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Swoole is an event-driven asynchronous & coroutine-based concurrency networking communication engine with high performance written in C++ for PHP.
Run Swoole program by Docker
docker run --rm phpswoole/swoole "php --ri swoole"
For details on how to use it, see: How to Use This Image.
Or code and run the Swoole program on the official website of Swoole. Coding Online
- IDE Helper & API: https://github.com/swoole/ide-helper
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/phpswoole
- Discord: https://discord.swoole.dev
- δΈζζζ‘£: https://wiki.swoole.com
- δΈζη€ΎεΊ: https://wiki.swoole.com/#/other/discussion
Project Awesome Swoole maintains a curated list of awesome things related to Swoole, including
- Swoole-based frameworks and libraries.
- Packages to integrate Swoole with popular PHP frameworks, including Laravel, Symfony, Slim, and Yii.
- Books, videos, and other learning materials about Swoole.
- Debugging, profiling, and testing tools for developing Swoole-based applications.
- Coroutine-friendly packages and libraries.
- Other Swoole related projects and resources.
The network layer in Swoole is event-based and takes full advantage of the underlying epoll/kqueue implementation, making it really easy to serve millions of requests.
Swoole 4.x uses a brand new engine kernel and now it has a full-time developer team, so we are entering an unprecedented period in PHP history which offers a unique possibility for rapid evolution in performance.
Swoole 4.x or later supports the built-in coroutine with high availability, and you can use fully synchronized code to implement asynchronous performance. PHP code without any additional keywords, the underlying automatic coroutine-scheduling.
Developers can understand coroutines as ultra-lightweight threads, and you can easily create thousands of coroutines in a single process.
Concurrency 10K requests to read data from MySQL takes only 0.2s!
$s = microtime(true);
Co\run(function() {
for ($c = 100; $c--;) {
go(function () {
$mysql = new Swoole\Coroutine\MySQL;
$mysql->connect([
'host' => '127.0.0.1',
'user' => 'root',
'password' => 'root',
'database' => 'test'
]);
$statement = $mysql->prepare('SELECT * FROM `user`');
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
$result = $statement->execute();
assert(count($result) > 0);
}
});
}
});
echo 'use ' . (microtime(true) - $s) . ' s';
You can create multiple services on the single event loop: TCP, HTTP, Websocket and HTTP2, and easily handle thousands of requests.
function tcp_pack(string $data): string
{
return pack('N', strlen($data)) . $data;
}
function tcp_unpack(string $data): string
{
return substr($data, 4, unpack('N', substr($data, 0, 4))[1]);
}
$tcp_options = [
'open_length_check' => true,
'package_length_type' => 'N',
'package_length_offset' => 0,
'package_body_offset' => 4
];
$server = new Swoole\WebSocket\Server('127.0.0.1', 9501, SWOOLE_BASE);
$server->set(['open_http2_protocol' => true]);
// http && http2
$server->on('request', function (Swoole\Http\Request $request, Swoole\Http\Response $response) {
$response->end('Hello ' . $request->rawcontent());
});
// websocket
$server->on('message', function (Swoole\WebSocket\Server $server, Swoole\WebSocket\Frame $frame) {
$server->push($frame->fd, 'Hello ' . $frame->data);
});
// tcp
$tcp_server = $server->listen('127.0.0.1', 9502, SWOOLE_TCP);
$tcp_server->set($tcp_options);
$tcp_server->on('receive', function (Swoole\Server $server, int $fd, int $reactor_id, string $data) {
$server->send($fd, tcp_pack('Hello ' . tcp_unpack($data)));
});
$server->start();
Whether you DNS query or send requests or receive responses, all of these are scheduled by coroutine automatically.
