I am wondering if it is viable to store cached items in Session variables, rather than creating a file-based caching solution? Because it is once per user, it could reduce some extra calls to the database if a user visits more than one page. But is it worth the effort?
If the data you are caching (willing to cache) does not depend on the user, why would you store in the session... which is attached to a user ?
Considering sessions are generally stored in files, it will not optimise anything in comparaison of using files yourself.
And if you have 10 users on the site, you will have 10 times the same data in cache ? I do not think this is the best way to cache things ;-)
For data that is the same fo all users, I would really go with another solution, be it file-based or not (even for data specific to one user, or a group of users, I would probably not store it in session -- except if very small, maybe)
Some things you can look about :
Almost every framework provides some kind of caching mecanism. For instance :
PEAR::Cache_Lite
Zend_Cache
You can store cached data using lots of backend ; for instance :
files
shared memory (using something like APC, for example)
If you have several servers and loads of data, memcached
(some frameworks provide classes to work with those ; switching from one to the other can even be as simple as changing a couple of lines in a config file ^^ )
Next question is : what do you need to cache ? For how long ? but that's another problem, and only you can answer that ;-)
It can be, but it depends largely on what you're trying to cache, as well as some other circumstances.
Is the information likely to change?
Is it a problem if slightly outdated information is shown?
How heavy is the load the query imposes on the database?
What is the latency to the database server? (shouldn't be an issue on local network)
Should the information be cached on a per user basis, or globally for the entire application?
Amount of data involved
etc.
Performance gain can be significant in some cases. On a particular ASP.NET / SQL Server site I've worked on, adding a simple caching mechanism (at application level) reduced the CPU load on the web server by a factor 3 (!) and at the same time prevented a whole bunch of database timeout issues when accessing a certain table.
It's been a while since I've done anything serious in PHP, but I think your only option there is to do this at the session level. Most of my considerations above are still valid however. As for effort; it should take very little effort to implement, assuming your code is sufficiently structured.
Session should only really be used strictly for user specific data. If you're using it to cache things that should be common across multiple sessions, you're duplicating a lot of data needlessly. Why not just use the Cache that comes with ASP.NET (you can use inProcess, rather than SQL if your concern is DB roundtrips, since you'll be storing Cached data in memory)
Related
Lets assume you're developing a multiplayer game where the data is stored in a MySQL-database. For example the names and description texts of items, attributes, buffs, npcs, quests etc.
That data:
won't change often
is frequently requested
is required on server-side
and cannot be cached locally (JSON, Javascript)
To solve this problem, i wrote a file-based caching system that creates .php-files on the server and copies the entire mysql-tables as pre-defined php variables into them.
Like this:
$item_names = Array(0 => "name", 1 => "name");
$item_descriptions = Array(0 => "text", 1 => "text");
That file contains a loot of data, will end up having a size of around 500 KB and is then loaded on every user request.
Is that a good attempt to avoid unnecessary queries; Considering that query-caching is being deprecated in MySQL 8.0? Or is it better to just get the data needed using individual queries, even if ending up with hundreds of them per request?
I suggest you to use some kind of PSR-6 compilant cache system (it could be filesystem also) and later when your requests grow you can easily swap out to a more performant cache, like a PSR-6 Redis cache.
Example for PSR-6 compatible file system cache.
More info about PSR-6 Caching Interface
Instead of making your own caching mechanism, you can use Redis as it will handle all your caching requirements.
It will be easy to implement.
Follow the links to get to know more about Redis
REDIS
REDIS IN PHP
REDIS PHP TUTORIALS
In my experience...
You should only optimize for performance when you can prove you have a problem, and when you know where that problem is.
That means in practice that you should write load tests to exercise your application under "reasonable worst-case scenario" loads, and instrument your application so you can see what its performance characteristics are.
Doing any kind of optimization without a load test framework means you're coding on instinct; you may be making things worse without knowing it.
Your solution - caching entire tables in arrays - means every PHP process is loading that data into memory, which may or may not become a performance hit in its own right (do you know which request will need which data?). It also looks like you'll be doing a lot of relational logic in PHP (in your example, gluing the item_name to the item_description). This is something MySQL is really good at; your PHP code could easily be slower than MySQL at joins.
Then you have the problem of cache invalidation - how and when do you refresh the cached data? How does your application behave when the data is being refreshed? I've seen web sites slow to a crawl when cached data was being refreshed.
In short - it's a complicated decision, there are no obvious right/wrong answers. My first recommendation is "build a test framework so you can approach performance based on evidence", my second is "don't roll your own - consider using an ORM with built-in cache support", my third is "consider using something like Redis or memcached to store your cache information".
