Imminent Drop Of PHP 5 Support

,

Based on the schedule published almost two years ago, PeepSo will stop working on PHP older than 7.0 very soon. Please read this article carefully to avoid any unpleasant surprises.

The timeline of PHP versions

5.6 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 8.0 1 Jan 2018 1 Jan 2019 1 Jan 2020 1 Jan 2021 1 Jan 2022 1 Jan 2023 1 Jan 2024 1 Jan 2025 Today: 24 May 2021

  A release that is being actively supported. Reported bugs and security issues are fixed and regular point releases are made.
  Supported for critical security issues only. Updates only made on an as-needed basis.
  A release that is no longer supported. Upgrade as soon as possible, you may be exposed to unpatched security vulnerabilities.

Why are we dropping PHP 5.x support?

PHP version 5 is a very old, slow and long dead version of the language. Active development stopped in January 2017, and critical security patches are no longer provided since January 2019. The successor – PHP 7 – is more modern, over twice as fast and more secure.

Each PHP version has its own life span, beginning with “active support”, through “security fixes only” to “no support at all”. Using a PHP version that is still “in the green” or “in the orange” is the only reasonable and safe way.

We will start dropping support for PHP 5.6 since 2.8.0

The planned timeline for 5.6 phase-out is:

  • 2.8.0 As soon as March, no later than May the Extras will deactivate under PHP older than required 7.0
  • 2.9.0 As soon as April, no later than June the Integrations + Monetization will deactivate under PHP older than required 7.0
  • 2.10.0 As soon as May, no later than July the entire PeepSo suite will deactivate under PHP older than required 7.0

The deadlines will become more specific as we move forward.

Why you should go straight to PHP 7.3

  • As soon as January 2021, no later than June 2021 we will require PHP 7.1
  • As soon as June 2021, no later than December 2021 we will require PHP 7.2

Because of the aforementioned PHP versions life cycle, both PHP 7.0 and 7.1 have already reached official End Of Life. PeepSo support for these “dead” versions is expected to finish in 2021.

Since PHP 7.2 has entered security fixes only mode, starting with PeepSo 2.7.3 the recommended PHP version is 7.3. If we release any new plugins, they will require PHP 7.3+.

If you are planning to upgrade your PHP version, the reasonable choice is at least PHP 7.3

Brought to you by PeepSo Team Matt Jaworski
I am a professional nerd with **over fifteen years of experience** in the field of Open Source web development. Before [PeepSo](https://PeepSo.com) I was a contractor and have helped build successful businesses around the world, including USA, UK, Germany, Indonesia, and Malaysia. A couple of years leading up to founding PeepSo, I was involved with JomSocial โ€“ a social networking extension for Joomla. Stepping up from the role of a contractor to a business owner, I became [PeepSo](https://PeepSo.com) founder and Chief Technology Officer. I strive to build beautiful, fast, and functional software that **empowers users to build their own digital tribes with full autonomy and freedom** often not available on mainstream social networking media. In 2023 we spun off a new company to launch [Awedesk](https://awedesk.com) – a complete ticket-based client support solution for WordPress. I also created [ListoWP](https://LIstoWP.com), a modern to-do plugin for WordPress which is now evolving into a project management tool.

Reactions & comments

Join Our Community!
Join us to discuss PeepSo’s features, connect with the development team and give suggestions.

Comments

Eric Tracz avatar
@peepso_user_7(Eric Tracz)
I’d gladly stop supporting 5.6 when its official support was done. It’s nothing more than a liability.
Matt Jaworski avatar
@peepso_user_10(Matt Jaworski)
@peepso_user_17556(Andrew Dash) the difference is obvious on larger sites, PHP7 is much better at handling multiple requests per second.
Feb 16, 2020 5:15 PM
Josh Journey avatar
@peepso_user_10386(Josh Journey)
Even on my personal website with minimal JS, plugins, lazy loading, and using best practices I notice a difference. This isn’t just for sites with thousands of posts. Use a browser addon such as “Page Speed Monitor” to see the timed results navigating through pages to get a better sample. Perhaps using HTTP2 plays a role with PHP7 being extremely fast on my end. My legacy site used for mockups had old scripts that made it chug at 5 seconds which now can load as fast as 1.2 seconds! Regardless to the major performance boost in hundreds of situations there is the security aspect of older PHP versions.

Community by PeepSo

Super-light and free social networking plugin for WordPress