Can you "compile" PHP code and upload a binary-ish file, which will just be run by the byte code interpreter?
After this question was asked, Facebook launched HipHop for PHP which is probably the best-tested PHP compiler to date (seeing as it ran one of the world’s 10 biggest websites). However, Facebook discontinued it in favour of HHVM, which is a virtual machine, not a compiler.
Beyond that, googling PHP compiler
turns up a number of 3rd party solutions.
PeachPie
- PeachPie GitHub
- compiles PHP to .NET and .NET Core
- can be compiled into self-contained binary file
- runs on Mac, Linux, Windows, Windows Core, ARM, ...
Phalanger
- GitHub (download), Wikipedia
- compiles to .NET (CIL) looks discontinued from July 2017 and doesn't seem to support PHP 7.
phc
- compiles to native binaries
- not very active now (February 2014) – last version in 2011, last change in summer 2013
Roadsend PHP Compiler
- GitHub, GitHub of a rewrite
- free, open source implementation of PHP with compiler
- compiles to native binaries (Windows, Linux)
- discontinued since 2010 till contributors found – website down, stays on GitHub where last change is from early 2012
bcompiler
- PECL extension of PHP
- experimental
- compiles to PHP bytecode, but can wrap it in Windows binary that loads PHP interpreter (see
bcompiler_write_exe_footer()
manual) - looks discontinued now (February 2014) – last change in 2011
Project Zero
- Wikipedia, IBM
- incubator of changes for WebSphere sMash
- supported by IBM
- compiles to Java bytecode
- looks discontinued now (February 2014) – website down, looks like big hype in 2008 and 2009
Bambalam
- compiles to stand-alone Windows binaries
- the binaries contain bytecode and a launcher
- looks discontinued now (February 2014) – last change in 2006
BinaryPHP
- compiles to C++
- looks discontinued now (February 2014) – last change in 2003
The short answer is "no".
The current implementation of PHP is that of an interpreted language. You can argue the theoretical aspects of the fact that any language can technically be interpreted or compiled, but as it stands, the current implementations are such that PHP code requires an interpreter to run, and the interpreter manages the executing environment.
To answer your question about uploading pre-compiled PHP bytecode, it's probably possible, but you'd have to implement a way for the PHP interpreter to read in such a file and work with it. With existing opcode caches out there already, it doesn't seem like a task that would reap much reward.
Since the question was first asked, there has been a change to that answer from a flat out "no" to a "kind of"
http://github.com/facebook/hiphop-php/wiki
Hip Hop for PHP was a compiler that took PHP code and turned it into highly optimized C++ Apparently, some functions are not supported (for example 'explode')
I found this question while looking for more information on how to implement HipHop and thought I'd speak up :)
Since 2013 Facebook no longer use it, however, and it has been discontinued in favour of HHVM, which is not a compiler: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HipHop_for_PHP