Book Image

PHP Microservices

By : Pablo Solar Vilariño, Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Book Image

PHP Microservices

By: Pablo Solar Vilariño, Carlos Pérez Sánchez

Overview of this book

The world is moving away from bulky, unreliable, and high-maintenance PHP applications, to small, easy-to-maintain and highly available microservices and the pressing need is for PHP developers to understand the criticalities in building effective microservices that scale at large. This book will be a reliable resource, and one that will help you to develop your skills and teach you techniques for building reliable microservices in PHP. The book begins with an introduction to the world of microservices, and quickly shows you how to set up a development environment and build a basic platform using Docker and Vagrant. You will then get into the different design aspects to be considered while building microservices in your favorite framework and you will explore topics such as testing, securing, and deploying microservices. You will also understand how to migrate a monolithic application to the microservice architecture while keeping scalability and best practices in mind. Furthermore you will get into a few important DevOps techniques that will help you progress on to more complex domains such as native cloud development, as well as some interesting design patterns. By the end of this book you will be able to develop applications based on microservices in an organized and efficient way. You will also gain the knowledge to transform any monolithic applications into microservices.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
PHP Microservices
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Frameworks for microservices


A framework is a skeleton that we can use for sofware development. Using a framework will help us use standard and robust patterns in our application, making it more stable and well known by other developers. PHP has many different frameworks you can use in your daily work. We will see some standards used on the most common frameworks so that you can pick the best for your project.

PHP-FIG

For years, the PHP community has been working on their own projects and following their own rules. Thousands of different projects with different developers have been released since the first years of PHP, and none followed any common standards.

This was a problem for PHP developers, firstly because there was no way of knowing if the steps they were following to build applications were the correct ones. Only their own experience and the Internet could help the developer guess if their code was written properly and if it would be readable by other developers in the future.

Secondly...