Event-driven, non-blocking I/O with PHP.
As of 2014-05-25 we have reversed roles of this and the component repositories. Instead of reactphp/react being the master code repository it is now the sum of React's parts. All PRs should be made against their corresponding repository found in /reactphp. All existing PRs will be evaluated and work will be done with the submitter to merge it into the proper component.
The recommended way to install React is through composer. Type the following command in your shell environment:
php ~/composer.phar require react/react
React is a low-level library for event-driven programming in PHP. At its core is an event loop, on top of which it provides low-level utilities, such as: Streams abstraction, async dns resolver, network client/server, http client/server, interaction with processes. Third-party libraries can use these components to create async network clients/servers and more.
The event loop is based on the reactor pattern (hence the name) and strongly inspired by libraries such as EventMachine (Ruby), Twisted (Python) and Node.js (V8).
- Usable with a bare minimum of PHP extensions, add more extensions to get better performance.
- Provide a standalone event-loop component that can be re-used by other libraries.
- Decouple parts so they can be replaced by alternate implementations.
React is non-blocking by default. Use workers for blocking I/O.
There are two main abstractions that make dealing with control flow a lot more manageable.
-
Stream: A stream represents an I/O source (ReadableStream) or destination (WritableStream). These can be used to model pipes, similar to a unix pipe that is composed of processes. Streams represent very large values as chunks.
-
Promise: A promise represents an eventual return value. Promises can be composed and are a lot easier to deal with than traditional CPS callback spaghetti and allow for almost sane error handling. Promises represent the computation for producing single values.
You should use these abstractions whenever you can.
Here is an example of a simple HTTP server listening on port 1337:
<?php
$i = 0;
$app = function ($request, $response) use (&$i) {
$i++;
$text = "This is request number $i.\n";
$headers = array('Content-Type' => 'text/plain');
$response->writeHead(200, $headers);
$response->end($text);
};
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
$socket = new React\Socket\Server($loop);
$http = new React\Http\Server($socket);
$http->on('request', $app);
$socket->listen(1337);
$loop->run();
Superficial documentation can be found in the README files of the individual
components. See vendor/react/*/src/README.md
.
Check out #reactphp on irc.freenode.net. Also follow @reactphp on twitter.
To run the test suite, you need install the dependencies via composer, then run PHPUnit.
$ composer install
$ phpunit
MIT, see LICENSE.