go(function () {
// http
$http_client = new Swoole\Coroutine\Http\Client('127.0.0.1', 9501);
assert($http_client->post('/', 'Swoole Http'));
var_dump($http_client->body);
// websocket
$http_client->upgrade('/');
$http_client->push('Swoole Websocket');
var_dump($http_client->recv()->data);
});
go(function () {
// http2
$http2_client = new Swoole\Coroutine\Http2\Client('localhost', 9501);
$http2_client->connect();
$http2_request = new Swoole\Http2\Request;
$http2_request->method = 'POST';
$http2_request->data = 'Swoole Http2';
$http2_client->send($http2_request);
$http2_response = $http2_client->recv();
var_dump($http2_response->data);
});
go(function () use ($tcp_options) {
// tcp
$tcp_client = new Swoole\Coroutine\Client(SWOOLE_TCP);
$tcp_client->set($tcp_options);
$tcp_client->connect('127.0.0.1', 9502);
$tcp_client->send(tcp_pack('Swoole Tcp'));
var_dump(tcp_unpack($tcp_client->recv()));
});
Channel is the only way for exchanging data between coroutines, the development combination of the Coroutine + Channel
is the famous CSP programming model.
In Swoole development, Channel is usually used for implementing connection pool or scheduling coroutine concurrent.
In the following example, we have a thousand concurrently requests to redis. Normally, this has exceeded the maximum number of Redis connections setting and will throw a connection exception, but the connection pool based on Channel can perfectly schedule requests. We don't have to worry about connection overload.
class RedisPool
{
/**@var \Swoole\Coroutine\Channel */
protected $pool;
/**
* RedisPool constructor.
* @param int $size max connections
*/
public function __construct(int $size = 100)
{
$this->pool = new \Swoole\Coroutine\Channel($size);
for ($i = 0; $i < $size; $i++) {
$redis = new \Swoole\Coroutine\Redis();
$res = $redis->connect('127.0.0.1', 6379);
if ($res == false) {
throw new \RuntimeException("failed to connect redis server.");
} else {
$this->put($redis);
}
}
}
public function get(): \Swoole\Coroutine\Redis
{
return $this->pool->pop();
}
public function put(\Swoole\Coroutine\Redis $redis)
{
$this->pool->push($redis);
}
public function close(): void
{
$this->pool->close();
$this->pool = null;
}
}
go(function () {
$pool = new RedisPool();
// max concurrency num is more than max connections
// but it's no problem, channel will help you with scheduling
for ($c = 0; $c < 1000; $c++) {
go(function () use ($pool, $c) {
for ($n = 0; $n < 100; $n++) {
$redis = $pool->get();
assert($redis->set("awesome-{$c}-{$n}", 'swoole'));
assert($redis->get("awesome-{$c}-{$n}") === 'swoole');
assert($redis->delete("awesome-{$c}-{$n}"));
$pool->put($redis);
}
});
}
});
Some Swoole's clients implement the defer mode for concurrency, but you can still implement it flexible with a combination of coroutines and channels.
go(function () {
// User: I need you to bring me some information back.
// Channel: OK! I will be responsible for scheduling.
$channel = new Swoole\Coroutine\Channel;
go(function () use ($channel) {
// Coroutine A: Ok! I will show you the github addr info
$addr_info = Co::getaddrinfo('github.com');
$channel->push(['A', json_encode($addr_info, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT)]);
});
go(function () use ($channel) {
// Coroutine B: Ok! I will show you what your code look like
$mirror = Co::readFile(__FILE__);
$channel->push(['B', $mirror]);
});
go(function () use ($channel) {
// Coroutine C: Ok! I will show you the date
$channel->push(['C', date(DATE_W3C)]);
});
for ($i = 3; $i--;) {
list($id, $data) = $channel->pop();
echo "From {$id}:\n {$data}\n";
}
// User: Amazing, I got every information at earliest time!
