PHP Cheat Sheet
There is a great little PHP cheat sheet available here for those of you who want to be able to figure out common function arguments, etc. without having to browse the manual at php.net
There is a great little PHP cheat sheet available here for those of you who want to be able to figure out common function arguments, etc. without having to browse the manual at php.net
Just a quick post to say that this blog is now running Serendipity 0.8. The upgrade path was frought with disaster after disaster, much of which David Rolston helped steer me though. Ultimately, though, it came down to the default version of PHP that ships with Debian being incompatible with Serendipity 0.8. Furthermore, to hear …
Following up on a recent post explaining why PHP works in the Enterprise, I thought it might be equally useful to lay out the common concerns I have heard over the years from programming shops trying to make the case against PHP and for another web development platform. Here are a few off the top …
Having ploughed through writing my upcoming article for PHP Magazine on “Farming PHP” I am still motivated to think deeply about PHP in the enterprise and, specifically, under high volumes of web traffic. Having come through several industries in a variety of capacities where PHP is being used effectively for business-critical operations, I am used …
Issue 03.05 of International PHP Magazine is out, featuring my article on, “Enterprise PHP Coding Standards.” This topic seems to have sparked considerable interest from my previous entries (here, here, here, and here) and the teaser article available on the IPM site. This issue should hit newsstands in Europe today, and is available overseas to …
One important area I forgot to mention in my overview of PHP application server farm considerations is monitoring. How will you know how to tune your farm for performance, or when it is time to add a new server or two to the mix? When it comes to understanding individual server performance and health, cacti …