socalnick / scn-http-cache
Adds several features to help make ZF2 applications cacheable.
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Requires
- php: >=5.3.9
- zendframework/zendframework: 2.*
Requires (Dev)
- mockery/mockery: >=0.7.2
README
A ZF2 module that helps implement standards based caching built into the HTTP spec and gateway caches.
Requirements
- Zend Framework 2 (2.*)
Features
- PHP implementation of a gateway cache (COMING SOON)
- Plugin for manipulating HTTP Cache headers (COMING SOON)
- Plugin for dealing with expiration and validation (COMING SOON)
- ESI View Helper
- Very performant in Surrogate Capability mode - just renders ESI tag
- Works w/o surrogate capability by running separate application lifecycle
Installation
It is recommended to add this module to your Zend Framework 2 application using Composer. After cloning ZendSkeletonApplication, add "socalnick/scn-http-cache" to list of requirements, then run php composer.phar install/update. Your composer.json should look something like this:
{
"name": "zendframework/skeleton-application",
"description": "Skeleton Application for ZF2",
"license": "BSD-3-Clause",
"keywords": [
"framework",
"zf2"
],
"homepage": "http://framework.zend.com/",
"require": {
"php": ">=5.3.3",
"zendframework/zendframework": "2.*",
"socalnick/scn-http-cache": "1.*"
}
}
Next add the required modules to config/application.config.php:
<?php return array( 'modules' => array( 'Application', 'ScnHttpCache', ), 'module_listener_options' => array( 'config_glob_paths' => array( 'config/autoload/{,*.}{global,local}.php', ), 'module_paths' => array( './module', './vendor', ), ), );
Varnish
Installation
Varnish can be installed on any modern Linux distribution: https://www.varnish-cache.org/docs/3.0/installation/ It is also available via Homebrew on Mac OSX for development by running brew install varnish
Configuration
This is the most basic Varnish configuration for a development environment. It sets the backend host / port, sets a request header indicating Surrogate Capability, and looks for the response Surrogate Control header to initiate ESI handling. Before running Varnish in a production environment, I highly encourage you to learn more about it at https://www.varnish-cache.org/docs
backend default {
.host = "127.0.0.1";
.port = "10088";
}
sub vcl_recv {
# Set a header announcing Surrogate Capability to the origin
# ScnEsiWidget sees this header and emits ESI tag for widgets
set req.http.Surrogate-Capability = "varnish=ESI/1.0";
}
sub vcl_fetch {
# Unset the Surrogate Control header and do ESI
if (beresp.http.Surrogate-Control ~ "ESI/1.0") {
unset beresp.http.Surrogate-Control;
set beresp.do_esi = true;
}
}
Usage
Echo ESI in View Script
<div><?php echo $this->esi($this->url('route/to/recent/tweets')) ?></div>
Make the ESI Action
public function recentTweetsAction() { $headers = $this->getResponse()->getHeaders(); $cacheControl = new \Zend\Http\Header\CacheControl(); $cacheControl->addDirective('s-maxage', '10'); $headers->addHeader($cacheControl); $viewModel = new ViewModel(); $viewModel->setTerminal(true); return $viewModel; }
Make a View Script for ESI Widget Action
<ul>
<li><?php echo date('h:i:s')?> @SocalNick: This is a recent tweet!</li>
<li><?php echo date('h:i:s', time() - 10)?> @SocalNick: This is a slightly less recent tweet!</li>
</ul>