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@philipstanislaus
philipstanislaus / sane-caching.nginx.conf
Last active August 21, 2024 03:30
Sample Nginx config with sane caching settings for modern web development
# Sample Nginx config with sane caching settings for modern web development
#
# Motivation:
# Modern web development often happens with developer tools open, e. g. the Chrome Dev Tools.
# These tools automatically deactivate all sorts of caching for you, so you always have a fresh
# and juicy version of your assets available.
# At some point, however, you want to show your work to testers, your boss or your client.
# After you implemented and deployed their feedback, they reload the testing page – and report
# the exact same issues as before! What happened? Of course, they did not have developer tools
# open, and of course, they did not empty their caches before navigating to your site.
@mickaelandrieu
mickaelandrieu / upgrade2.3-to-2.7.md
Last active May 21, 2024 03:39
Complete migration guide from Symfony 2.3 LTS to Symfony 2.7 LTS

From Symfony 2.3 to Symfony 2.7: the complete guide

Objectives

  • assume your code doesn't use any deprecated from versions below Symfony 2.3
  • update dependencies from 2.3 to 2.7
  • do not support "deprecated", be "Symfony3-ready"
  • list tasks component by component, bundle by bundle.
@nikic
nikic / objects_arrays.md
Last active September 24, 2024 14:51
Post explaining why objects often use less memory than arrays (in PHP)

Why objects (usually) use less memory than arrays in PHP

This is just a small post in response to [this tweet][tweet] by Julien Pauli (who by the way is the release manager for PHP 5.5). In the tweet he claims that objects use more memory than arrays in PHP. Even though it can be like that, it's not true in most cases. (Note: This only applies to PHP 5.4 or newer.)

The reason why it's easy to assume that objects are larger than arrays is because objects can be seen as an array of properties and a bit of additional information (like the class it belongs to). And as array + additional info > array it obviously follows that objects are larger. The thing is that in most cases PHP can optimize the array part of it away. So how does that work?

The key here is that objects usually have a predefined set of keys, whereas arrays don't:

@nikic
nikic / accessors.markdown
Created October 13, 2012 11:22
Analysis of getter/setter usage in Symfony and Zend Framework

In order to get a bit of "hard data" on what accessors will actually be used for once they are introduced I wrote a small script that scans through a codebase, finds all getter and setter methods and checks them for various characteristics. (The analyze.php file in this Gist.)

Here are the results of running it on a Symfony (Standard) skeleton.

absoluteTotal        => 18516 (486.6%)
total                =>  3805 (100.0%)
skipped              =>   124 (  3.3%)
@ziadoz
ziadoz / awesome-php.md
Last active July 13, 2024 05:29
Awesome PHP — A curated list of amazingly awesome PHP libraries, resources and shiny things.