa b=aaa
$a='ccc'; $b='ddd';   // a=ddd b=ddd   <= a is not ccc!

To correct the issue, I gave them a different name:

$a='aaa'; $b=&$a;     // a=aaa b=aaa
$c='ccc'; $d='ddd';   // c=ccc d=ddd   <= c is now correct

Edit: Why the answer is "yes" and not "no"

PHP does not reveal pointer information through scripting (neither pointer manipulation etc). However, it does allow alias variables (references), done by using the reference operator '&'. Feature is typically found in pointers, which explains the general confusion. That said, pointers are not aliases.

However, if we see the original question, the person wanted to know if $a is the same as $b, not where in the memory $a (or $b) is found. Whereas the earlier requirement applies to both references and pointers, the later one only applies to pointers.

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 $a["unqiue-thing"] = 1;
 if($b["unique-thing"] == 1) // a and b are the same
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Just because a = b and b = c means a = c does not mean they point to the same memory block. – Gordon Nov 6 '10 at 10:28
Kind of clever though =] – Kirk Nov 6 '10 at 15:32
2  
what on earth are you talking about? what on earth does this have to do with memory locations? – Hamish Nov 23 '10 at 7:40
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@stereofrog this answer is wrong in so many ways. Firstly, if you assign an array by value, it is actually a reference until a value is changed in one array. That is, your solution will actually cause an array to 'de-reference' itself in some situations. Also, to do it properly, you'd need to check your test value for uniqueness, then overwrite the value, then test equality, then rewrite the old value back. It's full of fail. – Hamish Nov 23 '10 at 19:04
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@sterofrot I've already upvoted the correct answer. It does make sense if you're familiar with how PHP manages memory under the hood. If you create $a as an array, then do $b = $a, $b will in fact be reference $b - as in, no extra memory is assigned. If you then do $b[] = "new item" only then does PHP copy the entire array and make the change. You can test this by checking memory usage of a large array if you like. memory usage is only bumped up after changing the second array, not during assignment. Try it. – Hamish Nov 23 '10 at 23:29
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