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Zend Engine
Original author(s) Andi Gutmans, Zeev Suraski
Developer(s) Zend Technologies, The PHP Development Team
Initial release1999
Stable release
3.4 (PHP 7.4)
4.0 (PHP 8.0)
Repository github.com/php/php-src [1]
Written in C
TypeScripting engine
License Zend Engine License (some parts are under the PHP License)
Website www.zend.com

The Zend Engine is a compiler and runtime environment for the PHP scripting language and consists of the Zend Virtual Machine, which is composed of the Zend Compiler and the Zend Executor, that compiles and executes the PHP code. [2] It was originally developed by Andi Gutmans and Zeev Suraski while they were students at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. They later founded a company called Zend Technologies in Ramat Gan, Israel. The name Zend is a combination of their forenames, Zeev and Andi.

The first version of the Zend Engine appeared in 1999 in PHP version 4. [3] It was written in C as a highly optimized modular back-end, which for the first time could be used in applications outside of PHP. The Zend Engine provides memory and resource management, and other standard services for the PHP language. Its performance, reliability and extensibility played a significant role in PHP's increasing popularity.

This was followed by Zend Engine 2 at the heart of PHP 5.

This was followed by Zend Engine 3, originally codenamed phpng, which was developed for PHP 7 and significantly improves performance. [4]

The newest version is Zend Engine 4, which was developed for PHP 8.

The source code for the Zend Engine has been freely available under the Zend Engine License (although some parts are under the PHP License) since 1999, [5] as part of the official releases from php.net, as well as the official git repository or the GitHub mirror. Various volunteers contribute to the PHP/Zend Engine codebase.

Architecture

Zend Engine is used internally by PHP as a compiler and runtime engine. PHP Scripts are loaded into memory and compiled into Zend opcodes. These opcodes are executed and the HTML generated is sent to the client. [6]

To implement a Web script interpreter requires three parts:

  1. The interpreter part analyzes the input code, translates it, and executes it.
  2. The functionality part implements the functionality of the language (its functions, etc.).
  3. The interface part talks to the Web server, etc.

Zend takes part 1 completely and a bit of part 2; PHP takes parts 2 and 3.

Zend itself really forms only the language core, implementing PHP at its very basics with some predefined functions.

See also

References

  1. ^ "php.internals: Changes to Git commit workflow". news-web.php.net. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Zend engine". PHP Internals Book. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Zend's History with PHP". Zend Technologies.
  4. ^ "PHP: General Information - Manual". php.net. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  5. ^ Gutmans, Andi (14 July 1999). "- License update · php/php-src@fec59d3". Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  6. ^ "PHP - What is zend engine?". careerride.

External links