Book Image

Learning Apache Thrift

Book Image

Learning Apache Thrift

Overview of this book

With modern software systems being increasingly complex, providing a scalable communication architecture for applications in different languages is tedious. The Apache Thrift framework is the solution to this problem! It helps build efficient and easy-to-maintain services and offers a plethora of options matching your application type by supporting several popular programming languages, including C++, Java, Python, PHP, Ruby, Erlang, Perl, Haskell, C#, Cocoa, JavaScript, Node.js, Smalltalk, OCaml, and Delphi. This book will help you set aside the basics of service-oriented systems through your first Apache Thrift-powered app. Then, progressing to more complex examples, it will provide you with tips for running large-scale applications in production environments. You will learn how to assess when Apache Thrift is the best tool to be used. To start with, you will run a simple example application, learning the framework's structure along the way; you will quickly advance to more complex systems that will help you solve various real-life problems. Moreover, you will be able to add a communication layer to every application written in one of the popular programming languages, with support for various data types and error handling. Further, you will learn how pre-eminent companies use Apache Thrift in their popular applications. This book is a great starting point if you want to use one of the best tools available to develop cross-language applications in service-oriented architectures.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Learning Apache Thrift
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
5
Generating and Running Code in Different Languages
Index

PHP


PHP is one of the most popular programming languages used mainly for server-side scripting of web applications (however, it may be used also as a general purpose language). It is relatively easy to learn and simple to use with thousands of popular applications written in it.

Generating the code

Apache Thrift's compiler offers a bunch of options for PHP. Run the following command to see them:

$ thrift --help

Look for the information about PHP generators given below:

  php (PHP):
    inlined:         Generate PHP inlined files
    server:          Generate PHP server stubs
    oop:             Generate PHP with object oriented subclasses
    rest:            Generate PHP REST processors
    nsglobal=NAME:   Set global namespace
    validate:        Generate PHP validator methods
    json:            Generate JsonSerializable classes (requires PHP >= 5.4)

Some of the options may cater to your project's specific needs. Their descriptions may be cryptic, so here's some extra explanation...