NOTE The audience of programmers.se and dba.se is different, and will have different viewpoints, so in this instance I think it's valid to duplicate What are the arguments against or for putting application logic in the database layer? on programmers.se.
I couldn't find discussion on dba on this...
Comparing the answers here and on SO, the gap is striking. The developers protest at the delays entailed from centralizing processes in the database, but to the DBAs that's a good thing. Forcing people to put more time and effort into requesting a new view or sproc reduces the number of contact points with the data, making it easier to maintain consistency and reducing the number of points of optimization. — Jon of All TradesApr 10 '12 at 21:35
I'm moving my old answer across unedited from programmers.se, as answers seem pretty polarised between sites.
I know I'm in for a world of hurt
here, but put business logic in the
database because:
You can allow business power users direct access to the database and not
worry ab...
testing matters is a wrong reason...
it's ok to not know the tools, it's not ok to dismiss an entire way to work because you don't want to know them
Comparing the answers here and on SO, the gap is striking. The developers protest at the delays entailed from centralizing processes in the database, but to the DBAs that's a good thing. Forcing people to put more time and effort into requesting a new view or sproc reduces the number of contact points with the data, making it easier to maintain consistency and reducing the number of points of optimization. — Jon of All TradesApr 10 '12 at 21:35
Most software developers want to keep application logic in the application layer, and it probably feels natural for us to keep it here. Database developers seem to want to put application logic in the database layer, as triggers and stored procedures.
Personally I would prefer to keep as much as...
I'll admit freely that I don't use stored procedures, though. That's because I don't use Postgres. I probably should step into the light, but I'm lazy and use SQLite3 for EVERYTHING
( just red a message about something that happend here in my country where they have to chose to pay a large amount of money or they will publish the data.)
@AndreaFaulds Here's a thing that database thing is huge. There's a stored procedures that create temporary table, nested views, etc. If I start writing unit-tests for them I will never finish the project. :-)
410 Gone
Indicates that the resource requested is no longer available and will not be available again. This should be used when a resource has been intentionally removed and the resource should be purged. Upon receiving a 410 status code, the client should not request the resource again in the future.
@AndreaFaulds But couples my back-end to that database. And my code is supposed to be flexible enough to change database later. I am unable to do so because of this shitty db.
@AndreaFaulds I am not testing business logic in database which clearly is not mine.
204 No Content
The server successfully processed the request, but is not returning any content. Usually used as a response to a successful delete request.
> This code was defined in 1998 as one of the traditional IETF April Fools' jokes, in RFC 2324, Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol, and is not expected to be implemented by actual HTTP servers.
@FlorianMargaine Not really. This application is 20 years old and we're replacing it step-by-step. First step is to remove old Delphi administration stuff (doing right now), then eliminate web interface that is rendered to user and after that remove this crap reusing new code.
@FlorianMargaine Previous devs have come, implemented stuff with no comments, procedural code in classes, no specs, so no reasons why... A lot of it nobody knows why it's there or what it does
I'm using a ready made class called "ExcelWriter" to write data from PHP to excel sheet.
For this I'm creating object of class ExcelWriter and calling it's methods to do the operations using PHP.
Till here everything is working fine for me. All the code is doing it's job well. The only issue is...
Good morning everyone.. If anyone has any answers for this, please let me know stackoverflow.com/questions/26924216/…. I will try the fix right away and mark it solved if it works....
@tereško I'll agree with that, but still less frustrating that the API for Date(). (inst.getUTCHours() > 12 ? inst.getUTCHours() - 12 : inst.getUTCHours()) + inst.getUTCMinutes() + (inst.getUTCHours() >= 12 ? 'pm' : 'am') -- seriously?
@Rican7 If you mean logging in general then yes, performance is an issue. A lot of people use redis (or similar) to have very fast writes on logging, and then have a separate task to fetch the log data and write it to disk. If you mean does PHP-FPM having errors cause a slow down......then the thing to worry about there is having a high error rate.
@JoeSaad {count_of_records: 23044, items: [array of records]} -- notice the difference? The key "Items" has to be there. Just like the example says. It also says the count has to have the key of "Count", not "count_of_items"
@Rican7 Yes. Logging blindly in production is a big concern. Like @Danack said, though, errors will make your program slow in any environment. The problem is the errors, though, not the logging of those errors. Focus on the source.
@rdlowrey yea, well the reason I'm asking it that I was thinking about logging some info for every request, regardless of error
and before I commit to a new part of the architecture by using some async service or redis proxy, I was curious to see the effect that it would have with the default FPM setup
@Rican7 I think it's handled by the master process, so it wouldn't block an individual request but could prevent fpm from handling new requests. But the whole think is almost completely illegible so I'm not confident any more.
@Rican7 I've got an old system transitioning into a new one, and I'm logging every incidence where the new one bootstaps the old to use some functionality that has not been ported yet. It does not seem to have an adverse effect on performance or server load.
@DaveRandom This is one of the few times when I recommend re-writing something from scratch. Any changes are probably going to break things/expose already broken things. So long as the ini files stay the same (or possibly allow longer lines ;) then it would be easy to get people using a new version.
Then assuming enough research has been put into verifying that - I don't see any point in keeping them - so removing them seems reasonable. In general removing things from PHP sounds like a good idea.
@LeviMorrison Consider adding more statistics, how many projects have primary constructors on GH with more than 3 stars and updated in the last year for example?
@LeviMorrison well, you can write a script that takes the 10000 most popular PHP projects on GH, downloads them one by one, use a static analysis tool to detect PHP4 constructor syntax and report.