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High Performance with Laravel Octane

You're reading from   High Performance with Laravel Octane Learn to fine-tune and optimize PHP and Laravel apps using Octane and an asynchronous approach

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801819404
Length 204 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Roberto Butti Roberto Butti
Author Profile Icon Roberto Butti
Roberto Butti
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Architecture
2. Chapter 1: Understanding the Laravel Web Application Architecture FREE CHAPTER 3. Part 2: The Application Server
4. Chapter 2: Configuring the RoadRunner Application Server 5. Chapter 3: Configuring the Swoole Application Server 6. Part 3: Laravel Octane – a Complete Tour
7. Chapter 4: Building a Laravel Octane Application 8. Chapter 5: Reducing Latency and Managing Data with an Asynchronous Approach 9. Part 4: Speeding Up
10. Chapter 6: Using Queues to Apply the Asynchronous Approach in Your Application 11. Chapter 7: Configuring the Laravel Octane Application for the Production Environment 12. Index 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Installing and configuring the queue

To create the data structure to store the jobs in the queue, we can execute the command in the terminal in our Laravel project directory:

php artisan queue:table

The command is provided by Laravel without the need to install additional packages.

The queue:table command creates a new migration file for creating the jobs table.

The file is created in the database/migrations/ directory.

Figure 6.1: The migration file for creating the jobs table

Figure 6.1: The migration file for creating the jobs table

The migration will create the following:

  • A new table named 'jobs'
  • 'id': For the unique identifier
  • 'queue': The queue name, helpful for controlling the queue via the command line
  • 'payload': The data in JSON format that contains information to manage and launch the task by the consumer of the queue
  • 'attempts': The number of attempts to execute the jobs
  • 'reserved_at': The timestamp when...
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