});
$id = Swoole\Timer::tick(100, function () {
echo "βοΈ Do something...\n";
});
Swoole\Timer::after(500, function () use ($id) {
Swoole\Timer::clear($id);
echo "β° Done\n";
});
Swoole\Timer::after(1000, function () use ($id) {
if (!Swoole\Timer::exists($id)) {
echo "β
All right!\n";
}
});
go(function () {
$i = 0;
while (true) {
Co::sleep(0.1);
echo "π Do something...\n";
if (++$i === 5) {
echo "π Done\n";
break;
}
}
echo "π All right!\n";
});
As of Swoole v4.1.0, we added the ability to transform synchronous PHP network libraries into co-routine libraries using a single line of code.
Simply call the Swoole\Runtime::enableCoroutine()
method at the top of your script. In the sample below we connect to php-redis and concurrently read 10k requests in 0.1s:
Swoole\Runtime::enableCoroutine();
$s = microtime(true);
Co\run(function() {
for ($c = 100; $c--;) {
go(function () {
($redis = new Redis)->connect('127.0.0.1', 6379);
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
assert($redis->get('awesome') === 'swoole');
}
});
}
});
echo 'use ' . (microtime(true) - $s) . ' s';
By calling this method, the Swoole kernel replaces ZendVM stream function pointers. If you use php_stream
based extensions, all socket operations can be dynamically converted to be asynchronous IO scheduled by coroutine at runtime!
Sleep 10K times, read, write, check and delete files 10K times, use PDO and MySQLi to communicate with the database 10K times, create a TCP server and multiple clients to communicate with each other 10K times, create a UDP server and multiple clients to communicate with each other 10K times... Everything works well in one process!
Just see what the Swoole brings, just imagine...
Swoole\Runtime::enableCoroutine();
$s = microtime(true);
Co\run(function() {
// i just want to sleep...
for ($c = 100; $c--;) {
go(function () {
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
usleep(1000);
}
});
}
// 10K file read and write
for ($c = 100; $c--;) {
go(function () use ($c) {
$tmp_filename = "/tmp/test-{$c}.php";
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
$self = file_get_contents(__FILE__);
file_put_contents($tmp_filename, $self);
assert(file_get_contents($tmp_filename) === $self);
}
unlink($tmp_filename);
});
}
// 10K pdo and mysqli read
for ($c = 50; $c--;) {
go(function () {
$pdo = new PDO('mysql:host=127.0.0.1;dbname=test;charset=utf8', 'root', 'root');
$statement = $pdo->prepare('SELECT * FROM `user`');
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
$statement->execute();
assert(count($statement->fetchAll()) > 0);
}
});
}
for ($c = 50; $c--;) {
go(function () {
$mysqli = new Mysqli('127.0.0.1', 'root', 'root', 'test');
$statement = $mysqli->prepare('SELECT `id` FROM `user`');
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
$statement->bind_result($id);
$statement->execute();
$statement->fetch();
assert($id > 0);
}
});
}
// php_stream tcp server & client with 12.8K requests in single process
function tcp_pack(string $data): string
{
return pack('n', strlen($data)) . $data;
}
function tcp_length(string $head): int
{
return unpack('n', $head)[1];
}
go(function () {
$ctx = stream_context_create(['socket' => ['so_reuseaddr' => true, 'backlog' => 128]]);
$socket = stream_socket_server(
'tcp://0.0.0.0:9502',
$errno, $errstr, STREAM_SERVER_BIND | STREAM_SERVER_LISTEN, $ctx
);
if (!$socket) {
echo "$errstr ($errno)\n";
} else {
$i = 0;
while ($conn = stream_socket_accept($socket, 1)) {
stream_set_timeout($conn, 5);
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
$data = fread($conn, tcp_length(fread($conn, 2)));
assert($data === "Hello Swoole Server #{$n}!");
fwrite($conn, tcp_pack("Hello Swoole Client #{$n}!"));
}
if (++$i === 128) {
fclose($socket);
break;
}
}
}
});
for ($c = 128; $c--;) {
go(function () {
$fp = stream_socket_client("tcp://127.0.0.1:9502", $errno, $errstr, 1);
if (!$fp) {
echo "$errstr ($errno)\n";
} else {
stream_set_timeout($fp, 5);
for ($n = 100; $n--;) {
