Caching
Caching is used to speed up the rendering of a template by saving and re-using the output.
If a cached version of the call is available, that is displayed instead of regenerating the output. Caching can speed things up tremendously, especially templates with longer computation times.
Since templates can include or extend other templates, one cache file could conceivably be made up of several template files, config files, etc.
** Note **
Since templates are dynamic, it is important to be careful what you are caching and for how long. For instance, if you are displaying the front page of your website that does not change its content very often, it might work well to cache this page for an hour or more. On the other hand, if you are displaying a page with a timetable containing new information by the minute, it would not make sense to cache this page.
Setting Up Caching
The first thing to do is enable caching by calling Smarty::setCaching()
with either
\Smarty\Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT
or \Smarty\Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_SAVED
.
Or with \Smarty\Smarty::CACHING_OFF
to disable caching again.
<?php
use Smarty\Smarty;
$smarty = new Smarty;
// enable caching, using the current lifetime (see below)
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT);
// enable caching, using the lifetime set when the cache was saved (see below)
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_SAVED);
// disable caching
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_OFF);
$smarty->display('index.tpl');
With caching enabled, the function call to $smarty->display('index.tpl')
will
render the template as usual, but also saves a copy of its output. On the
next call to $smarty->display('index.tpl')
, the cached copy will be used
instead of rendering the template again.
Note
By default, Smarty saved its caches as files in a dir called
cache
relative to the current directory. The default directory can be changed using$smarty->setCacheDir('/some/cache/dir');
The files are named similar to the template name. Although they end in the.php
extension, they are not intended to be directly executable. Do not edit these files!
Cache lifetime
Each cached page has a limited lifetime. The default value is 3600 seconds, or one hour. After that time expires, the cache is regenerated.
You can change the lifetime as follows:
<?php
use Smarty\Smarty;
$smarty = new Smarty;
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT);
// or $smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_SAVED);
// set the cache_lifetime to 5 minutes
$smarty->setCacheLifetime(5 * 60);
Setting caching to a value of \Smarty\Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT
tells Smarty to use
the current lifetime to determine if the cache has expired.
A value of \Smarty\Smarty::CACHING\_LIFETIME\_SAVED
tells Smarty to use the lifetime value at the time the
cache was generated. This way you can set the just before rendering a template to have granular control over
when that particular cache expires.
An example:
<?php
use Smarty\Smarty;
$smarty = new Smarty;
// retain current cache lifetime for each specific display call
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_SAVED);
// set the cache_lifetime for index.tpl to 5 minutes
$smarty->setCacheLifetime(300);
$smarty->display('index.tpl');
// set the cache_lifetime for home.tpl to 1 hour
$smarty->setCacheLifetime(3600);
$smarty->display('home.tpl');
// NOTE: the following $cache_lifetime setting will not work when $caching
// is set to Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_SAVED.
// The cache lifetime for home.tpl has already been set
// to 1 hour, and will no longer respect the value of $cache_lifetime.
// The home.tpl cache will still expire after 1 hour.
$smarty->setCacheLifetime(30); // 30 seconds
$smarty->display('home.tpl');
Compile check
By default, every template file and config file that is involved with the cache file is checked for modification. If any of the files have been modified since the cache was generated, the cache is immediately regenerated.
This is a computational overhead, so for optimum performance, disable this on a production environment:
<?php
use Smarty\Smarty;
$smarty = new Smarty;
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT);
$smarty->setCompileCheck(Smarty::COMPILECHECK_OFF);
$smarty->display('index.tpl');
Checking if a template is cached
Smarty's `isCached() method can be used to test if a template has a valid cache or not. If you have a cached template that requires something like a database fetch, you can use this to skip that process.
<?php
use Smarty\Smarty;
$smarty = new Smarty;
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT);
if (!$smarty->isCached('index.tpl')) {
// No cache available, do variable assignments here.
$smarty->assign('data', do_expensive_database_calls());
}
$smarty->display('index.tpl');
Nocache-blocks
You can keep parts of a page dynamic (disable caching) with the
{nocache}{/nocache}
block function,
or by using the nocache
parameter for most template functions.
Let's say the whole page can be cached except for a banner that is
displayed down the side of the page. By using a {nocache}{/nocache}
block for the banner, you can
keep this element dynamic within the cached content.
Clearing the cache
You can clear all the cache files with Smarty's clearAllCache()
method, or individual cache
files with the clearCache()
method.
<?php
use Smarty\Smarty;
$smarty = new Smarty;
$smarty->setCaching(Smarty::CACHING_LIFETIME_CURRENT);
// clear only cache for index.tpl
$smarty->clearCache('index.tpl');
// clear out all cache files
$smarty->clearAllCache();
// clear out all cache files older than one hour
$smarty->clearAllCache(3600);
// or, clear all expired caches
$smarty->clearAllCache(Smarty::CLEAR_EXPIRED);