Compare PHP Arrays Using Memory References
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.
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')
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