Hi,
Am Dienstag, den 12.12.2006, 18:38 +0200 schrieb Joe Kramer:
[...]
It's not only about obfuscating.
Zend Guard optimizes performance of scripts. Compiles php files into
bytecode. And it caches them.
Makes perfect sense for high-volume projects.
I do not want to be beaten by the
Why are you encoding Zend Framework at all? It's an open source
project, not like you need to conceal any intellectual property...
Regards,
Eric
On Dec 12, 2006, at 11:02 AM, Joe Kramer wrote:
Nico,
My point is incompatibility between Zend products.
If you build serious,
I suggest you put your money where your mouth is and show some exampes
of the parse errors you say are being generated when you run Zend
Guard's syntax-checking abilities against the latest version of ZF.
That's the only way to be sure.
Here you go, Zend Guard 4.0.1 is the latest version, php 5
Joe,
My point is incompatibility between Zend products.
If you build serious, enterprise-level project, you probably will use
Zend Guard. I am not being elitist, but it seems like Zend framework
is not used for projects that are encoded with Zend Guard? Because
nobody raised the issue
Matthew Weier O'Phinney wrote:
-- Joe Kramer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
(on Tuesday, 12 December 2006, 05:26 PM +0200):
How is snapshot/release of Zend Framework is being built? Just export
form SVN and that's it?
Snapshots and releases are two different things. The snapshots are done
Based on these, in each case, the issue is with perfectly valid PHP
using the 'array' type hint. As an example:
protected function _setInvokeArgs(array $args = array())
It looks like Zend Guard is not currently compatible with valid PHP 5.1
syntax, or you're not using PHP = 5.1.0. If you
On 12/12/06, Nico Edtinger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[12.12.2006 16:26] Joe Kramer wrote:
There is no compile php, you can only do php -f to parse single
file.
There is a syntax checker (lint) built into php with php -l. -f
does also execute the file.
Probably can be automated using some