fwrite($fp, tcp_pack("Hello Swoole Server #{$n}!"));
$data = fread($fp, tcp_length(fread($fp, 2)));
assert($data === "Hello Swoole Client #{$n}!");
}
fclose($fp);
}
});
}
// udp server & client with 12.8K requests in single process
go(function () {
$socket = new Swoole\Coroutine\Socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
$socket->bind('127.0.0.1', 9503);
$client_map = [];
for ($c = 128; $c--;) {
for ($n = 0; $n < 100; $n++) {
$recv = $socket->recvfrom($peer);
$client_uid = "{$peer['address']}:{$peer['port']}";
$id = $client_map[$client_uid] = ($client_map[$client_uid] ?? -1) + 1;
assert($recv === "Client: Hello #{$id}!");
$socket->sendto($peer['address'], $peer['port'], "Server: Hello #{$id}!");
}
}
$socket->close();
});
for ($c = 128; $c--;) {
go(function () {
$fp = stream_socket_client("udp://127.0.0.1:9503", $errno, $errstr, 1);
if (!$fp) {
echo "$errstr ($errno)\n";
} else {
for ($n = 0; $n < 100; $n++) {
fwrite($fp, "Client: Hello #{$n}!");
$recv = fread($fp, 1024);
list($address, $port) = explode(':', (stream_socket_get_name($fp, true)));
assert($address === '127.0.0.1' && (int)$port === 9503);
assert($recv === "Server: Hello #{$n}!");
}
fclose($fp);
}
});
}
});
echo 'use ' . (microtime(true) - $s) . ' s';
As with any open source project, Swoole always provides the most reliable stability and the most powerful features in the latest released version. Please ensure as much as possible that you are using the latest version.
- Linux, OS X or Cygwin, WSL
- PHP 7.2.0 or later (The higher the version, the better the performance.)
- GCC 4.8 or later
pecl install swoole
Please download the source packages from Releases or:
git clone https://github.com/swoole/swoole-src.git && \
cd swoole-src
Compile and install at the source folder:
phpize && \
./configure && \
make && make install
After compiling and installing to the system successfully, you have to add a new line extension=swoole.so
to php.ini
to enable Swoole extension.
for example:
./configure --enable-openssl --enable-sockets
--enable-openssl
or--with-openssl-dir=DIR
--enable-sockets
--enable-http2
--enable-mysqlnd
(need mysqlnd, it just for supporting$mysql->escape
method)--enable-swoole-json
--enable-swoole-curl
β οΈ If you upgrade from source, don't forget tomake clean
before you upgrade your swoole
pecl upgrade swoole
cd swoole-src && git pull && make clean && make && sudo make install
- if you change your PHP version, please re-run
phpize clean && phpize
then try to compile
Async clients and API are moved to a separate PHP extension swoole_async
since version 4.3.0, install swoole_async
:
git clone https://github.com/swoole/ext-async.git
cd ext-async
phpize
./configure
make -j 4
sudo make install
Enable it by adding a new line extension=swoole_async.so
to php.ini
.
- On the open source Techempower Web Framework benchmarks Swoole used MySQL database benchmark to rank first, and all performance tests ranked in the first echelon.
- You can just run Benchmark Script to quickly test the maximum QPS of Swoole-HTTP-Server on your machine.
Security issues should be reported privately, via email, to the Swoole develop team team@swoole.com. You should receive a response within 24 hours. If for some reason you do not, please follow up via email to ensure we received your original message.
Your contribution to Swoole development is very welcome!
You may contribute in the following ways:
- Report issues and feedback
- Submit fixes, features via Pull Request
- Write/polish documentation
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute. [Contributors].
Demin has been playing with PHP since 2000, focusing on building high-performance, secure web services. He is an occasional conference speaker on PHP and Swoole, and has been working for companies in the states like eBay, Visa and Glu Mobile for years. You may find Demin on Twitter or GitHub.
Apache License Version 2.0 see http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html