It is possible to assign a PHP closure to a native variable of function pointer type or to pass it as a function argument:
Example #1 Assigning a PHP Closure to a C function pointer
<?php
$zend = FFI::cdef("
typedef int (*zend_write_func_t)(const char *str, size_t str_length);
extern zend_write_func_t zend_write;
");
echo "Hello World 1!\n";
$orig_zend_write = clone $zend->zend_write;
$zend->zend_write = function($str, $len) {
global $orig_zend_write;
$orig_zend_write("{\n\t", 3);
$ret = $orig_zend_write($str, $len);
$orig_zend_write("}\n", 2);
return $ret;
};
echo "Hello World 2!\n";
$zend->zend_write = $orig_zend_write;
echo "Hello World 3!\n";
?>
The above example will output:
Hello World 1! { Hello World 2! } Hello World 3!
It is therefore recommended to minimize the usage of PHP callbacks.
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