|
Posted by Jochem Maas on 10/06/45 11:32
Marcus Bointon wrote:
> On 19 Nov 2005, at 04:07, Curt Zirzow wrote:
>
>> If you are using mysql i would use the SQL_CACHE flag, it will
>> eliminate the need for you to manage the cache.
>
>
> You don't necessarily need to us the SQL_CACHE flag in queries - you
> can just turn on the query cache globally using query_cache_type=1 in
> your my.cnf. Otherwise I quite agree - and MySQL has the huge advantage
> that it will work very nicely across multi-server deployments:
>
> http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/query-cache.html
>
>> The last version of php5.1 i have installed APC on is a cvs
>> snapshot of around Feb 4 2005 11:49:05. Nothing special was needed.
>
>
> The current 3.0.8 release of APC is broken in PHP 5.1.0-dev if you ever
> use __autoload. It will be fixed in 3.0.9 (and is fixed in CVS), though
> Rasmus implied that 3.0.9 is waiting until 5.1 release.
I guess I'll have to try a build myself a copy of APC from cvs - operative
word being try :-/
having said that I don't use __autoload() - I did but it was just a PITA -
but I wonder if the segfault still occurs if there are situations that occur
(missing class[es]) that cause the engine to check-for/try-to-run __autoload()
(even though it doesn't due to the fact that its not defined)??
thanks for the feedback!
>
> Marcus
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|