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Yoram Kornatzky
Yoram Kornatzky

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at yoramkornatzky.com

Media Streaming with ReactPHP

Whats' Up with ReactPHP

When I first heard of ReactPHP, a few years ago, it looked very promising.
Providing timers, asynchronous processing, streams, and sockets, all within PHP.

However, in recent years, there seems to be stagnation. While you see commits, you seldom see any publication.

The Framework X is an attempt to make ReactPHP into a micro framework, but I see little mention of it.

Overall, whenever I tried using ReactPHP, I found that it is better to use Laravel and its rich ecosystem.

Streaming with ReactPHP

Building Video Streaming Server with ReactPHP was a nice approach to building a streaming server with ReactPHP, which I could not see how to do as simple in Laravel.

A recent article Streaming ReactPHP in ReactJS revived the topic and showed how you integrate with React.

This got me thinking about how far you can go with ReactPHP in terms of streaming.

A Media Server Design

A media server has three components:

  1. Streaming of media files
  2. Web interface to select files, login users, and control playback.
  3. A backend to manage files and users

While ReactPHP is very good for the streaming part, web application programming with ReactPHP is not common and lacks an ecosystem of build tools and libraries.

This is especially apparent if you want to build a dynamic modern interface, the way you do nowadays with a Single Page Application (SPA).

So it would seem natural to wrap the ReactPHP in a Laravel application. Laravel is well suited for managing files, including file upload, and has built-in user management.

The web interface will be built by either some SPA framework such as React or Vue or Laravel Livewire and AlpineJS.

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