A hypothetical question for you all to chew on...
I recently answered another question on SO where a PHP script was segfaulting, and it reminded me of something I have always wondered, so let's see if anyone can shed any light on it.
Consider the following:
<?php
function segfault ($i = 1) {
echo "$i\n";
segfault($i + 1);
}
segfault();
?>
Obviously, this (useless) function loops infinitely. And eventually, will run out of memory because each call to the function executes before the previous one has finished. Sort of like a fork bomb without the forking.
But... eventually, on POSIX platforms, the script will die with SIGSEGV (it also dies on Windows, but more gracefully - so far as my extremely limited low-level debugging skills can tell). The number of loops varies depending on the system configuration (memory allocated to PHP, 32bit/64bit, etc etc) and the OS but my real question is - why does it happen with a segfault?
- Is this simply how PHP handles "out-of-memory" errors? Surely there must be a more graceful way of handling this?
- Is this a bug in the Zend engine?
- Is there any way this can be controlled or handled more gracefully from within a PHP script?
- Is there any setting that generally controls that maximum number of recursive calls that can be made in a function?
known recursion limitbut give no indication as to the constraints of that limit, or provide any way to control it. As the reporter of that bug says, this is only likely to cause a problem if you write buggy code anyway, but it would just be nice to know where the boundaries are. – DaveRandom Sep 7 '11 at 0:01