There are many possible solutions, depends on your requirements. Possible solution could be:
File base JSON format caching. Data retrieve from database will be save to a file for next time use before the program process.
Memory base cache, such as Memcached, APC, Redis, etc. Similar the upon solution, better performance but more integrated code required.
Memory base database, such as NoSQL, MongoDB, etc. It is a memory base database.
Multiple database servers, one master write database with multiple salve for read databases, there are a synchronisation between servers.
Quick and minimise the code changes, I suggest using option B.
Think you are the proud owner of Facebook, then
which data you want to store in app layer [memcached/ APC] and which data in MySQL cache ?
Please explain also why you think so.
[I want to have an idea on which data to cache where]
For memcache, store session data. You have to typically query from a large table or from the filesystem to get it, depending on how it's stored. Putting that on memory removes hitting the disk for a relatively small amount data (that is typically critical to one's web application).
For your database cache, put stuff in there that is not changing so often. We're talking about wall posts, comments, etc. They are queried a lot and rarely change, all things considered. You may also want to consider doing a flat file cache, so you can purge individual files with greater ease, and divide it up as you see fit.
I generally don't directly cache any arbitrary data with APC, usually I will just let it cache stuff automatically and get lessened memory loads.
This is only one way to do it, but as far as the industry goes, this is a somewhat well-used model.
Hi this is more of an information request really.
I'm currently working on a pretty large event listing website and have started thinking about some caching for the data sets being used.
I have been messing with APC this week and have seen some real improvements during testing however what I'm struggling to get my head around is best practices and techniques required when trying to cache data that changes frequently.
Say for example the user hits the home page, this by default displays the latest 10 events happening and if that user is logged in those events are location specific. Is it possible to deploy some kind of caching system when dealing with logged in states and data that changes frequently, the system currently allows the user to "show more events: which is an ajax request to pull extra results from the db.
I haven't really found anything on this as I'm not sure what to search for but I'm really interested to know the techniques used for advanced caching systems that deal especially with data that changes and data specific to users?
I mean is it even worth it? are the other performance boosters when dealing with this sort of criteria?
Any articles or tips and info on this will be greatly appreciated!! Please let me know if any other info is required!!
Your basic solutions are:
file cache
memcached/redis
APC
Each used for slightly different goal.
File cache is usually something that you utilize when you can pre-render files or parts of them. It is used in templating solutions, partial views (mvc), css frameworks. That sort of stuff.
Memcached and redis are both more or less equal, except redis is more of a noSQL oriented thing. They are used for distributed cache ( multiple servers , same cached data ) and for storing the sessions, if you have cluster of webservers.
APC is good for two things: opcode cache and data cache. Faster then memcached, but works for each server separately.
Bottom line is : in a huge project you will use all of them. Each for a different task.
So you have opcode caching, which speeds things up by saving already compiled PHP files in cache.
Then you have data caching, where you save variables or objects that take time to get like data built from SQL queries.
Then you have output caching, which is where you save entire blocks of your webpages in files, and output those files instead of building that block of your webpage on each request.
I once wrote a blog post about how to do output caching:
http://www.spotlesswebdesign.com/blog.php?id=17
If it's location specific, and there are a billion locations, your best bet is probably output caching assuming you have a lot of disc space, but you will have to use your head for what is best, as each situation is very different when it comes to how best to apply caching.
If done correctly, using memcached or similar solutions can give huge boosts to site performance. By altering the cached data directly instead of rehydrating it from the database you can bypass the database entirely for data that either doesn't need to be saved or can be trivially rebuilt. Since the database is often the most critical component in web applications, any load you can take off it is a bonus.
On the other hand, making sure your database queries are as light and efficient as possible will have a much larger impact on performance than most cache tweaks.
I don't really have any experience with caching at all, so this may seem like a stupid question, but how do you know when to cache your data? I wasn't even able to find one site that talked about this, but it may just be my searching skills or maybe too many variables to consider?
I will most likely be using APC. Does anyone have any examples of what would be the least amount of data you would need in order to cache it? For example, let's say you have an array with 100 items and you use a foreach loop on it and perform some simple array manipulation, should you cache the result? How about if it had a 1000 items, 10000 items, etc.?
Should you be caching the results of your database query? What kind of queries should you be caching? I assume a simple select and maybe a couple joins statement to a mysql db doesn't need caching, or does it? Assuming the mysql query cache is turned on, does that mean you don't need to cache in the application layer, or should you still do it?
If you instantiate an object, should you cache it? How to determine whether it should be cached or not? So a general guide on what to cache would be nice, examples would also be really helpful, thanks.
