Look into one of the caching options. That copies static assets to the public 
dir - turning them into regular requests (bypassing mvc)

Op 20 jul. 2013 om 17:40 heeft "Andy L." <[email protected]> het volgende 
geschreven:

> Hi Enrico,
> 
> Thanks for the link, I am taking a look at it. It seems good & useful.
> 
> But now these questions come to my mind. The module caches assets,
> loads, and sends them as an mvc response. Is this kind of approach good for
> production & scalability? Is there a way to just dump the assets to a
> directory, and serve them as a regular static files (without the need
> of php) ?
> 
> 
> 
> On Saturday, July 20, 2013, Enrico Zimuel wrote:
> 
>> Hi Andy,
>> 
>> you can use this AssetManager module:
>> https://github.com/RWOverdijk/AssetManager
>> It should cover all your needs.
>> 
>> Here you can find also a blog post that shows how to use it:
>> http://ocramius.github.io/blog/asset-manager-for-zend-framework-2/
>> 
>> Regards,
>> Enrico Zimuel
>> 
>> On Sat, Jul 20, 2013 at 9:29 AM, Andy L. <[email protected]<javascript:;>>
>> wrote:
>>> Hi everyone,
>>> 
>>> How do you manage asset / static files in ZF2? I don't see it in manuals
>> /
>>> docs.
>>> 
>>> - Say i have 3 modules, each has its own asset (static file : css, js),
>> how
>>> do you load your css in view script?
>>> 
>>> - Do you symlink your assets to public directory? Do you symlink manually
>>> or do you use a tool?
>>> 
>>> - I'd like to have an asset management module, that I can configure the
>>> base url so I can serve my asset via other base url, eg via CDN. Does
>>> anyone has any recommendations?
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --
>>> Warmest regards,
>>> 
>>> Andy L.
>> 
>> --
>> Enrico Zimuel
>> Senior PHP Engineer     | [email protected] <javascript:;>
>> Zend Framework Team     | http://framework.zend.com
>> Zend Technologies Ltd.
>> http://www.zend.com
> 
> 
> -- 
> Warmest regards,
> 
> Andy L.

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