Independent Testing Demonstrates Bitrix® Site Manager Industry-Leading Performance Indicators

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Submitted by bitrix on

Bitrix, Inc., a technology trendsetter in web business communications, introduces TrafficJuggler™, a unique traffic balancing, caching and compression technology that allows for sustainable operation of extremely loaded websites running on the modest hardware. As confirmed by the independent testing Bitrix® Site Manager peak performance reaches 222 requests per second while maintaining acceptable level of service quality.

2bits: Drupal core caching and contributed content caching modules

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Submitted by Bryan on
2bits is spending a lot of time lately discussing how best to manage a high traffic Drupal site.  This particular article on Drupal's built-in caching caught my attention.
As a site grows, the overhead of executing so many queries per page against the database starts to add up. This is where caching can benefit a high traffic site. Drupal core caching Caching stores "elements" in a cache table in the database, so the data can be retrieved by a single query, rather that constructing the page from individual elements. Drupal's core cache has two parts, stuff that gets caches no matter what, and stuff that is optional via an administrator defined settings.

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2bits: PHP accelerators: Drupal large site case study

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Submitted by Bryan on
A great article posted on 2bits regarding the use of PHP accelerators: PHP op-code caches / accelerators: Drupal large site case study.  While the article uses Drupal for the case study, the use of PHP op-code caches/accelerators such as eAccelerator and APC should benefit any PHP-based application on the server.
For a large Drupal site, one of the biggest performance boosts one can do is to install an op-code cache/accelerator. PHP op-code caches / Accelerators Since PHP is an interpreted language, every page access has to load the script, parse it, compile it into op-codes, then execute it. This load/parse/compile cycle can add up to a lot of processing time, specially when you have lots of page accesses.  Op-code caches/accelerators eliminate this load/parse/compile time, by doing so once, and keeping the compiled version of the script in memory (or disk) and use it next time a page requests this script.
You'll want to especially take a look in the article at the CPU and memory usage comparisons between using and not using op-code caching.  The writer also hints that eAccelerator may use less CPU and memory usage than APC.  I personally like eAccelerator over APC, but either one is a must have if you run your site on a virtual private server (VPS) or a dedicated server.  I run CMS Report using eAccelerator on a VPS I manage through Dakota Hosting.

Getting eAccelerator 0.9.5 to run correctly

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Submitted by Bryan on

Over the weekend, I upgraded the server that hosts CMS Report with the latest stable releases of MySQL and eAccelerator. The upgrade from MySQL 4.1 to 5.0 was easy compared to the upgrade I made a year ago from MySQL 3.23 to 4.1. This time around I also have use of CPanel which meant I could make the database upgrade with at least one eye closed. My journey with upgrading from eAccelerator 0.9.4 to 0.9.5 however took a lot longer.

I've been using eAccelerator 0.9.4 since it was released early in 2006. I've gotten into some trouble in the past by those smarter than me when I tried to explain exactly what eAccelerator does and does not do. To play it safe this time around, I'll give you the summary of what eAccelerator does straight from eAccelerator.net:

Dougal Campbell: Using the WordPress Object Cache

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Submitted by Bryan on
"The goal of the WordPress Object Cache is to provide a way to persistently store results from expensive queries in an external cache file. This lets us avoid re-querying the database or re-fetching information from an external web service if we think that the data hasn't changed. It should be noted, however, that some server environments have trouble using the cache. It is up to you to monitor your server to determine whether use of the cache will benefit your sites."

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