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Posted by "david forums" on 10/20/72 11:19
To make persistant object with php use serialize
and include the object into session.
it's the only way with php
regards
david
Le Wed, 22 Jun 2005 14:43:51 +0200, Catalin Trifu
<catalin@isp-software.de> a écrit:
> Hi,
>
> Basically you can take your mind off object persistance in PHP
> unless you code a C extension yourself which would do such a thing.
> Besides code accelerators and caching techniques there isn't much
> to play with; at least none that I know of.
>
> Catalin
>
>
> Evert | Rooftop wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm writing a big web application, and trying really hard to seperate
>> business logic and presentation, which been no problem up to now.
>> Because I abstracted the business logic so much the framework became
>> heavier, sometimes a simple action can take up to 2 mb memory and
>> several extra milliseconds.
>>
>> I know this doesn't sound much and I'm applying all kinds of technique's
>> to reduce resource-usage and increase speed. The thing is, I feel like I
>> need to split the business tier up in 2 tiers, one of them being my
>> persisitant object manager. The main reason is because every script that
>> is executed must do some initialization and database calls, and I think
>> I could reduce this by making a persistant tier, but there doesn't seem
>> a good way to do this using php except when I would use sockets.
>>
>> Shared memory doesn't really seem like an option, because I would still
>> need to include all the classes to manage it, and when I use shared
>> memory, the memory would still be copied into the php memory + having a
>> central manager seems like a good idea.
>>
>> I know I'm pretty vague in my requirements, but I think it should be
>> enough to explain what kind of solution I´m looking for, because this
>> seems like a big advantage of java over php, or am I mistaken?
>> If you have any ideas, let me know :)
>>
>> grt,
>> Evert
>> Collab
>
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