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template sctipt execution time
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| Nchanged 2008-02-28, 10:05 pm |
| Hi all!
I'm progammer from Moscow, so sorry for my english.
I wrote a template class, which has 2 advanced options
1) Cash to mysql (it collects all tpl files, grabs them into one, and
pushes into db)
2) Cash to variable in file (collects all tpl files. creates in same
dir php file, creates function which returns array with full tpl data)
I thought, that the second pt. will decrease the exection time...
but.. as appeared - it's the longest one.Template file browsing (like
overwhelming majority template classes do - opening file, parsing..
next...) is the most quickest. I thought that using array solution
will be.
For example we have 20 files, and php must open each of them and
parse. What is the php load?
Question: What is the best solution? Or maybe i do smth wrong. Don't
know. Wanna write the most quickest script.
Thx,
Ivan
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| Jerry Stuckle 2008-02-28, 10:05 pm |
| Nchanged wrote:
> Hi all!
> I'm progammer from Moscow, so sorry for my english.
>
> I wrote a template class, which has 2 advanced options
> 1) Cash to mysql (it collects all tpl files, grabs them into one, and
> pushes into db)
> 2) Cash to variable in file (collects all tpl files. creates in same
> dir php file, creates function which returns array with full tpl data)
>
Other than the fact I think you mean "cache" instead of "cash", I find
your English very good - much better than my Russian :-)
> I thought, that the second pt. will decrease the exection time...
> but.. as appeared - it's the longest one.Template file browsing (like
> overwhelming majority template classes do - opening file, parsing..
> next...) is the most quickest. I thought that using array solution
> will be.
>
The arrays can take a lot of space. That can cause performance problems
unless you have a lot of RAM available on your server.
> For example we have 20 files, and php must open each of them and
> parse. What is the php load?
>
It depends many different things. First is whether a file is in the
system cache or not. Once it's loaded, it depends on the size and
complexity of the file. There are no general answers - every one is
specific to the file.
> Question: What is the best solution? Or maybe i do smth wrong. Don't
> know. Wanna write the most quickest script.
>
Templates, due to their nature, always take longer to process than
straight PHP files. You can write the quickest pages in assembler - but
that's not generally feasible. Non-template PHP scripts are pretty
good. But that doesn't mean you shouldn't use templates - they are
quite useful.
You need to find out where the delays are before you can determine how
to fix them. And if you can't optimize them any more (reasonably), then
you probably need a more powerful (faster CPU and/or disk, more RAM,
etc.) server.
> Thx,
> Ivan
>
--
==================
Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
JDS Computer Training Corp.
jstucklex@attglobal.net
==================
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| Nchanged 2008-02-29, 4:04 am |
| thx for response, unfortunatly i send reply by "reply author". You
have reassured me=)
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