From aad4fd59e9a799663e238282992530a8e738f3ac Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Erick Hitter <ehitter@gmail.com> Date: Mon, 3 Mar 2014 22:12:11 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] Updated documentation See #4 --- README.md | 36 +++++++++++------------------------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 21b5885..d1cb1a3 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,38 +1,24 @@ ## Overview -A WordPress object cache backend that implements all available methods using Redis and the Predis library for PHP. +A WordPress object cache backend that implements all available methods using Redis and either the Redis PECL library or the Predis library for PHP. -## Authors +## Authors * Eric Mann +* Erick Hitter ## Installation 1. Install and configure Redis. There is a good tutorial [here](http://www.saltwebsites.com/2012/install-redis-245-service-centos-6). -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. -4. By default, the script will connect to Redis at 127.0.0.1:6379. +2. Install the [Redis PECL module](http://pecl.php.net/package/redis) or the Predis library (included in this repository as a submodule) in the `/wp-content/predis` directory (since that's where the object cache expects it to reside if it's to be used). +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. See the *Connecting to Redis* section for further options. ### 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: +By default, the plugin uses `127.0.0.1` and `6379` as the default host and port when creating a new client +instance; the default database of `0` is also used by default. Three constants are provided to override these default values. -```php -$redis = new Predis\Client(); -$redis->set('foo', 'bar'); -$value = $redis->get('foo'); -``` +Specify `WP_REDIS_BACKEND_HOST`, `WP_REDIS_BACKEND_PORT`, and `WP_REDIS_BACKEND_DB` to set the necessary, non-default connection values for your Redis instance. -It is possible to specify the various connection parameters using URI strings or named arrays: - -```php -$redis = new Predis\Client('tcp://10.0.0.1:6379'); - -// is equivalent to: - -$redis = new Predis\Client(array( - 'scheme' => 'tcp', - 'host' => '10.0.0.1', - 'port' => 6379, -)); -``` +### Prefixing Cache Keys ### +The constant `WP_CACHE_KEY_SALT` is provided to add a prefix to all cache keys used by the plugin. If running two single instances of WordPress from the same Redis instance, this constant could be used to avoid overlap in cache keys. Note that special handling is not needed for WordPress Multisite. \ No newline at end of file -- GitLab