Zend_ProgressBar is a component to create and update
            progressbars in different environments. It consists of a single
            backend, which outputs the progress through one of the multiple
            adapters. On every update, it takes an absolute value and optionally
            a status message, and then calls the adapter with some precalculated
            values like percentage and estimated time left.
        
            Zend_ProgressBar is quite easy in its usage. You
            simply create a new instance of Zend_Progressbar, defining a
            min- and a max-value, and choose an adapter to output the data. If
            you want to process a file, you would do something like:
        
$progressBar = new Zend_ProgressBar($adapter, 0, $fileSize);
while (!feof($fp)) {
    // Do something
    $progressBar->update($currentByteCount);
}
$progressBar->finish();
        
            In the first step, an instance of Zend_ProgressBar is
            created, with a specific adapter, a min-value of 0 and a max-value
            of the total filesize. Then a file is processed and in every loop
            the progressbar is updated with the current byte count. At the end
            of the loop, the progressbar status is set to finished.
        
            You can also call the update() method of
            Zend_ProgressBar without arguments, which just
            recalculates ETA and notifies the adapter. This is useful when there
            is no data update but you want the progressbar to be updated.
        
            If you want the progressbar to be persistent over multiple requests,
            you can give the name of a session namespace as fourth argument
            to the constructor. In that case, the progressbar will not notify
            the adapter within the constructor, but only when you call
            update() or finish(). Also the current
            value, the status text and the start time for ETA calculation will
            be fetched in the next request run again.
        
            Zend_ProgressBar comes with the following three adapters:
            
        Zend_ProgressBar_Adapter_Console is a text-based adapter
        for terminals. It can automatically detect terminal widths but supports
        custom widths as well. You can define which elements are displayed with
        the progressbar and as well customize the order of them. You can also
        define the style of the progressbar itself.
    
Automatic console width recognition
            shell_exec is required for this feature to work on
            *nix based systems. On windows, there is always a fixed terminal
            width of 80 character, so no recognition is required there.
        
        You can set the adapter options either via the set* methods
        or give an array or a Zend_Config instance with options as first
        parameter to the constructor. The available options are:
    
- 
            
outputStream: A different output-stream, if you don't want to stream to STDOUT. Can be any other stream likephp://stderror a path to a file. - 
            
width: Either an integer or theAUTOconstant ofZend_Console_ProgressBar. - 
            
elements: EitherNULLfor default or an array with at least one of the following constants ofZend_Console_ProgressBaras value:- 
                    
ELEMENT_PERCENT: The current value in percent. - 
                    
ELEMENT_BAR: The visual bar which display the percentage. - 
                    
ELEMENT_ETA: The automatic calculated ETA. This element is firstly displayed after five seconds, because in this time, it is not able to calculate accurate results. - 
                    
ELEMENT_TEXT: An optional status message about the current process. 
 - 
                    
 - 
            
textWidth: Width in characters of theELEMENT_TEXTelement. Default is 20. - 
            
charset: Charset of theELEMENT_TEXTelement. Default is utf-8. - 
            
barLeftChar: A string which is used left-hand of the indicator in the progressbar. - 
            
barRightChar: A string which is used right-hand of the indicator in the progressbar. - 
            
barIndicatorChar: A string which is used for the indicator in the progressbar. This one can be empty. 
        Zend_ProgressBar_Adapter_JsPush is an adapter which let's
        you update a progressbar in a browser via Javascript Push. This means
        that no second connection is required to gather the status about a
        running process, but that the process itself sends its status directly
        to the browser.
    
        You can set the adapter options either via the set* methods
        or give an array or a Zend_Config instance with options as first
        parameter to the constructor. The available options are:
    
- 
            
updateMethodName: The javascript method which should be called on every update. Default value isZend_ProgressBar_Update. - 
            
finishMethodName: The javascript method which should be called after finish status was set. Default value isNULL, which means nothing is done. 
        The usage of this adapter is quite simple. First you create a progressbar
        in your browser, either with JavaScript or previously created with plain
        HTML. Then you define the update method and optionally the finish method
        in JavaScript, both taking a json object as single argument. Then you
        call a webpage with the long-running process in a hidden
        iframe or object tag. While the process is
        running, the adapter will call the update method on every update with
        a json object, containing the following parameters:
    
- 
            
current: The current absolute value - 
            
max: The max absolute value - 
            
percent: The calculated percentage - 
            
timeTaken: The time how long the process ran yet - 
            
timeRemaining: The expected time for the process to finish - 
            
text: The optional status message, if given 
Exemplo 660. Basic example for the client-side stuff
This example illustrates a basic setup of HTML, CSS and JavaScript for the JsPush adapter
<div id="zend-progressbar-container">
    <div id="zend-progressbar-done"></div>
</div>
<iframe src="long-running-process.php" id="long-running-process"></iframe>
        
#long-running-process {
    position: absolute;
    left: -100px;
    top: -100px;
    width: 1px;
    height: 1px;
}
#zend-progressbar-container {
    width: 100px;
    height: 30px;
    border: 1px solid #000000;
    background-color: #ffffff;
}
#zend-progressbar-done {
    width: 0;
    height: 30px;
    background-color: #000000;
}
        
function Zend_ProgressBar_Update(data)
{
    document.getElementById('zend-progressbar-done').style.width =
         data.percent + '%';
}
        
            This will create a simple container with a black border and a
            block which indicates the current process. You should not hide
            the iframe or object by display: none;,
            as some browsers like Safari 2 will not load the actual content then.
        
Instead of creating your custom progressbar, you may want to use one of the available JavaScript libraries like Dojo, jQuery etc. For example, there are:
Interval of updates
You should take care of not sending too many updates, as every update has a min-size of 1kb. This is a requirement for the Safari browser to actually render and execute the function call. Internet Explorer has a similar limitation of 256 bytes.
        Zend_ProgressBar_Adapter_JsPull is the opposite of jsPush,
        as it requires to pull for new updates, instead of pushing updates out
        to the browsers. Generally you should use the adapter with the
        persistence option of the Zend_ProgressBar. On notify,
        the adapter sends a JSON string to the browser, which looks exactly
        like the JSON string which is send by the jsPush adapter. The only
        difference is, that it contains an additional parameter,
        finished, which is either FALSE when
        update() is called or TRUE, when
        finish() is called.
    
        You can set the adapter options either via the set*() methods
        or give an array or a Zend_Config instance with options as first
        parameter to the constructor. The available options are:
    
- 
            
exitAfterSend: Exits the current request after the data were send to the browser. Default is
TRUE.