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Cache
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=====
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- Using cache is a great way of making your application run quicker. The Symfony cache
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- component is shipped with many adapters to different storages. Every adapter is
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+ Using a cache is a great way of making your application run quicker. The Symfony cache
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+ component ships with many adapters to different storages. Every adapter is
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developed for high performance.
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The following example shows a typical usage of the cache::
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ The following example shows a typical usage of the cache::
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// ... and to remove the cache key
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$pool->delete('my_cache_key');
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- Symfony supports the Cache Contracts, PSR-6/16 and Doctrine Cache interfaces.
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+ Symfony supports Cache Contracts, PSR-6/16 and Doctrine Cache interfaces.
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You can read more about these at the :doc: `component documentation </components/cache >`.
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.. versionadded :: 4.2
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This is a service that you will interact with. Each pool will always have
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its own namespace and cache items. There is never a conflict between pools.
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**Adapter **
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- An adapter is a *template * that you use to create Pools .
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+ An adapter is a *template * that you use to create pools .
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**Provider **
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- A provider is a service that some adapters are using to connect to the storage.
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+ A provider is a service that some adapters use to connect to the storage.
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Redis and Memcached are example of such adapters. If a DSN is used as the
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provider then a service is automatically created.
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@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ The Cache component comes with a series of adapters pre-configured:
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* :doc: `cache.adapter.redis </components/cache/adapters/redis_adapter >`
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Some of these adapters could be configured via shortcuts. Using these shortcuts
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- will create pool with service id of ``cache.[type] ``
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+ will create pools with service IDs that follow the pattern ``cache.[type] ``.
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.. configuration-block ::
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@@ -302,13 +302,13 @@ You can also create more customized pools:
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],
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]);
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- Each pool manages a set of independent cache keys: keys of different pools
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+ Each pool manages a set of independent cache keys: keys from different pools
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*never * collide, even if they share the same backend. This is achieved by prefixing
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keys with a namespace that's generated by hashing the name of the pool, the name
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of the compiled container class and a :ref: `configurable seed<reference-cache-prefix-seed> `
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that defaults to the project directory.
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- Each custom pool becomes a service where the service id is the name of the pool
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+ Each custom pool becomes a service whose service ID is the name of the pool
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(e.g. ``custom_thing.cache ``). An autowiring alias is also created for each pool
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using the camel case version of its name - e.g. ``custom_thing.cache `` can be
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injected automatically by naming the argument ``$customThingCache `` and type-hinting it
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Some providers have specific options that can be configured. The
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:doc: `RedisAdapter </components/cache/adapters/redis_adapter >` allows you to
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- create providers with option ``timeout ``, ``retry_interval ``. etc. To use these
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+ create providers with the options ``timeout ``, ``retry_interval ``. etc. To use these
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options with non-default values you need to create your own ``\Redis `` provider
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and use that when configuring the pool.
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@@ -426,7 +426,7 @@ item in a cache chain, Symfony stores it in all pools sequentially. When
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retrieving an item, Symfony tries to get it from the first pool. If it's not
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found, it tries the next pools until the item is found or an exception is thrown.
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Because of this behavior, it's recommended to define the adapters in the chain
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- in order from the fastest to the slowest.
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+ in order from fastest to slowest.
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If an error happens when storing an item in a pool, Symfony stores it in the
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other pools and no exception is thrown. Later, when the item is retrieved,
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----------------
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In applications with many cache keys it could be useful to organize the data stored
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- to be able to invalidate the cache more efficient . One way to achieve that is to
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+ to be able to invalidate the cache more efficiently . One way to achieve that is to
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use cache tags. One or more tags could be added to the cache item. All items with
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- the same key could be invalidate with one function call::
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+ the same key could be invalidated with one function call::
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use Symfony\Contracts\Cache\ItemInterface;
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use Symfony\Contracts\Cache\TagAwareCacheInterface;
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To clear the cache you can use the ``bin/console cache:pool:clear [pool] `` command.
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That will remove all the entries from your storage and you will have to recalculate
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- all values. You can also group your pools into "cache clearers". There are 3 cache
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+ all the values. You can also group your pools into "cache clearers". There are 3 cache
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clearers by default:
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* ``cache.global_clearer ``
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* ``cache.system_clearer ``
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* ``cache.app_clearer ``
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- The global clearer clears all the cache in every pool. The system cache clearer
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+ The global clearer clears all the cache items in every pool. The system cache clearer
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is used in the ``bin/console cache:clear `` command. The app clearer is the default
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clearer.
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