this always resulted in a coredump (after everything was finished, so only
visible in the logfile).
So it seems to be neccesary to copy the contents of the result of get_buffer,
to avoid this coredump.
i nuked all unneded calls to php_header() - i'm not too sure how we do
handle HEAD Requests as they were only detected via php_header(). but calling
php_header from a module makes output-buffering unusable.
NOTICE: there is some EBSDIC stuff in gd.c - i think it's obsolete.
* fixed prototype for pdf_new()
* MINFO: included Revision of pdf.c, removed info about CJK + in-memory, this is
standard with V3.x)
* repaired PDF_open_CCITT
* repaired PDF_setfont
* eliminated many compiler warnings.
* former resource "pdf document" is now called "pdf object"
done by Rainer Schaaf from pdflib GmbH.
- Some more functions has been implemented as well.
- backwards compatibility has been maintained a much as possible
* Fixed a bug in zend_rsrc_list_get_rsrc_type()
* Switched register_list_destructors() to use
zend_register_list_destructors_ex() instead
* Updated all relevant modules to provide the resource type name
to register_list_destructors() call
* Updated var_dump() to output resource type name instead of number
@- Made resource type names visible, e.g. var_dump() and
@ get_resource_type() display "file" for file resources. (Andrei)
has NOT had PDF_open_*() called on it, according to the documentation.
There is not currently any way to obtain such from user-land in PHP.
@ Catch users trying to set "compatibility" parameter, which is not
@ supported from user-land.
#
# Not sure this is the best way to do this...
# Uwe, could you please double check this?
Draft 3 of IEEE 1003.1 200x, "2.2 The Compilation Environment"
All identifiers that begin with an underscore and either an uppercase
letter or another underscore are always reserved for any use by the
implementation.