HOME | NEWS | ABOUT EASIBUILD | CASE STUDIES | FAQ | DOWNLOADS | SEARCH | CONTACT US


NEWS
Topic:

 Web politics: The honeymoon is over

 Google tests TV set-top search, says report

 Small firms say UK taxes are strangling growth

 Facebook plans PHP changes

 Google yanks IE6 love from web apps

 BBC looks to grab internet TV market

 Google contradicts self, confirms own Googlephone

 Israel tests biometric database

 Google equips self for 'real-time' search

 Dell sows experimental Chrome OS for Mini netbooks

 Microsoft's Windows 7 buy early plan builds to climax

 New IIS attacks expand number of vulnerable servers

 Apple loses students to netbooks and Windows

 Microsoft ultra-thins to 'out cool' netbooks, Apple

 Web browser makers line up battleships



Subscribe to our RSS feed02 February 2010
Facebook plans PHP changes

On Tuesday, says The Register, Facebook is expected to unveil changes to PHP, the language that helped make the social networking site a success - along with millions of other web sites

SD Times has outed the planned change here. Facebook wouldn't provide details when contacted by The Reg but said it would make more details available Tuesday morning, Pacific time.

The changes have been described as either a re-write of the PHP runtime or a compiler for PHP.

A change to PHP would be Facebook's latest donation to the language, which has also had contributions from Microsoft and the former Sun Microsystems over the years.

PHP co-founder Andi Gutmans said that his company Zend Technologies was aware that Facebook has been planning a change, and told The Reg he thinks it will be "significant." But he wouldn't elaborate further.

"We have to see what come out," Gutmans said. "Generally speaking... I think there's been some good innovation at Facebook. I imagine some of it could help community PHP."

When it comes to run-times, there have been projects such as Caucho's Quercus - a Java implementation of the PHP language - and the Project Zero PHP runtime, but these have generally failed to get-traction. Gutmans said this was because open-source PHP has remained the industry's de-facto standard.

He's also not overly worried that what Facebook unveiled could lead to a fork of PHP, noting the community is not as political as, for example, the former Sun's MySQL community. He expects whatever Facebook announces to be under a community-friendly license, and said if it is innovative then he'd be happy to see it find its way into PHP.

He said developers would continue to get their PHP source from the community.

Gutmans noted Facebook might be introducing changes because of the scale of its operations and that changes in the language might help it cut the number of servers it needs.

"We've got to remember Facebook is a very different user - a very atypical user compared to the majority of users. The performance requirements at the scale they run is very different from even heavily loaded web sites that have tens or hundreds of servers. Saving 10 per cent can be thousands of servers," he said.