The PHP-FIG is currently going through some growing pains. I recently resigned as a voting rep, and after some juvenile controversy Lavarel, Doctrine and Propel have as well.

Since its inception 8 years ago, the groups greatest problem has been to properly organize itself. From having followed the mailing lists for that time, I believe that the amount of emails entailing “the process, bylaws, voting and general bureaucracy” outnumber the actually productive technical discussions by maybe something like 4 to 1. This is a lot of wasted time, for a lot of people, and while (some) good documents have come from it, it is an incredibly inefficient process.

Now as a sort of knee-jerk reaction to these issues, PHP-CDS was setup with a much simpler process. Anyone can submit a PSR document there, first come first serve, disrespectfully in the psr composer vendor name. While it’s a nice protest, this will of course go nowhere. But the initiative makes a few good points: Ultimately the key to the success of PHP-FIG will be a more open group, a much lower barrier to entry and the ability to more rapidly release PSR’s; allowing them to fail quicker so better versions can rise from their ashes.

If you want a great example of why this is needed, look no further than PSR-6 a.k.a. the “Caching” interface. This is an effort I originally started somewhere in 2011. It took 5 years to complete (I gave up after 2). Originally a simple key-value store that mimicked interfaces from memcache and apc 1:1, it has become a textbook example of “design by committee” and aims to solve a wide range of problems such as being able to store and retrieve NULL from a cache (yes, this was a major design consideration, and a big influencer for the resulting API. See the meta document).

Now I don’t think we need to try to aim to create an organization that prevents people from making bad decisions. Instead the organization we need is one that allows someone to make that mistake in the timespan of about 5 months instead of 5 years, so room can be created for a new PSR that solves the 80% problem in a less ridiculous way.

Some good stuff is happening though. A few people are working on a thankless effort to restructure the organization dubbed “FIG 3.0”. (thanks Larry Garfield and Michael Cullum). Contrary what you might read in the first half of my post, I don’t actually believe that total anarchy is the solution. Process is needed, but it needs to be good process, and you need humble people to shepard it. As long as the role comes with a certain amount of prestige, it will attract the wrong people. This has happened with the group of voting representatives. Some voters have joined and then put in zero effort, while others have devised elaborate schemes to get admitted as one.

I think PHP-FIG needs to immediately create a separate mailing list, specifically for organizational / process matters. Let its moderators rule with an iron hand and delete posts and suspend mailing list users that go off topic on either the organization or general mailing list.

Perhaps even go to a model where every post gets moderated in the short-term.

Why it matters

But why does this all matter in the first place? Take caching for example. A lot of different frameworks provide some facility to do this.

But there’s also a lot of framework-independent libraries that can take advantage of this.

Libraries today generally have a few options to solve this:

Build in a caching library in the library. Depend on a specific external caching library. Only work with one framework (by expecting for example a Symfony cache). Provide adapters for different frameworks.

All of these solutions have drawbacks, and all of these solutions are happening in the wild. A (sane) PSR-Cache can solve this.

We are creating a TON of redundant code, each framework and ecosystem gets its own implementation of everything, and the few packages that are used across frameworks get framework-specific bundle packages.

I think it requires a bit of change in thinking to make successful interfaces though. The problem that haunts PSR-Cache, but also the earlier PSR-3 Logging interface and PSR-7 (HTTP), is that they all aim to be the framework directly exposed to the user, instead just the plumbing.

This is the most obvious from the logging interface. The logging interface really only facilitates one operation, logging something:

public function log ( $level , $message , array $context = array ());

This would actually have been enough, but we got 8 additional methods that make it easier to to call this (already fairly simple) method:

public function emergency ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function alert ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function critical ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function error ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function warning ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function notice ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function info ( $message , array $context = array ()); public function debug ( $message , array $context = array ());

While I think it’s fine for something like monolog to provide this interface to its end-users, this goal should not have been conflated with the PSR.

Removing those functions would have cost us very little. It’s up to library developers to make the plumbing look nice.

Instead, the Monolog API pretty much is PSR-3, like the Stash user-facing API is PSR-6 and Zend Diactoros is PSR-7.

By conflating the goal of simple library to library interop to becoming the end-user API, each of these standards have become very opiniated which is good for the people running those projects, or people who hold that opinion, but it leaves little space for other opinions. There’s also a risk that these PSRs will go out of fashion when their respective ‘host projects’ do.

The folks that sign up to taking an “event sourcing” / functional approach to PHP have largely dictated the design of PSR-7. This is why we’re left with a set of objects that are pretty odd to pretty much anyone who first sees them.

The larger problem is that PSR-7 was never designed to cater the use-case where an existing PHP framework interacts with a framework-agnostic plugin. In the world of PSR-7, we all first need to convert to the church of event sourcing. There is one de facto implementation, and while there is traction, the traction largely exists within libraries that subscribe to the idea of this particular approach to Middleware and they seem mostly new utilities, not existing feature bundles that are becoming framework agnostic. We pretty much need new major versions of the major frameworks first, and then PSR-7 to become a first-class citizen. Had PSR-7 been a simple mutable interface, every framework could have created a simple proxy pattern between PSR-7 and the underlying request/response objects they already had.

However I actually believe that PHP-FIG should facilitate the eventsourcing school of thought and should help them interop, but by optimizing the process and making it much easier to publish PSR documents (even if they are competing with earlier ones) it will be in a much better position to achieve the goal to let libraries and frameworks interop better.

This is because a successful PSR is one that allows at least 3 projects to better interop. If we make it a requirement to reach total concensus the pressure is way too high for everyone involved to make that PSR perfect. Since “perfect” is different for everyone, the most persistent debater wins, and ultimately for PSR 3, 6 and 7 that has been the author of the document. That’s why PSR-3, PSR-6 and PSR-7 might as well be called Monolog, Stash and Diactoros.

If you only get a chance once every 5 years to build the right interface, you’re gonna care about getting it right. Nobody is to blame for that, but if we were a bit more flexible, we may have had a simple key-value store 4 years ago. 3 years ago we may have gotten a multikey extension, and last year the author of Stash may have published a third PSR that might have worked better for Stash’s end users, one which may not have suffered as much from having too many cooks in the kitchen.

Conclusion

Well, this turned into quite a rant. My ultimate goal with this post is to try and better vocalize the vague criticism I’ve seen about the PHP-FIG. I notice a lot of people ‘feel’ this way but have not been inside the sausage factory for long enough to figure out why all the recent PSR’s leave such an odd after-taste.

Not sure if I’ve succeeded with that or if I’m just stirring the pot. Regardless, I believe PHP needs PHP-FIG, and I would be excited to get involved again in a strict technical capacity once Larry and others are done with the open heart surgery.