sander-martijn wrote:
Yeah I found that this morning - I've tried the long list of possible solutions - deleting references from the systems and variables tables, deleting the devel tables, empty cache tables, run cron.php. still not working.
If deleting the dev_query variable doesn't help, I doubt you are experiencing this particular issue. To be sure, manually remove the debug_backtrace from the relevant database.??.inc file ($bt = debug_backtrace();).
Honestly the attitude of the maintainers of this module is pretty awful. They're claiming that a warning on the main page is all that is needed and that they shouldn't have to fix the module since it's a bug in zend. Well I was under a crunch last night and quickly and wrongly assumed it was a zend related module - knowing that i had installed no such module I went forward.
If I get this right; you read the warning, then decided to go ahead anyway?
Zend Optimizer is a Zend (the PHP company) related module and the cause for a lot of pain through the years, but still in use on many hosts.
This module should not allow itself to be installed if the wrong version of zend is present, or as some suggested should disable the buggy functionality. now my site is hosed and none of the prescribed solutions are helping.
The wrong version of Zend is a subtle issue and depends on the PHP version you are on. I am with the module maintainers that they should not step in this sorry mess.
Or, in the words of PHP.net, "Always disable any Zend or other 3rd party extensions (Turck MMCache, ionCube loader, Xdebug, APC) before submitting a *PHP* bug."
The only positive thing about this is that I have a dev environment and installed it on there. I feel really bad for those that are like me only days from launch, install this to debug a problem with a module someone else has stopped maintaining but only have one instance so lose everything. always run at least two (preferably 3) instances of any site in development.
It's painful I'm sure, though I'm not yet convinced your site is unrecoverable, or that you've exhausted investigative possibilities. Of course, sometimes it's much quicker to revert to a backup / different site that to satisfy ones curiosity.
Heine