12

I know PHP is single-threaded, so I am wondering, does this mean if I run say foo.php in a browser tab and then open another browser tab and run the same file, will it still run if foo.php is still running in the other browser tab!?

If not, how can you run the same script at once? Do you just rename the script something else and then you can run both at the same time? ...or am I getting confused here?

5
  • 2
    yes, you can open a hundred\thousand\million copies of foo.php
    – user557846
    Oct 19, 2013 at 20:14
  • 1
    PHP may be single-threaded but Apache certainly isn't. Oct 19, 2013 at 20:16
  • 1
    ditto all the other web servers
    – user557846
    Oct 19, 2013 at 20:17
  • 1
    @dagon Ok, so when does php's single-threaded status come into it exactly? What does that prevent you doing? Does that mean that it can only be handled by a single thread an hence u can't make php go any faster because you can't hand it off to more threads to take on some of the work?
    – Brett
    Oct 19, 2013 at 20:19
  • to me it means that when im producing pdf's on a dedicated 8 core machine, i run 8 copies at once to optimise overall speed. but otherwise its non issue
    – user557846
    Oct 19, 2013 at 20:23

2 Answers 2

19

PHP is NOT single threaded by nature.

http://php.net/Thread

It is, however, the case that the most common installation of PHP on unix systems is a single threaded setup, as is the most common Apache installation, and nginx doesn't have a thread based architecture whatever.

In this most common unix setup, each http server process accepting requests can do one of a few things:

  • spawn a php interpreter process (cgi - generic CGI gateway)
  • manipulate an in process instance of the interpreter (mod_php5 - apache specific PHP module, services both mpm and worker installations of Apache)
  • communicate with an FCGI process (php-fpm - commonly used with nginx, some apache usage goes on still ...)

In the most common Windows setup and some more advanced unix setups, PHP can and does operate multiple interpreter threads in one process.

In any case, each instance of the interpreter, be it in another process or in another thread, has access to a unique representation of the script that is a result of compiling the PHP script into opcodes for execution by Zend.

This is by design, it's referred to as a shared nothing architecture and it is the thing allowing you to create hundreds/thousands/millions of instances of the same script that for the most part do not interfere with each other.

Even where PHP utilizes opcode caching to save resources on the compilation stage of execution, no two instances of the interpreter access the same physical memory.

Noteworthy: PHP is not completely void of the effects of concurrent execution in any setup, this is the nature of modern computing; for example if your script edits a text file, and 1000 clients come at once, what do you think will happen to the text file ?

3
  • 2
    PHP as a language has zero support for multithreading and as such is single-threaded. That fact that you have various interpreters doing multithreaded request processing because they're memory stingy, doesn't change the fact that PHP is single threaded by design. I haven't come across any standard hosts that run the worker MPM by default.
    – Niels B.
    Oct 21, 2013 at 6:56
  • 6
    That is completely wrong, PHP as an interpreter had support for multi-threading since the year 2000. Oct 21, 2013 at 7:07
  • 3
    Yes, as an interpreter. We are talking about different things. Are you telling me you can fork new threads in a php script?
    – Niels B.
    Oct 21, 2013 at 9:10
5

The single threaded nature of PHP means that PHP doesn't have any built-in support for spawning new threads during script execution.

However, this doesn't mean that you can't have two executions of the same script simultanously.

In the most common setup, your website is served by Apache HTTPD. When an HTTP request for a particular script comes in (e.g. /news.php, Apache executes the script and returns the result. While the script itself cannot launch new threads, Apache itself happily forks whole new processes to service multiple HTTP requests simultanously.

Update

Please see Joe Watkins answer. It appears that PHP indeed does have support for creating threads during execution. However, this doesn't change that fact that you can have simultanous executions of the same script.

1
  • 1
    ... this doesn't mean that you can't have two executions of the same script simultaneously is probably better stated as the apache server will execute the same script simultaneously because that is it's job - to handle multiple requests. Then maybe the term forking a process can be better understood in the context in which it is usually used: your script forking a process to perform another action. But a forked process is a copy on write duplication of your environment whereas creating another thread (multi-threading with pThreads) exists within the same environment.
    – Ricalsin
    Apr 15, 2014 at 18:34

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.