therselman
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README.md
twister
Twister is a fast and light-weight micro-framework component library
Another definition of this code release would be;
Twister is a set of fast and light-weight components around which a framework can be written
I have written a skeleton framework, also called Twister based on this code!
At the heart of the framework, sits a very flexible, simple and elegant Inversion-of-Control (IoC) Container.
In fact, there are NO global variables, NO define's, NO pipeline, NO Kernel and NO App; just the Container.
The Container controls the entire flow of code (except routing), with a custom execute()
function (written by you);
which is actually just an anonymous callback function inside the Container, called from the Front Controller (index.php);
even the name of that function can be changed in the config file.
ie. There is NO pre-programmed flow of the program or hard-coded Kernel/App.
Most things are handled/registered with the IoC Container, objects are pre-configured and lazy-loaded
on request/use only!
Along with the Container, comes a very flexible and fast router (inside the Request class).
I consider this router to be THE fastest router I've tested, with the same functionality.
It includes the ability to filter by method (GET/POST), and optional parameters like /user/{id}[/{name}]
Another somewhat unique capability is the ability to pre-define the patterns associated with named parameters eg. id
=>\d+
So everytime you specify {id}
, {date}
, {uuid}
etc. in the routes, the pre-configured patterns are used,
or you can specify custom patterns with {id:[0-9]+}
or {id:uuid}
where uuid
=>[A-F0-9-]+
etc.
Two design choices make the router fast:
- Everything is configured/loaded from a
config
array (which is usually cached by APC/Xcode/PHP7) - The router splits the request uri by '/', doing an
isset
array lookup for the first path segment - The router only takes further action after the first segment (eg. /admin/, /login etc.) is resolved
Although Twister is a fully functional and useable framework (based on my personal framework), it's more a proof-of-concept for me to demonstrate my capabilities and design decisions.
Benchmarks:
All tests were done with a skeleton hello world
application on the same PC.
Laravel and Symfony were NOT configured to establish a database connection, while Twister WAS!
With a database connection, Symfony dropped to 9-12 requests per second, and Laravel 12-16 rps,
Twister was running about 50x-100x faster than Symfony and Laravel
ab -t 30 http://laravel/
Complete requests: 198
Requests per second: 6.59 [#/sec] (mean)
Time per request: 151.765 [ms] (mean)
memory_get_usage(): 6,621,416
memory_get_usage(true): 2,097,152
memory_get_peak_usage(): 6,691,272
memory_get_peak_usage(true): 2,097,152
ab -t 30 http://symfony/
Complete requests: 95
Requests per second: 3.15 [#/sec] (mean)
Time per request: 317.717 [ms] (mean)
memory_get_usage(): 10,887,352
memory_get_usage(true): 4,194,304
memory_get_peak_usage(): 11,168,984
memory_get_peak_usage(true): 4,194,304
ab -t 30 http://twister/
Complete requests: 911
Requests per second: 30.35 [#/sec] (mean)
Time per request: 32.952 [ms] (mean)
memory_get_usage(): 858,848
memory_get_usage(true): 2,097,152
memory_get_peak_usage(): 1,049,528
memory_get_peak_usage(true): 2,097,152