Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
why do you want to disable caching? That will just put your server under more
strain
Original comment by BinaryMoon
on 16 Aug 2011 at 11:41
Becuase I am limited by disk space.
Original comment by loudsphi...@gmail.com
on 16 Aug 2011 at 12:11
TimThumb is not designed to be run without caching so there's no way to disable
it. I really don't recommend disabling caching as it's going to be a processor
killer.
Original comment by BinaryMoon
on 16 Aug 2011 at 3:39
OK, thanks BinaryMoon.
I love the cropping....being able to throw an image at it and it crops it
without messing the ratio up. Might have to find something else, I've got a
virtual server and the disk space will fill up quickly when users upload
images.
Original comment by loudsphi...@gmail.com
on 16 Aug 2011 at 3:44
You should really just cache (so if the user reloads 5-10 times the image isn't
regenerated - then cleanup old files created more than 1 day ago every day
using a Cronjob
Original comment by m...@mattclements.co.uk
on 23 Aug 2011 at 12:25
That's great adive, thanks. I forgot about the CronJob stuff.
Original comment by loudsphi...@gmail.com
on 23 Aug 2011 at 12:46
I am a Chinese e-mail you can reply me?OK
Address: li6741@gmail.com
http://sae.sina.com.cn/?m=devcenter&catId=201
Because of SAE (cloud) Web Service is a distributed environment, so when users
need to share the cache of some form of small key-value data, need to use
Memcache service, so you can quickly respond to data, and can reduce the
back-end storage pressure
I use the "cloud" services is the need for new code cache!
Example:
Memcache service currently offers the following interfaces:
memcache_init - MC link initialization
memcache_get - for MC data
memcache_set - into the MC data
Examples of use:
$ mmc = memcache_init ();
if ($ mmc == false)
echo "mc init failed \ n";
else
{
memcache_set ($ mmc, "key", "value");
echo memcache_get ($ mmc, "key");
}
Original comment by li6...@gmail.com
on 20 Sep 2011 at 11:49
I have an issue where one of my website has 1000 images and posts. When it
starts caching, I get a message saying 100s of my files are changing from my
security tool in wordpress and my website runs really slow for several hours
and some of the pages go missing until its finished. Is there any way to
manage the caching better so it doesnt effect the website going down.
Original comment by bi...@creative-impact.co.uk
on 7 Oct 2013 at 9:25
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
loudsphi...@gmail.com
on 15 Aug 2011 at 3:52