clockwork
tracker
Our great sponsors
clockwork | tracker | |
---|---|---|
30 | 1 | |
5,500 | 2,869 | |
- | - | |
8.3 | 0.0 | |
4 days ago | 3 months ago | |
PHP | PHP | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
clockwork
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Laravel Debugger
Either Clockwork or Debugbar.
- Need to get good performance on request
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Profiling Laravel application
https://underground.works/clockwork/ is super easy to set up and really good.
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API Post Route slow
Get clockwork (https://github.com/itsgoingd/clockwork) so you can understand where in (or outside) your application you are getting an issue.
- How to read enterprise web applications built on Laravel8?
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Debugbar skipping trace
Give https://github.com/itsgoingd/clockwork a go - I made the switch a long time ago, haven't look back
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Are there any lesser-known tools you use a lot in your work?
90% of what I do is Laravel work and for every project, I use Clockwork. It puts all of the stuff below into a tab in Chrome's DevTools.
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How to profile your PHP applications with Xdebug
Funny timing — I just spent 4 hours this morning comparing Xdebug, Blackfire, and New Relic.
After feeling like my SaaS application is starting to hit some scaling bottlenecks, I had a play with all 3 services to try and get some insight for a real-world application.
A brief summary:
- Xdebug: Slow. Fiddly to set up. Fine for a development environment and day-to-day profiling, but things like Clockwork[0] are, practically speaking, far more insightful.
- Blackfire: Terrible UX. Difficult setup process. Their free plan is almost impossible to evaluate as it only shows you glorified stack traces, most of which are littered with vendor and framework files. I didn’t want to commit to paying a full year of their standard plan (no monthly payment unless options, unless you go for the highest tiers), so I happily uninstalled and moved on.
- New Relic: wow… one command and a server reboot later, and I’m seeing performance profiling, consolidated dashboards, error logging, MariaDB and Redis queries, frontend performance, and server capacities - with REAL data, on production! I’m very, very impressed. And it’s free for a single user…?!
[0] Clockwork: https://underground.works/clockwork/
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Performance of Relationship queries - Eloquent vs. Collection - Impact on performance
Clockwork is a must-have for identifying hidden performance bottlenecks. It’s like DebugBar, but on steroids. Also seems to be kinda under-the-radar, it should definitely be more widely known :)
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Laravel Query Log
You might want to have a look at clockwork, it has a query logger and so much more.
tracker
What are some alternatives?
laravel-debugbar - Debugbar for Laravel (Integrates PHP Debug Bar)
IP-Biter - IP-Biter: The Hacker-friendly E-Mail (but not only) Tracking Framework
laravel-telescope-toolbar - A toolbar for Laravel Telescope, based on the Symfony Web Profiler.
CWH (CloudWatch Handler) - Amazon Web Services CloudWatch Logs Handler for Monolog library
phpqa - Docker image that provides static analysis tools for PHP
laravel-auditing - Record the change log from models in Laravel
php-spx - A simple & straight-to-the-point PHP profiling extension with its built-in web UI
EvilAnalytics - An elegant and powerfull alternative to GoogleAnalytics for Laravel application. Track routes, users, ip, devices, countries etc...
laravel-ide-helper - IDE Helper for Laravel
laravel-flashlight - A Highly Customizable Laravel Package to Log Requests
phpinsights - 🔰 Instant PHP quality checks from your console
volkszaehler.org - Open Source Smart Meter with focus on privacy - you remain the master of your data.