Pop PHP Framework

The Pop PHP Framework a free and open source PHP Web framework that was created by Nick Sagona. It is distributed under the BSD License and hosted on GitHub. The framework is intended to be utilized for rapid application development, with an emphasis on web applications.

Pop PHP Framework
Developer(s)Nick Sagona
Initial releaseMarch 19, 2012 (2012-03-19)
Stable release
4.5.0[1] / May 28, 2020 (2020-05-28)
RepositoryPop PHP Repository
Written inPHP
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeWeb framework
LicenseBSD License
Websitepopphp.org

History

Development on the Pop PHP Framework was officially begun by Nick Sagona in late 2011, when he refactored a set of older library components into the first version of Pop PHP, which was released on March 19, 2012. The focus was for Pop PHP to become a more modern, MVC-style web framework with a set of supporting components to assist in building web applications.

After PHP 5.4 was released, Pop PHP 2 was refactored to take advantage of the new features available in PHP 5.4, as well as fully leveraging Composer by breaking out almost all of the components into separate repositories on GitHub. Pop PHP 2 was first released on July 12, 2015.

Pop PHP 3 was a slight refactor of the existing framework, while adding a handful of new components and deprecating a few older components. Version 3 supports PHP 7 and 5.6 and was released on July 9, 2016. The last version, 3.8.0, was released on August 25, 2018. The EOL version 3.8.9 was released on February 24, 2020.

Pop PHP 4 was another refactor of the existing framework that upgraded and improved existing components. Version 4 supports PHP 7.1 or greater and PHP 5.6 is no longer supported. The current version, 4.5.0, was released on May 28, 2020.

The framework has been included on a number of "best of" lists for new and up-and-coming PHP Frameworks.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]

The Pop PHP Framework is the framework on which the open source Phire CMS project was built.[9][10]

Release history

Version 4.5.0 is the current version that is in active development. Versions 3 and earlier have reached end of life and are no longer supported. A current changelog is maintained for a recent list of changes and how they impact continued development with Pop PHP.[11]

Legend: Old version, not maintained Older version, still maintained Current stable version Latest preview version Future release
Version Release date Notes
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.0 March 19, 2012
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.7.0 December 1, 2013 Final Release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.7.0 March 6, 2016 EOL
Old version, no longer maintained: 2.0.0 July 12, 2015
Old version, no longer maintained: 2.1.0 July 8, 2016 Final Release
Old version, no longer maintained: 2.1.0 August 31, 2017 EOL
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.0.0 July 9, 2016
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.5.0 February 27, 2017
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.6.0 August 31, 2017
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.6.5 May 15, 2018
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.7.0 June 28, 2018
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.8.0 August 25, 2018 Final Release
Old version, no longer maintained: 3.8.9 February 24, 2020 EOL
Older version, yet still maintained: 4.0.1 February 9, 2019
Older version, yet still maintained: 4.0.2 March 12, 2019
Older version, yet still maintained: 4.0.3 April 9, 2019
Current stable version: 4.1.0 October 17, 2019
Current stable version: 4.5.0 May 28, 2020 Current production version

Source: Github[12]

Development

While the initial development of the Pop PHP Framework was focused on building web applications, since version 3, Pop PHP fully supports console-based applications to be used on the CLI as well. Pop PHP incorporates current standards, trends and patterns in software development in an attempt to build an ecosystem that is familiar to developers. The framework is heavily unit-tested using PHPUnit and runs through the Travis CI continuous integration platform to ensure the builds of the individual framework components are passing.[13]

Pop PHP 4 is currently written for and supports PHP 7.1 or greater and no longer supports PHP 5.6.

The Pop PHP Framework project welcomes community involvement and contribution via the current available channels.[14]

Features

The base foundation of Pop PHP is the initial set of core components that make up the application stack:

  • The Application Object
  • The Router
  • The Service Locator
  • The Event Manager
  • The Module Manager
  • The Base Controller Class

Additionally, there are a number of other components that are available for use in building an application.[15] Some of the commonly used components and what they include are:

  • Database Abstraction (popphp/pop-db)
    • Database adapters
    • Active record
    • Query builder
    • SQL migration
  • HTTP Abstraction (popphp/pop-http)
    • Request & response handlers
    • HTTP clients
    • File uploads
  • HTML Form Generation (popphp/pop-form)
    • HTML Form Validation
  • PDF Generation (popphp/pop-pdf)
    • PDF Creation
  • Job Queue (popphp/pop-queue)
    • Job Queue Management & Scheduler
  • Mail (popphp/pop-mail)
    • SMTP support
    • Mail queues
    • IMAP/POP client
  • Auditing (popphp/pop-audit)
  • Caching (popphp/pop-cache)
  • Debugging (popphp/pop-debug)
  • Logging (popphp/pop-log)
  • Image Manipulation (popphp/pop-image)
  • Views (popphp/pop-view)
  • Sessions (popphp/pop-session)
  • Cookies (popphp/pop-cookie)

Popcorn

Popcorn is a standalone web-based component that serves as a REST-based micro-framework layer to allow developers to quickly build REST-based web applications and APIs. With it, a developer can enforce routes by request methods and direct HTTP requests accordingly.[16][17][18]

Kettle

Kettle is a CLI-based helper script available since version 4.0.1. It allows the user quickly scaffold application files and folders together as well as manage databases and migrations.[19]

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References

  1. "popphp/popphp-framework: Release v4.5.0". github.com.
  2. "Guide to 24 PHP Frameworks". anastasionico.uk. Nico Anastasio.
  3. "List of Top 10 Best PHP Frameworks". catswhocode.com. Cats Who Code.
  4. "List of Top 10 Best PHP Frameworks". themangomedia.com. Mango Media.
  5. "List of 15 New Best Frameworks". codegeekz.com. Code Geekz.
  6. "Best MVC PHP Frameworks for Developers". bestjquery.com. Best jQuery.
  7. "Best PHP Frameworks". firebearstudio.com. Firebear Studios.
  8. "Best PHP Frameworks". indefiniteloop.com. Indefinite Loop.
  9. "Phire CMS". phirecms.org.
  10. "Phire CMS on GitHub". github.com.
  11. "Github: Pop PHP Framework Changelog". github.com.
  12. "Github: Pop PHP Framework Releases". github.com.
  13. "Travis CI: Pop PHP Framework". travis-ci.org/.
  14. "Pop PHP Development". popphp.org.
  15. "Pop PHP Components". github.com.
  16. "Popcorn". popphp.org.
  17. "Popcorn Overview". popphp.org.
  18. "Popcorn on GitHub". github.com.
  19. "Kettle on GitHub". github.com.
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