each request loads a lot of database rows into ActiveRecord objests, each subsequent request loads the same objects
the majority of time spent in every request is loading these objects from the database. Synchronizing with Redis or Memcached seems like a lot of wasted IO
@Caleb If I was going to architect a solution for that I would have a background task that runs continuously, and holds all those objects in memory, and the front-end would communicate with that background task via sockets or redis.
You almost certainly don't need to pass a complete HTTP request through to the thing that is holding all of the ActiveRecord objects in memory.
well, you could try to json_encode headers + wait for the body and send that data then to a worker process (if you want to retain Yii and not completely rearchitecture your App)
right, but if you run a thread per request, and implement RW mutexes on shared data, shouldn't it be faster than running a separate process? plus you don't have to maintain an API to the separate process holding data
Is it just me or does anyone else find this kind of thinking bizarre and rampant now a days. All these young engineers with their "Hey Active Record stores all this data and it's expensive... I know the solution!!!! I'll make PHP persistent outside the request life cycle! What could possibly go wrong?!?!"
@MadaraUchiha Well according my last architecture review meeting the average segfault occurs about 1:10M requests with upgrade events usually account for about 50% of those segfaults. Since those don't typically happen during peak hours that would account for roughly about ~50K/req sec, which would mean a single segfault on a single worker (were it threaded) would take down roughly ~2K requests per segfault.
That means you'd probably piss off about 1M people
So, for example, if your server takes 5 seconds to start, and someone found a URL that causes an uncaught error, they can DoS you with 12 requests/min which is trivial
You can also prepare for a zombie apocalypse, the risk of which is catastrophic and is probably well worth preparing for. However, even without preparing or planning I can tell you the chances are slim
@MadaraUchiha I didn't suggest any such thing. But based on this conversation you seem to be ignoring data and presenting your predilections matter-of-factly. That's all I can say based on current observation.
Science is about being able to reproduce results and create proofs. Not merely guess at the problem.
@Sherif When I work, I normally try to account for changes in requirements and scale.
I program extremely defensively and provide an abstraction over any part of the application I deem worthy of a representation
This allows me to react, rather than plan
I could sit and plan for weeks ahead of time, and have a 50% chance of nailing an architecture to last a decade
Or I could plan for a few hours, start with a MVP, have a solid infrastructure in place, have unit tests with high coverage rate, and continue from there
I found that the latter is far far more productive in application development, especially when you can just stop in the middle to reevaluate your choices, and since you have unit tests for all, you can shift things around with high confidence
@Sherif As a self-learner and an indie dev for a while (I'm now employed fulltime) I learned to be my own QA, IT, designer, frontend, backend, and tester, all in one. So I know a bit of everything
But being extremely good at all of those is hard
That's why companies have teams of specialized people :)
@MadaraUchiha I guess that's where you and I part ways. I rather enjoy solving interesting problems. I don't really wish to bother with boring problems. Being surface-deep opens you up to little more than boring problems.
@MadaraUchiha I mean to say that it has no applications in the field of software engineering.
@MadaraUchiha Hey, I don't make fun of JavaScript. It does a good enough job of that all on its own, but actually I've never meet anyone doing UI/UX that does javascript beyond "Hello World" stuff, to be perfectly honest with you.
Most of them can't even get that far.
They're usually considered sub-front-end in all of the organizations I've worked for.
Every language has them, that's exactly my point that "stuff is opinionated and as long as we're comfortable with what we do and manage to express ourselves in that language it doesn't matter what we pick"