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  2. Laravel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laravel

    Laravel is a free and open-source PHP-based web framework for building web applications. [3] It was created by Taylor Otwell and intended for the development of web applications following the model–view–controller (MVC) architectural pattern and based on Symfony.

  3. List of free and open-source web applications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_free_and_open...

    All web applications, both traditional and Web 2.0, are operated by software running somewhere.This is a list of free software which can be used to run alternative web applications.

  4. October (CMS) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_(CMS)

    October is a self-hosted content management system (CMS) based on the PHP programming language and Laravel web application framework.It supports MariaDB, MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite and SQL Server for the database back end [3] and uses a flat file database for the front end structure. [4]

  5. Comparison of server-side web frameworks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_server-side...

    Laravel: PHP >= 8.0 [89] Any Yes Push Yes Eloquent: PHPUnit: Yes Yes Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Redis: Yes Yes Yes Yes Li3 (Lithium) PHP >= 5.3.6 Any Yes Push Yes Yes Unit tests, builtin test framework or other independent No Yes, Plugins available PHP, Twig Plugin available Memcache, Redis, XCache, APC, File Yes, with CSRF Protection ...

  6. BookStack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BookStack

    BookStack is a free and open-source wiki software aimed for a simple, self-hosted, and easy-to-use platform. Based on Laravel, a PHP framework, BookStack is released under the MIT License.

  7. XAMPP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XAMPP

    XAMPP (/ ˈ z æ m p / or / ˈ ɛ k s. æ m p /) [2] is a free and open-source cross-platform web server solution stack package developed by Apache Friends, [2] consisting mainly of the Apache HTTP Server, MariaDB database, and interpreters for scripts written in the PHP and Perl programming languages.

  8. TLDR Pages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TLDR_Pages

    TLDR Pages (stylized as tldr-pages) is a free and open-source collaborative software documentation project that aims to be a simpler, more approachable complement to traditional man pages. It's a collection of community-maintained help pages that cover command-line utilities and other computer programs.

  9. CodeIgniter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CodeIgniter

    The first public version of CodeIgniter was released by EllisLab on February 28, 2006. [16]On July 9, 2013, EllisLab announced that it was seeking a new owner for CodeIgniter, citing a lack of resources to give the framework the attention they felt it deserved. [17]