AMF is a very compact binary format. It is however difficult to parse. AmfPHP on its own does a good job, but it takes time, as it is written in PHP. Baguette AMF is written in C, and therefore enjoys native performance.
The first release candidate came out in June. Since then there have been quite a few bugfixes and enhancements. A lot of this was in reaction to the feedback from the community, so a big shout goes out to everyone who took the time to help us make this the best release of amfPHP yet.
Today I’d like to show you a way to attach AMF headers to each remote messages you receive from a Zend_Amf server, and how to handle them on the client side. For now this will be only hypothetical, later I’ll show you some practical usage as well
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