@@ -11,3 +11,28 @@ A WordPress object cache backend that implements all available methods using Red
...
@@ -11,3 +11,28 @@ A WordPress object cache backend that implements all available methods using Red
2. Install Predis (included in this repository as a submodule) in the `/wp-content/predis` directory, since that's where the object cache expects it to reside.
2. Install Predis (included in this repository as a submodule) in the `/wp-content/predis` directory, since that's where the object cache expects it to reside.
3. Add object-cache.php to the wp-content directory. It is a drop-in file, not a plugin, so it belongs in the wp-content directory, not the plugins directory.
3. Add object-cache.php to the wp-content directory. It is a drop-in file, not a plugin, so it belongs in the wp-content directory, not the plugins directory.
4. By default, the script will connect to Redis at 127.0.0.1:6379.
4. By default, the script will connect to Redis at 127.0.0.1:6379.
### Connecting to Redis ###
By default Predis uses `127.0.0.1` and `6379` as the default host and port when creating a new client
instance without specifying any connection parameter:
```php
$redis=newPredis\Client();
$redis->set('foo','bar');
$value=$redis->get('foo');
```
It is possible to specify the various connection parameters using URI strings or named arrays: