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Mastering PHP 7

You're reading from   Mastering PHP 7 Design, configure, build, and test professional web applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785882814
Length 536 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Branko Ajzele Branko Ajzele
Author Profile Icon Branko Ajzele
Branko Ajzele
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The All New PHP FREE CHAPTER 2. Embracing Standards 3. Error Handling and Logging 4. Magic Behind Magic Methods 5. The Realm of CLI 6. Prominent OOP Features 7. Optimizing for High Performance 8. Going Serverless 9. Reactive Programming 10. Common Design Patterns 11. Building Services 12. Working with Databases 13. Resolving Dependencies 14. Working with Packages 15. Testing the Important Bits 16. Debugging, Tracing, and Profiling 17. Hosting, Provisioning, and Deployment

Non-blocking IO


Using the RxPHP extensions opens up quite a few possibilities. Its observables, operators, and subscribers/observers implementations are certainly powerful. What they don't provide, however, is asynchronicity. This is where the React library comes into play, by providing an event-driven, non-blocking I/O abstraction layer. Before we touch upon React, let's first lay out a trivial example of blocking versus non-blocking I/O in PHP.

We create a small beacon script that will merely generate some standard output (stdout) over time. Then, we will create a script that reads from the standard input (stdin) and see how it behaves when reading is done in the stream blocking and stream non-blocking mode.

We start by creating the beacon.php file with the following content:

<?php

$now = time();

while ($now + $argv[1] > time()) {
  echo 'signal ', microtime(), PHP_EOL;
  usleep(200000); // 0.2s
}

The use of $argv[1] hints that the file is intended to be run from console. Using $argv...

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