@brzuchal In terms of using it, that's pretty simple. It's possible to do some super complex things with it (e.g. Jeeves has an aerys server embedded in the same main process). But at the end of the day, HTTP servers are not simple things... if you want to be able to handle any kind of concurrency, you need a lot of logic
@KuKeC and @DaveRandom. Just resolved the issue by placing the /rootfoldername/ before the paths to css/js/images links. I am sure there must be a smarter way than this. Would be glad to know.
I'm not 100% clear on what they would be trying to sell me but we already have an MPLS solution between our leased line and our remote servers so whatever it is we don't need it
room topic changed to PHP: Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, just ask. Username auto complete is *tab, not enter. Chat Guidelines : guide.room11.org [php]*
room topic changed to PHP: Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, just ask. Username auto complete is tab, not enter. Chat Guidelines : guide.room11.org [php]
room topic changed to PHP't ask to ask, just ask. Username auto complete is tab, not enter. Chat Guidelines : guide.room11.org: Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, just ask. Username auto complete is *tab, not enter. Chat Guidelines : guide.room11.org [php]*
room topic changed to PHP: Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, just ask. Username auto complete is *tab, not enter. Chat Guidelines : guide.room11.org [php]*
> ♋ Cancer | June 21 to July 22 So ashamed will you be about falling down the stairs that you’ll lie to friends and family, telling them your husband beat you instead. http://www.theonion.com/features/horoscope
> ♓ Pisces | Feb. 19 to March 20 When times are tough and the world around you seems grim, don’t be afraid to turn to religion for a good, hearty laugh. http://www.theonion.com/features/horoscope
Anonymous
1:59 PM
yes, because that's all religion is good for. Laughing at it.
I usually deploy client projects as haproxy/varnish/apache/php-fpm with some mix of Percona cluster, openldap or occasionally mongo if they insist and pay enough
plus it's mainly front-end dev, which I'd rather have. they want expert knowledge in HTML/CSS, proficiency in JS, PHP and Git, and want experience in Drupal/Wordpress
@Stephen I'm currently hosting all smaller things on apache2.4 with php7.0 as module with mysql-server5.7 - nothing more for caching/load balancing - wanted to know some other approches
load balancing should be done by hardware, well away from programmers ... and haproxy ... just ... just ... tiring shit ... get a sysadmin, they enjoy that stuff ...
@CodeBrauer in some ways, i agree with what @JoeWatkins said: you probably need someone who's experienced in the field to actually solve some of this stuff for you, if its for paying clients
I find it ironic that he suggests getting a sysadmin, and then says it has to be "hardware" (aka an appliance) - surely picking the solution is why you want the sysadmin in the first place
btw I'm starting to winder if it might make sense to "prime" the DNS resolver @kelunik @bwoebi... in particular there's a potential performance hit to checking whether the system config/hosts file is loaded for each lookup. Not a huge one but it mounts up, and having a Resolver#load(array $overrideConfig = []): Promise or something would potentially simplify the code and maybe allow for simpler consumer code if you want to use custom config (set once instead of per-request).
@kelunik well I wondered about that as well. Either we prime it on startup and treat all config as permanent, or we treat all config as ephemeral and periodically reload it (in the latter case I'd suggest checking the file mod time e.g. once a minute)
@kelunik Yeah, we definitely need more examples in docs of using promises and creating coroutines.
@kelunik That's the nature of an interop interface. We're not going to standardize React's interface.
@kelunik If Amp is the only lib implementing the standard, yes. But there's already interest from others, and hopefully it could someday pressure React to implement the standard.
If I were to provide examples of my work, and I don't have anything worthwhile that's recent, could I just build a calculator using the requested languages?
@kelunik React is the de-facto standard for async in PHP… unlike other interop projects, there really isn't competition for React. I'm not sure we can present something where React benefits or doesn't require change.
@kelunik We can put in support for React promises… it'll add some complexity to our combinators, but users will probably appreciate it.
If we offered an official React loop impl. that hooks into our global event loop (like I did with Icicle) then we could claim Amp was completely compatible with React.
@Trowski @bwoebi The main issue is that the interop specs do not really make sense. It only really makes sense to have a standard implementation directly.
@bwoebi We need to give people a reason to use Amp. I think because there's so much code that's React compatible, we need to allow users to use that existing code by baking in support.