Re: [PHP] Re: Epiphany - a salute to APC

2009-07-05 Thread Eddie Drapkin
> -=- (from other discussion) > Interesting that facebook uses both. The fedora maintainer for the apc rpm > listed it as conflicting with memcache. If you can use both, that's a fedora > packaging but that should be fixed. I've never seen, nor heard of, a full scale caching implementation that do

Re: [PHP] Re: Epiphany - a salute to APC

2009-07-05 Thread Michael A. Peters
Brandon Johnson wrote: you think this is similar to http://www.danga.com/memcached/ or you think this method would be faster ? Which do you say would be the greatest benfit ? In my case I think apc is better because I'm single server xen host and (after reading the other posts in thread) mo

Re: [PHP] Re: Epiphany - a salute to APC

2009-07-04 Thread Eddie Drapkin
On Sun, Jul 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, Paul Scott wrote: > Eddie Drapkin wrote: >> if you want a pure opcode cache, APC is a great choice. >> >>> you think this is similar to http://www.danga.com/memcached/ or you think >>> this method would be faster ? Which do you say would be the greatest >>> benfit ?

Re: [PHP] Re: Epiphany - a salute to APC

2009-07-04 Thread Brandon Johnson
ok thanks for information was just something I was reading about the other night. Then I came across this message. Brandon -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Re: [PHP] Re: Epiphany - a salute to APC

2009-07-04 Thread Paul Scott
Eddie Drapkin wrote: > if you want a pure opcode cache, APC is a great choice. > >> you think this is similar to http://www.danga.com/memcached/ or you think >> this method would be faster ? Which do you say would be the greatest >> benfit ? >> A simple rule of thumb that I use is: If you have on

Re: [PHP] Re: Epiphany - a salute to APC

2009-07-04 Thread Eddie Drapkin
if you want a pure opcode cache, APC is a great choice. APC should //not// be used for persistent RAM storage. Memcached is much faster and designed for that aim, while not being tied to the webserver. On Sun, Jul 5, 2009 at 2:10 AM, Brandon Johnson wrote: > you think this is similar to http://w