In order to address some lingering bugs, the PHP team pushed back the 7.0 release two weeks
PHP 7.0.0, a high-performance upgrade
to the popular server-side scripting language for Web development, was
due for a general release late last week. Instead, builders of the
language offered a seventh release candidate (RC).
Release candidates are generally considered the final precursor to a general release; the first release candidate for PHP 7.0.0 became available in August. But this seventh RC is supposed to finally lead to that general release, according to the PHP development team.
Two weeks after the announced availability of the seventh release candidate would be November 26, although the PHP wiki
does not specifically cite that date. "We're currently expecting PHP
7.0 to be released toward the end of the month, although there's no
final date yet," said prominent PHP developer Andi Gutmans, who has
served as CEO of PHP software vendor Zend Technologies. He is now
executive vice president of strategic partnerships at Rogue Wave
Software, which recently acquired Zend.
"RCs
in PHP speak are actually just mature betas," Gutmans explained in an
email. "Six RCs were planned from the get-go, it's only the seventh RC
that was unexpected and was added due to some stopper bugs found in RC6.
Even though it was unexpected, this was an 'expected unexpected' -- the
release guidelines enable as many RCs as needed to ensure the quality
of the shipped product is best-in-class."
PHP's release process is
more mature than most other open source projects, which often simply go
for "it'll be ready when it's ready" and provide no timeline, Gutmans
said. "We anticipate a faster-than-typical upgrade cycle with the
release of PHP 7. This means a potential of more than one-half of the
Web will be refreshing in the next 12 to 24 months, which spells out
huge opportunity for players in the PHP space."
The upgrade offers performance boosts for "real world" applications, and RC 7, downloadable at the PHP website,
fixes 17 reported bugs. Featuring a new version of the Zend Engine, PHP
7.0.0 is slated to be twice as fast as PHP 5.6, the current stable
release, and offer consistent 64-bit support. PHP founder Rasmus Lerdorf
expects the upgrade to require fewer servers. Additionally, many fatal
errors become exceptions, and old, unsupported SAPIs (Server API) and
extensions have been removed. Anonymous classes and Return type and
scalar type declarations also are featured. Users are again advised not
to use the release candidate in production, since it is only a
development preview.
Source: http://goo.gl/5SbkI5
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