When you're looking at caching data that has been read from the database in APC/memcache/WinCache/redis/etc, you should be aware that it will not be updated when the database is updated unless you explicitly code to keep the database and cache in synch. Therefore, caching is most effective when the data from the database doesn't change often, but also requires a more complex and/or expensive query to retrieve that data from the database (otherwise, you may as well read it from the database when you need it)... so expensive join queries that return the same data records whenever they're run are prime candidates.
And always test to see if queries are faster read from the database than from cache. Correct database indexing can vastly improve database access times, especially as most databases maintain their own internal cache as well, so don't use APC or equivalent to cache data unless the database overheads justify it.
You also need to be aware of space usage in the cache. Most caches are a fixed size and you don't want to overfill them... so don't use them to store large volumes of data. Use the apc.php script available with APC to monitor cache usage (though make sure that it's not publicly accessible to anybody and everybody that accesses your site.... bad security).
When holding objects in cache, the object will be serialized() when it's stored, and unserialized() when it's retrieved, so there is an overhead. Objects with resource attributes will lose that resource; so don't store your database access objects.
It's sensible only to use cache to store information that is accessed by many/all users, rather than user-specific data. For user session information, stick with normal PHP sessions.
The simple answer is that you cache data when things get slow. Obviously for any medium to large sized application, you need to do much more planning than just a wait and see approach. But for the vast majority of websites out there, the question to ask yourself is "Are you happy with the load time". Of course if you are obsessive about load time, like myself, you are going to want to try to make it even faster regardless.
Next, you have to identify what specifically is the cause of the slowness. You assumed that your application code was the source but its worth examining if there are other external factors such as large page file size, excessive requests, no gzip, etc. Use a site like http://tools.pingdom.com/ or an extension like yslow as a start for that. (quick tip make sure keepalives and gzip are working).
Assuming the problem is the duration of execution of your application code, you are going to want to profile your code with something like xdebug (http://www.xdebug.org/) and view the output with kcachegrind or wincachegrind. That will let you know what parts of your code are taking long to run. From there you will make decisions on what to cache and how to cache it (or make improvements in the logic of your code).
There are so many possibilities for what the problem could be and the associated solutions, that it is not worth me guessing. So, once you identify the problem you may want to post a new question related to solving that specific problem. I will say that if not used properly, the mysql query cache can be counter productive. Also, I generally avoid the APC user cache in favor of memcached.
I constantly read on the Internet how it's important to correctly architect my PHP applications so that they can scale.
I have built a simple/small CMS that is written in PHP (think of Wordpress, but waaaay simpler).
I essentially have URLs like such: http://example.com/?page_id=X where X is the id in my MySQL database that has the page content.
How can I configure my application to be load balanced where I'm simply performing PHP read activities.
Would something like Nginx as the front door setup to route traffic to multi-nodes running my same code to handle example.com/?page_id=X be enough to "load balance" my site?
Obviously, MySQL is not being load balanced in this situation, though for simplicity - that makes that out of scope for this question.
These are some well known techniques for scaling such an app.
Reduce DB hits
Most often the bottle neck will be your DB, so cache recent pages so that you reduce DB activity, perhaps in something like memcached.
Design your schema such that it is partition-able.
In the simplest case, separate your data into logical partitions, and store each partition in a separate mysql DB. Craigslist, for example, partitions data by city, and in some cases, by section within that. In your case, you could partition by Id quite simply.
Manage php sessions
Putting ngnx in front of a php website will not work if you use sessions. Load balancing php does have issues as sessions are persisted on local storage. Therefore you need to do session management explicitly. The traditional solution is to use memcached to store and look up some kind of cookie.
Don't optimize prematurely.
Focus on getting your application out so that the next magnitude of current users gets the optimal experience.
Note: Your main potential pain points are discussed here on SO
No, it is not at all important to scale your application if you don't need to.
My view on this is:
Make it work
Make sure it works correctly - testability, robustness
Make it work efficiently enough to be cost effective to run
Then, if you have to so much traffic that your system cannot handle it, AND you've already thrown all the hardware that (sensible) money can buy at it, then you need to scale. Not sooner.
Yes it is relatively easy to scale read-workloads, because you can simply perform reads against readonly database replicas. The challenge is to scale write-workloads.
A lot of sites have few writes, even if they're really busy.
The correct approach is to use some kind of load balancer such as:
http://www.softwareprojects.com/resources/programming/t-how-to-install-and-configure-haproxy-as-an-http-loa-1752.html
What this does is forward a certain user session only to a certain server, hence you dont have to worry about sessions and where they are stored at all. What you do have to worry is how to distribute the filesystem if the 2 servers are running on two different machines, especially if you make heavy use of the filesystem. Hope this article above helps...