This library provides an implementation of PSR-16 "Simple Cache", with some added functionality.
Also included are several helper cache clients (ApcuClient, FilecacheClient, MemcachedClient, MemoryClient) that may be of some assistance.
PSR-16 "Common Interface for Caching Libraries" can be found here: https://www.php-fig.org/psr/psr-16/
- Instantiate a cache client
- Instantiate Beryllium\Cache with the cache client in the constructor
- If desired, set a custom TTL or custom prefix
$client = new Beryllium\Cache\Client\FilecacheClient(__DIR__ . '/cache/');
$cache = new Beryllium\Cache\Cache($client);
// One Hour Time-To-Live
$cache->setTtl(3600);
// Prefix Filenames with extra information, such as 'www-'
$cache->setPrefix('www-');
Now you can get/set items in the cache:
$cache->set('latest-news-items', $newsArray);
$cache->get('latest-news-items', []);
Beryllium\Cache allows you to set a default TTL that gets passed into the caching client, as well as a key prefix that gets attached to each key. This prefix can be helpful for namespacing, for example.
In the above example, the file created on-disk for the cache would be
named %current_dir%/cache/www-latest-news-items_file.cache
.
APCu (Alternate PHP Cache - user) is a way of using the PHP memory stack as a cross-process caching system. Items added to the stack can be accessed by other processes that are using the same stack.
I'm not sure if that entirely made sense, but regardless, it can be a very powerful and fast caching system.
Requires the APCu extension to be installed and enabled. Note that the extension is disabled by default in CLI mode.
Configuration:
$client = new Beryllium\Cache\Client\ApcuClient();
$cache = new Beryllium\Cache\Cache($client);
$cache->setPrefix('apcu-cache:');
Because this extension is disabled on the CLI, to run the unit tests for this client you have to set an INI value on the command line:
php -d apc.enable_cli=1 vendor/bin/phpunit
Filesystems are a great way to cache certain types of data. I don't know what those types are, but I'm quite sure the statement is true.
Configuration:
$path = __DIR__ . '/../../somewhere/over/the/rainbow';
$client = new Beryllium\Cache\Client\FilecacheClient($path);
$cache = new Beryllium\Cache\Cache($client);
$cache->setPrefix('what-a-wonderful-world-');
Most of the reason for the existence of a "prefix" feature in this lib is wrapped up in the original conception of the FilecacheClient. :)
If the path doesn't exist, that might result in an error state - but the lib will make an attempt to create it & ensure that it's writeable.
Because this client uses PHP's serialize/unserialize functionality, it
should be considered quite a bit unsafe. Any process that has access to
modify the cache files could potentially hijack the PHP process when
unserialize
is called. At least, several documented vulnerabilities in
other projects seem to be traceable back to unsafe unserialization.
Help would be appreciated in making things a bit safer in that regard.
Memcache is a powerful library for caching. Some of that power has been "hidden" in this client implementation, but thanks to PSR-16 you should be able to find a different implementation that has that power if you need it. Or, if you see a power feature you need and feel it can be added to this client, PRs are welcome :)
Configuration:
$memcached = new \Memcached();
$verifier = new \Beryllium\Cache\Client\ServerVerifier\MemcacheServerVerifier();
$client = new Beryllium\Cache\Client\MemcachedClient(
$memcached,
$verifier
);
$client->addServer('localhost', 11211);
$cache = new Beryllium\Cache\Cache($client);
The "verifier" attempts to ensure that the server is online before it tries to interact with it. This behaviour is a holdover from a previous implementation & requirement. Perhaps it can be eliminated?
Adding servers can be done on the Memcached class itself - if you have multiple servers, this would actually be the better way to go.
Both of the parameters to MemcachedClient's constructor are optional. If you just need a basic Memcache configuration, you could do this:
$client = new Beryllium\Cache\Client\MemcachedClient();
$client->addServer('localhost', 11211);
$cache = new Beryllium\Cache\Cache($client);
Then, the Memcached object and the server verifier object will be instantiated inside the constructor.
This client stores cached items in an array inside itself. Mostly useful for tests, but could have some use as a way of accelerating processing within individual requests.
Configuration:
$client = new Beryllium\Cache\Client\MemoryClient();
$cache = new Beryllium\Cache\Cache($client);