2

I've been reading online about the pros and cons of using static methods for accessing data from the database. I have a LAMP based site built on Zend framework.

Some say in terms of performance - there is hardly any difference as quoted here by Greg Beech's analysis

in calling a method two billion times you could save yourself around 5ms by making it static, which is a saving of approximately nothing for each method call

But if I understand the concept of static methods correctly - there is only one instance of method which means only one DB connection - so on a high traffic website - while one request is being served - the other requests will be queued for the same method right?

So just wanted your thoughts and inputs on whether it makes sense to declare access methods as static or not.

Thanks much

2 Answers 2

3

I think you may have a skewed understanding of the processes at hand here.

Every individual request of an individual visitor is served completely independent of each other. Imagine these 2 independent requests:

Request visitor 1              Request visitor 2

index.php                      index.php
creates Zend_Db instance $db   creates Zend_Db instance $db
calls $db->insert()            calls $db->insert()
calls $db->insert() again      calls $db->insert() again

                    \        /
                     \      /
                      \    /

                     Database
           Queue might be something like:

             4. insert 2 from request 2
             3. insert 2 from request 1
             2. insert 1 from request 2
             1. insert 1 from request 1

In other words: basically only the database itself is troubled with queuing the SQL statements.

The PHP scripts work independent of each other. So whether you create instance methods or static methods is completely irrelevant to how the SQL queries are being queued.

1
  • Thanks for the explanation - so then what is the difference between accessing data via static method or instance method
    – Gublooo
    Sep 22, 2011 at 9:38
0

A static method doesn't necessarily mean that there is only one, it means you don't need an instance of the class to call a method. The Singleton Pattern can be used if you only want 1 instance of an object to exist for the lifetime of a request.

Each individual user requesting a page would get their own instance of that object, but they could only have one of each.

As fireeyedboy said, the database would be responsible for queuing up the requests as they came in. In the case of a large influx of requests, each page's calls to interact with the database may have to wait for earlier requests to be processed first, causing some delays to processing.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.