42

I need to cache some application specific data using Symfony 2's caching system so that I can run cache:clear to clear it. All the cache relies under app/cache but how do I actually go about caching data?

http://symfony.com/doc/current/cookbook/index.html

The only topic I see is about HTML caching with Varnish.

2
  • Symfony2 can do this caching internally too with the ESI implementation. It might seem a bit convoluted at first, but it makes the step to scaling with Varnish much smaller. Jan 17, 2012 at 14:39
  • @Louis-PhilippeHuberdeau I'm interested in caching app specific data, not template/HTML.
    – Tower
    Jan 17, 2012 at 18:46

5 Answers 5

78

If you are using Doctrine already just use those cache classes.

Add a service to config.yml:

services:
    cache:
        class: Doctrine\Common\Cache\ApcCache

And use it in your controller:

if ($fooString = $this->get('cache')->fetch('foo')) {
    $foo = unserialize($fooString);
} else {
    // do the work
    $this->get('cache')->save('foo', serialize($foo));
}
11
  • 20
    What if I'm not using Doctrine? Why is this part of Doctrine?
    – Tower
    Jan 18, 2012 at 7:09
  • 2
    @Tower Still no answer to this? Feb 1, 2013 at 20:56
  • 25
    This is part of Doctrine\Common. Don't confuse this with ORM, DBAL etc. "The Doctrine Common project is a library that provides extensions to core PHP functionality."
    – Peter
    Feb 28, 2013 at 19:29
  • 2
    Is there a way for set it a time? Feb 27, 2014 at 20:27
  • 2
    @FrancisGonzales The save method takes a third lifetime parameter: doctrine-project.org/api/common/2.0/…
    – Lg102
    Oct 14, 2015 at 7:47
33

Simple way use Doctrine cache providers. At first, register service(sample in config.yml):

services:
    memcached:
        class: Memcached
        calls:
            - [ addServer, ['localhost', 11211] ]
    memcached_cache:
        class: Doctrine\Common\Cache\MemcachedCache
        calls:
            - [ setMemcached, [@memcached] ]

Then to use get service, for example in controler:

$cache = $this->get('memcached_cache');

to send in another service use calls:

calls:
    - [ setCacheProvider, [@memcached_cache] ]

or arguments:

arguments:
    - @memcached_cache

In the same way, you can use other interfaces of Doctrine Cache package. Doctrine Cache provides a very simple interface for which several out of the box implementations are provided:

  • ApcCache (requires ext/apc)
  • ArrayCache (in memory, lifetime of the request)
  • FilesystemCache (not optimal for high concurrency)
  • MemcacheCache (requires ext/memcache)
  • MemcachedCache (requires ext/memcached)
  • PhpFileCache (not optimal for high concurrency)
  • RedisCache.php (requires ext/phpredis)
  • WinCacheCache.php (requires ext/wincache)
  • XcacheCache.php (requires ext/xcache)
  • ZendDataCache.php (requires Zend Server Platform)

If you do not already use Doctrine, you may require Common Library for Doctrine projects: php composer.phar require doctrine/common or require only Caching library offering an object-oriented API for many cache backends: php composer.phar require doctrine/cache

How to use Doctrine Caching you can read in Doctrine Common documentation on Doctrine Project web site

1
  • thank you very much for this answer, it finally works, I just had a little error with YAML, it seems that @memcached require quotes - [ setMemcached, ['@memcached'] ] (I'm using symfony 3.0) Dec 14, 2015 at 2:09
10

Symfony 3.1 provide a new Cache component.

8

Symfony2 does not provide any component for application layer caching.

Like you were already told, you can use the Doctrine Common caching library http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-common/en/latest/reference/caching.html

If you want something more advanced, you can also use one of the cache bundle provided by the community. For instance, the https://github.com/TheBigBrainsCompany/TbbcCacheBundle#cachebundle which provides tools for a good caching strategy.

0

There is no partial cache in Symfony2, the build-in cache is full HTTP only. You have to use a reverse proxy, and if you only want to cache a piece of code, you have to use ESI. It's maybe more work than with symfony 1 but performances worth it.

Anyway, nothing stop you to use a memcached and store some stuff in it, look at this Bundle i.e. If as your question state it, you only have data to store, that's perfect (and a memcache cache is much faster than a filesystem one).

2
  • 3
    I'm interested in caching app specific data, like computationally expensive results, etc. I'm already caching them on APC, but what's the point of having 2 different cache systems? I also need to clear two caches now, although I did make one command of my own which clears both, but still.
    – Tower
    Jan 17, 2012 at 18:48
  • It's said APC should not be used for caching data (like from DB) when it's used as opcode cache, because it affects its performance. There's a point why to use separate cache for custom data storing.
    – forsberg
    Jul 6, 2015 at 7:08

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.