A curated list of amazingly awesome PHP libraries, resources and shiny things.
-
Updated
Oct 9, 2020
{{ message }}
PHP is a popular general-purpose scripting language that's particularly suited for server-side web development. PHP runtime is generally executed by webpage content, and can be added to HTML and HTML5 webpages. PHP was originally developed in 1994 by Rasmus Lerdorf.
A curated list of amazingly awesome PHP libraries, resources and shiny things.
Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS
A PHP library for generating universally unique identifiers (UUIDs).
PHP Static Analysis Tool - discover bugs in your code without running it!
PPM is a process manager, supercharger and load balancer for modern PHP applications.
High-performance PHP application server, load-balancer and process manager written in Golang
A modern Docker LAMP stack and MEAN stack for local development
A high-performance backend cache system. It is intended for use in speeding up dynamic web applications by alleviating database load. Well implemented, it can drops the database load to almost nothing, yielding faster page load times for users, better resource utilization. It is simple yet powerful.
A school management Software
Hprose is a cross-language RPC. This project is Hprose 2.0 for PHP
A Static Code Analyzer for PHP (a PhpStorm/Idea Plugin)
Prettier PHP Plugin
I would need to get each user's hourly rate using the API (this should be one of the user preferences): how should I do it?
I'm not sure if it's already feasible (and I just cannot find it) or if this is missing.
Thanks in advance for your help.
Ciao,
Alberto
Our team created for you one of the most innovative CRM systems that supports mainly business processes and allows for customization according to your needs. Be ahead of your competition and implement YetiForce!
High-level cryptography interface powered by libsodium
High-performance PHP-to-Golang IPC bridge
Created by Rasmus Lerdorf
Released June 8, 1995
The name "CPU Threads" has lead to confusion twice today, and it actually is confusing. It sounds like it's the amount of CPU threads the server can use, not which specific (multi threaded) cores the server will use.
I suggest renaming it to "CPU Pinning", as that's more correct, and less likely to fall victim to "oh, I don't really know what I'm doing but my server needs all the performance it