COM is a technology which allows the reuse of code written in any language (by any language) using a standard calling convention and hiding behind APIs the implementation details such as what machine the Component is stored on and the executable which houses it. It can be thought of as a super Remote Procedure Call (RPC) mechanism with some basic object roots. It separates implementation from interface.
COM encourages versioning, separation of implementation from interface and hiding the implementation details such as executable location and the language it was written in.
The behaviour of these functions is affected by settings in php.ini.
Table 1. Com configuration options
Name | Default | Changeable |
---|---|---|
com.allow_dcom | "0" | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
com.autoregister_typelib | "0" | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
com.autoregister_verbose | "0" | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
com.autoregister_casesensitive | "1" | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
com.typelib_file | "" | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
The constants below are defined by this extension, and will only be available when the extension has either been compiled into PHP or dynamically loaded at runtime.
For further information on COM read the COM specification or perhaps take a look at Don Box's Yet Another COM Library (YACL)