@Hiyper It's not just about settings, it's about how your entire stack interacts. For example, if you have a database back-end that locks aggressively, that's going to be a huge bottleneck
PHP is not the fastest language in the world, but it's not a slouch. The real issue here is how you manage I/O concurrency, and writing your entire stack in hand-crafted ASM can't solve that problem for you
Suffice to say PHP is fast enough for whatever you're trying to do. Somewhat asking the question "is if fast enough" lends an insight to the complexity level of what you're aiming to achieve which leads me to believe the answer is "yes, it is fast enough".
BTW @Hiyper is this one of those "I currently have nothing, but my site is going to get huge!!!!1111" things or do you actually have something to show for?
Not to be somewhat mean about it but if I were commissioning a site to hold a couple of thousand concurrent I would hire someone who wouldn't ask the question "will php be fast enough?". I don't mean that in a derogatory way as well. Even though it sounds it.
@Hiyper you can always have one relational database and one document based, the first you use for writing info and producing the denormalized info in the document based, that way reads are gonna be lightning fast, while keeping the needed structure with relations
@Hiyper the good thing about PHP is that much more people can be found that can support it, rather than people who can do with lua, I guess that can also be taken into concideration
@Hiyper can you elaborate on the exact nature of the application and what this traffic is actually doing?
There are trade-offs and decisions to be made, but if what you are looking at here is brief bursts of traffic then it can likely be solved by throwing money at the problem (temporarily spinning up a bunch of EC2 instance under heavy load, for example)
It is a game. When people generate a new game, it generates 3 numbers and add them to a table. When the users are sending an ajax request, it is checking if the number the user picked is a generated number. If it is, do some math, write the guess to the row, and return information about the request
@Fabor isn't Docker kind of still hellish to support because of the vast amount of changes they introduce with their new versions without actual deprecation?
@Hiyper OK so that actually sounds like less of an issue because it sounds like it will be mostly row-level locking. However, it also sounds like the sort of thing that could be subbed out to the client side?
Or do you need to securel prevent people from cheating in some way? Is there anything material at stake?
@ziGi We use it somewhat simplistically. And only as a method to carry out bulk work through cloud.docker.com. I leave most of that architecture stuff to other people honestly.
Benchmarked the `array_change_keys` #PHP RFC, because it really smelled like broken benchmark. Confirmed broken :-\ https://www.reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/4ll1hg/rfc_array_change_keys/d3pjanq
so yeh anyway @Hiyper you'll want to get a load balancer in front of a couple of nginx instances and start screwing around with benchmarking to see what your loads are like
"A single charge lasts up to four weeks, based on half an hour of reading per day with wireless off. Battery life will vary based on wireless usage". They could argue twice the time with half the reading amount. psht. Who reads for only 30 minutes.
@Wes Bootstrap is a CSS framework. It's a foundation on top of which you apply your own rules and semantics. But it aims to provide, at the shallow level, common components that you can extend, and at the deeper level, a pretty rich mixin library for Less/SASS (depends on which version of bootstrap you use)
@MadaraUchiha In my years of experience on the internet, if somebody starts bragging about their ten years of experience they're usually particularly incompetent.
basically think of hot or not. Except you swipe left for no, right for yes. If the person you swipe right on also swipes right on you a match is made. You can then message or be messaged by this person. Location based too.
@bwoebi I might be able to spend some time either at work, or more realistically wednesday evening. tbh I think this is an RFC that some people will need to have some time to get used to....pushing for 7.1 might meet quite a bit of resistance....
@Ekn Reading is working for me. I can't imagine whisky would though :P
Well that and finding new people to converse with.
An interesting ... uhh... not fact but thing I read about twice in the last two days from different sources is that people who are blind from birth who then gain their sight in later life still can't tell the difference between shapes until they touch them. Interesting aye?
@Danack initial drafts were already proposed a while ago … It's not like we'd mention it for the first time ever now. Also, there's a vote on having only |null instead of ? too… hence it need s to be voted on now
in order, 1st is something to quickly bookmark links etc, 2nd is for pdf/books, 3rd for slides/presentations/images, 4th quick search in a few places, 5th note taking etc
the best thing about icon fonts is that they break every chrome update
i tried to maintain an icon font with the icons mapped to the actual relative unicode code point but after few months all the icons fallbacked to the chrome default font
in a backreference are {}'s only used to differentiate between numbers? For example $1 is the same as ${1} but you need {} if it was something like ${1}2? Can't seem to find documentation on it