18 juin 2014

Comparaison de frameworks PHP : Symfony2 et Laravel

Par Jean-Marc Amon

Comparaison de deux célèbre framework PHP, Symfony2 déja connu dans le monde des Frameworks PHP et de Laravel qui est entrain de se faire une place malgré son jeune âge.

Laravel Symfony 2
Category Framework, Web application framework, App Development Web application framework, Framework
Preference 51% votes 49% votes
Website laravel.​com symfony.​com
License MIT License MIT License
System requirements
Operating system Cross-platform Cross-platform
Programming language PHP PHP
Memory minimum ? 130 MB
More
Description A Framework For Web Artisans Klunge
Tag MVC MVC, Dependency Injection, Namespaces
Multi-user system Yes Yes
Autofocus Yes Yes
Pingback Yes Conditional
Extension/Plug-in Yes Yes
Image processing engin No Yes
Interpreter Yes Yes
Database SQLite, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Redis, Microsoft BI Microsoft BI, MongoDB, MySQL, NoSQL, PostgreSQL, CouchDB, DynamoDB, GemFire, GraphDB, Membase, MemcacheDB, Oracle, Apache Jackrabbit
Trackback Yes Yes
Multilingual content Yes Yes
Database model Object-oriented Document-oriented, Graph-oriented, NoSQL, Object-relational, XML Database, Multidimensional, Object-oriented
Transactions Yes Conditional
Unicode Yes Yes
Multiple projects Yes Yes
Standard compliance Yes Yes
External pages Yes Yes
User statistics Yes Yes
Revision control Yes Yes
Atomicity Yes Yes
Isolation Yes Yes
Horizontal scalable Yes Yes
Template language Blade, PHP, Smarty, Twig Twig, PHP
Target audience Web Development Web Development
Framework Laravel Symfony 2
Full text search Yes Yes
Scaffolding Yes Yes
Design pattern Active-Record, Model-View-Controller, Dependency injection Dependency injection, Model-View-Controller, Observer, Data Mapper, Domain Driven Design, HMVC
Development principles Convention over configuration, Test-driven development, Don’t repeat yourself Don’t repeat yourself, Test-driven development, Configuration over convention
Difficulty level Intermediate, Advanced, Beginner Intermediate, Advanced
Application startup time 1 ms ?
Version number 4.2.x 2.6.1
Adobe Flash Support Yes Yes
PSR-0 compliant Yes Yes
Object-Relational Mapping (ORM) Yes Yes
Machine Code Generation Yes Yes
Documentation level ●●●●● ●●●●●
E-Mail protocols SMTP IMAP, POP3, SMTP
Multi tasking Yes Yes
RESTful Yes Yes
Code Generation Yes Yes
Dynamic typing Yes Yes
Composite keys Yes Yes
Programming paradigm Object-oriented, Event-driven Object-oriented, Event-driven, Component-oriented, Code generation
Comments Yes Conditional
Multiple categories Yes ?
Hierarchical menus Conditional Conditional
Scripting language support PHP PHP
Free to use Yes Yes
Backend PHP PHP
Active Yes Yes
Supported VCS github, Subversion, Git Git
Database Connection Pooling Yes Yes
Separate Service Layer Yes Yes
Web Flows Yes Yes
Creation Date 2011 18ᵗʰ October 2009
Community Driven Good Excellent
Wizard Yes Yes
HTML syntax Yes Yes
WSDL Yes Yes
Reliability ●●●●● ●●●●●
Versioning Good Good
Data encryption Yes Yes
Custom queries Good Good
Input Widgets Yes Yes
Layout Structure Template Yes Yes
File Assets Yes Yes
API Good Excellent
Compiled language Yes No
XML Aware Good Good
3 Letter Country Code Yes ?
Client/Server code reuse Model-View-Controller, Template language, Web services Model-View-Controller
Batch Processing Yes Yes
Wireless hotspot No ?
Cloud platform support Google App Engine, Amazon EC2, Fortrabbit, Pagoda Box, digital ocean, Heroku Google App Engine, Amazon EC2, Amazon S3, Engine Yard, Windows Azure, Heroku, Pagoda Box, OpenShift
Admin Generator No Yes
Compiler Yes Yes
Library file size 17 MB 22.1 MB
API comprehensibility ●●●●○ ●●●●●
Webmail Yes Yes
Jobs Oportunities ●●●●○ ●●●●●
Implementation flexibility 46% votes 54% votes
Out-of-the-box functionality 35% votes 65% votes
Throttling Yes ?
Bundle system Yes Yes
Annotation Support Yes Yes
LDAP Yes Yes
Query Cache Yes Yes
Realtime Yes Yes
Data Security Yes Yes
Community feedback ●●●●● ●●●●●
Ease of use ●●●●● ●●●●○
Malicious Injection Prevention Yes Yes
Free for commercial use Yes Yes
Easy of Use Yes Yes
Sexiness 100 100
JVM No ?
Open Source Yes Yes
FAL support Yes ?
Web Developer Toolbar Yes Yes
IntelliSense Yes Yes
XQuery Support Yes Yes
Websocket Support Yes Yes
Maven support No ?
Resource File Processing Yes Yes
Lambda Expressions Yes Yes
Language Integrated Query Yes ?
Partial Classes Yes Yes
Closures Yes Yes
Perfomance ●●●●● ●●●●○
Database migrations Yes Yes
I like it Yes Yes
JavaScript Library included No No
Debug Mode Yes Yes
Static Typing No No
Cloud-enabled Yes ?
Click & Edit in Place / WYSIWYG No No
Archive Yes ?
API Reports Yes Yes
API Test Control Yes Yes
Autocomplete Code Yes Yes
Dependency Injection Yes Yes
Personalization Yes Yes
Supported from Google Yes Yes
Makes you angry No Yes
HLP 100 10 000
Easy to Learn Yes No
Extensibility Yes Yes
Unit Testing Yes Yes
Ajax Yes Yes
User management Yes Yes
ORM Join Support Yes Yes
Object-Oriented Views Yes Yes
Object Oriented Models Yes Yes
Model Conditions Yes Yes
Mobile ready Yes Yes
ACL Yes Yes
Requests per second 100 ?
Operating system server Cross-platform Cross-platform
Package Manager Yes Yes
Makes developer create a slew of inefficient Javascript No No
Easy Setup Yes Yes
Jquery Yes Yes
jQuery Support Yes Yes
Modules/Extensions/Plugins 7 999 2 262
Full-Stack Yes Yes
unnecessary features No No
Internationalization Yes Yes
Heroku Support Yes ?
Framework specific vocabulary Yes No
Easy to Config Yes Yes
Self Server Yes Yes
Will get you a job Yes Yes
Amount of letters 7 7
Use components elsewhere? Yes Yes
Can function without AJAX Yes Yes
Mayur No ?
WYSIWYG-Editor ? Yes
Popularity (0% global votes) (0% global votes)
Sync file manager ? Good
Scheduled posts ? Conditional
Geospatial elements ? Yes
Copy, Cut and Paste Support ? Yes
Realtime Server Push ? Yes
Spring Security ? No
PDF Support ? Yes
Latency Compensation ? No
Scalability ? Yes
Rack Middleware ? No

Lien utiles

 

source : http://vschart.com/compare/laravel/vs/symfony