Home Accessibility Courses Twitter The Mouth Facebook Resources Site Map About Us Contact
 
For 2023 (and 2024 ...) - we are now fully retired from IT training.
We have made many, many friends over 25 years of teaching about Python, Tcl, Perl, PHP, Lua, Java, C and C++ - and MySQL, Linux and Solaris/SunOS too. Our training notes are now very much out of date, but due to upward compatability most of our examples remain operational and even relevant ad you are welcome to make us if them "as seen" and at your own risk.

Lisa and I (Graham) now live in what was our training centre in Melksham - happy to meet with former delegates here - but do check ahead before coming round. We are far from inactive - rather, enjoying the times that we are retired but still healthy enough in mind and body to be active!

I am also active in many other area and still look after a lot of web sites - you can find an index ((here))
New Example - cacheing results in PHP for faster loading

Here's an example from the last couple of days which is fully my own work, so I can share!

I was analysing a big data flow - yesterday's web log file in this case - and it was rather harsh on the server. No big shock about that - the log file's around 40Mbytes per day and I didn't have it in anything other than a normal text file. But it was rather silly to analyse it every time as the data only changes once every 24 hours.

Solution - let it run slowly the first time it's used after the log files are cycled, but then store the results in a cache and replay it from there each time. A user won't notice the first hit being slow if he can then call up other variants of the page at the blink of an eye!

You can try the code here (separate window) and chances are it will be very fast for you, as someone else will probably have been there recently. If not, the first time it will be slow then it will be fast. Full source code is available here.

Salient points:

1.
if (filemtime("ac_20090522") > @filemtime("cache_0.txt")) {

"is the log file newer that any cache." In the live demo, I have changed the code slightly to pick up yesterday's data every time. Note the "@" to suppress the warning message from filemtime if the cache file doesn't exit

2.
$fho = fopen("cache_0.txt","w");
fputs($fho,"$lines<%%>$result1<%%>$result2<%%>$result3\n");
fclose($fho);
}
# ------------- End of Code to set up cache --------------


"save the results to the cache". All the work of analysis has been done and the data for all the reports that might be called up for the next day is dumped into a file and then ...

3.
$parts = explode("<%%>",file_get_contents("cache_0.txt"));

"read back all the results from the cache". Note that I have NOT added a conditional - even if the cache file has just been generated, I let my code re-read it. Really I did that for testing purposes, but there's no harm in calling it back as - remember - reading the cache is FAST.

4.
Don't forget to make the cache file writable by the PHP!
(written 2009-05-24, updated 2009-05-26)

 
Associated topics are indexed as below, or enter http://melksh.am/nnnn for individual articles
H307 - PHP - Web2 and caching
  [1633] Changing a screen saver from a web page (PHP, Perl, OSX) - (2008-05-06)
  [1647] Exchange Rates - PHP with your prices in your users currency - (2008-05-19)
  [1733] memcached - overview, installation, example of use in PHP - (2008-08-02)
  [1812] Starting Ajax - easy example of browser calling up server data - (2008-09-27)
  [1813] Ajax - going Asyncronous and what it means - (2008-09-28)
  [1814] Javascript/HTML example, dynamic server monitor - (2008-09-28)
  [1926] Flash (client) to PHP (server) - example - (2008-12-06)
  [1995] Automated server heartbeat and health check - (2009-01-16)
  [2321] Uploading and Downloading files - changing names (Perl and PHP) - (2009-08-04)
  [2545] Scraping content for your own page via PHP - (2009-12-21)
  [3029] PHP data sources - other web servers, large data flows, and the client (browser) - (2010-11-04)
  [3094] Setting your user_agent in PHP - telling back servers who you are - (2010-12-18)
  [3186] How to add a customised twitter feed to your site - (2011-02-27)
  [3458] On this day ... one PHP script with three uses - (2011-09-26)
  [3955] Building up from a small PHP setup to an enterprise one - (2012-12-16)
  [3999] Handling failures / absences of your backend server nicely - (2013-02-08)
  [4055] Using web services to access you data - JSON and RESTful services - (2013-03-29)
  [4075] Further recent PHP examples - (2013-04-28)
  [4106] Web server efficiency - saving repetition through caches - (2013-05-30)
  [4136] How do I post automatically from a PHP script to my Twitter account? - (2013-07-10)
  [4627] Caching results in an object for efficiency - avoiding re-calculation - (2016-01-20)


Back to
A two day gap - first time in five years?
Previous and next
or
Horse's mouth home
Forward to

Some other Articles
England, Scotland, Northern Ireland
Improving the structure of your early PHP programs
On the road, at a Service area thats a cut above the others
New Example - cacheing results in PHP for faster loading
A two day gap - first time in five years?
Melksham Business Map - Chamber of Commerce, Tourist Information and Town Council
Excellent product, excruciating customer service. 3 Mobile Broadband
Copy writing - allowing for the cut
RT @brento - a valuable source for the twitter newbie
How you are (re)presented at an exhibition
4759 posts, page by page
Link to page ... 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96 at 50 posts per page


This is a page archived from The Horse's Mouth at http://www.wellho.net/horse/ - the diary and writings of Graham Ellis. Every attempt was made to provide current information at the time the page was written, but things do move forward in our business - new software releases, price changes, new techniques. Please check back via our main site for current courses, prices, versions, etc - any mention of a price in "The Horse's Mouth" cannot be taken as an offer to supply at that price.

Link to Ezine home page (for reading).
Link to Blogging home page (to add comments).

You can Add a comment or ranking to this page

© WELL HOUSE CONSULTANTS LTD., 2024: 48 Spa Road • Melksham, Wiltshire • United Kingdom • SN12 7NY
PH: 01144 1225 708225 • EMAIL: info@wellho.net • WEB: http://www.wellho.net • SKYPE: wellho

PAGE: http://www.wellho.net/mouth/2196_.html • PAGE BUILT: Sun Oct 11 16:07:41 2020 • BUILD SYSTEM: JelliaJamb