First I'd like to congratulate the Zend team for putting this out and making a CE version! I need support for vhosts for development since I usually have at least 3-4 ZF projects that I'm doing simultaneously. Is there an easy way to achieve this yet?
Thanks! -- Jon On Fri, Feb 20, 2009 at 6:39 PM, Wil Sinclair <[email protected]> wrote: > Just like every technology- including Zend Framework itself- Zend Server > won't be for everyone. If you prefer other stacks- hopefully after trying > Zend Server- ZF will still run well as long as you have the necessary > extensions, PHP version, etc. I personally like Server a lot; it's hard for > me to imagine going back to another stack at this point. I also think that > many ZF users will find the feature set and convenience irresistible, but > we'll see about that in the next few months. ☺ > In any case, there is a *much* better place to carry on these discussions: > http://forums.zend.com/. I hope you'll find the discussions there as > constructive as the discussions on the ZF lists. > > ,Wil > > From: Cristian Bichis [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 7:25 AM > To: Zend Mailing List > Subject: Re: [fw-general] Zend Server & ZF > > Ok, > > So basically what's more than a classic tool like Wamp or VertrigoServ ? > > > Christopher Östlund wrote: > > I don't really see the benefits compared to "the regular" way. > > > Ease of use. Instead of manually installing a webserver and/or configuring > your webserver to PHP, and then having to manually update PHP when security > issues come out, you can do it all through the Zend Server UI. > > Then on top of that you get the cool things like monitoring and logging, > page caching, etc. Give it a try to see. > > > > > -- > Best regards, > Cristian Bichis > www.zftutorials.com | www.zfforums.com | www.zftalk.com | www.zflinks.com >
