Presented by:

Steve Meyers has worked as a PHP and MySQL scalability expert for the last 19 years at such companies as Omniture (now part of Adobe), Spark Networks (owner of jDate.com), CrimeReports, and currently GoReact. He also runs one of the largest independent online communities of college sports fans. When he's not too busy with all of that, he assists with the OpenWest Conference, is a core team member of the Utah Open Source Foundation, and helps organize the Provo Linux User Group. He also ran the Ski PHP Conference in the past.

A long time ago, it wasn't smart to run PHP daemons. Memory management issues made long-running processes impractical, and PHP "daemons" were often just frequently-restarted cron jobs. Since PHP 5, it's become more and more common to use PHP from the command line, and some are even brave enough to daemonize their PHP scripts. We'll discuss different useful ways to run PHP from the command line, and why you should be using it in your infrastructure.

Date:
2018 November 10 - 10:45
Duration:
50 min
Room:
Room 3179
Language:
Track:
Programming
Difficulty:
Some experience required

Happening at the same time:

  1. Preparing Lesson Plans - Teaching Yourself, Training Others
  2. Start Time:
    2018 November 10 10:45

    Room:
    Room 3184

  3. What Not to Automate
  4. Start Time:
    2018 November 10 10:45

    Room:
    Room 3178

  5. Personal Threat Modelling for Fun and Peace of Mind
  6. Start Time:
    2018 November 10 10:45

    Room:
    Room 3183

  7. Introduction to Identity Management
  8. Start Time:
    2018 November 10 10:45

    Room:
    Room 3180