WP Stash is a bridge between StashPHP and WP's object caching drop-in support. It enables APCu, Redis, SQLite, Memcached, and Filesystem caches, stampede protection, and group invalidation.
After installing, it will copy an object-cache.php
file to wp-content/
which will delegate all cache calls to its mu-plugin folder. From there, it will interface with StashPHP.
This plugin is a Composer package that will be installed as a wordpress-muplugin
. As such, there are a few things to note when attempting to install it.
Usually, MU-Plugins are single PHP files, sometimes accompanied by a subfolder containing more code. Since WP-Stash assumes it's living in a subfolder, it contains a lot of other dev-related stuff in its root folder.
For WP to pick up WP-Stash as an MU-Plugin, you have to do one of the following:
As a first step, simply require the package via composer
composer require inpsyde/wp-stash
Since this package will get installed in a subfolder. WordPress will not automatically load it on its own. The following solutions exist:
If you are using the awesome WP Starter package, then everything will work automatically.
It contains an MU-Loader which will take care of loading WP Stash. Note that you MUST NOT use WPStarter's drop-in functionality to copy object-cache.php
on build time! WPStash must place the drop-in file on its own. If you want to trigger WP-Stash to create the drop-in file just run a command like wp plugin list
.
WP Must-Use Plugin Loader is a standalone composer package that will take care of loading mu-plugins for you. Just require the package and follow the usage instructions from the link to set it up.
You can technically use WP-Stash by simply extracting all files into the wp-content/mu-plugins/
folder. However, this is pretty dirty and we strongly discourage doing so.
Instead, please look at the WordPress Codex on MU-Plugins to find solutions for loading mu-plugins from folders.
The easiest solution is to add a wp-content/mu-plugins/wp-stash.php
file and put the following in it:
<?php
require __DIR__ . '/wp-stash/wp-stash.php';
You can configure WP Stash globally in the configuration file of your WordPress instance. It is possible to set a Cache Driver and configuration values for it.
Please consult the the StashPHP documentation for information on Driver configuration
The following constants (or environment variables) can be used for configuring WP Stash:
WP_STASH_DRIVER
- FQCN: The class name of the Stash driver you want to use. Will fall back to Ephemeral
(pure memory cache without persistence) if unset or invalid. Available drivers are:
\Stash\Driver\Apc
\Stash\Driver\FileSystem
\Stash\Driver\Sqlite
\Stash\Driver\Memcache
(notMemcached
)\Stash\Driver\Redis
\Stash\Driver\Ephermal
\Stash\Driver\Composite
WP_STASH_DRIVER_ARGS
- string: Driver constructor args as a serialized array or JSON.
WP_STASH_IN_MEMORY_CACHE
- bool: If enabled, keeps an in-memory version of the cache in sync. This enhances performance during a single request. Default true
.
WP_STASH_PURGE_INTERVAL
- integer: WP Stash runs scheduled maintenance actions on the configured cache driver every 12 hours by default. You can configure a different interval here. Default 3600*12
.
WP_STASH_BYPASS
- bool: Allows temporarily disabling WP-Stash and falling back to the core WP system.
If you work with Composer-based environments like WPStarter you might want to use environment variables right away. Here are some examples:
Caching with APC:
WP_STASH_DRIVER=\Stash\Driver\Apc
WP_STASH_DRIVER_ARGS='{"ttl":3600}'
Caching to filesystem in the /var/www/cache
folder:
WP_STASH_DRIVER=\Stash\Driver\FileSystem
WP_STASH_DRIVER_ARGS='{"path":"\/var\/www\/cache","dirSplit":1}'
Caching to a memcached server at localhost
:
WP_STASH_DRIVER=\Stash\Driver\Memcache
WP_STASH_DRIVER_ARGS='{"servers":["memcached","11211"]}'
Don't cache persistently at all (cache lives only within the script lifetime):
WP_STASH_DRIVER=\Stash\Driver\Ephermal
define('WP_STASH_DRIVER', '\Stash\Driver\Apc');
define('WP_STASH_DRIVER_ARGS', serialize(['ttl' => 3600]));
WP Stash has the following CLI commands:
wp stash flush
: An improved version of wp cache flush
. This command ensures that wp_cache_flush()
is called by the web server, not the CLI process (which might run as a different user, or with a different configuration).
This ensures compatibility with all caching back-ends.
wp stash purge
: Some drivers require that maintenance action be performed regularly. The FileSystem and SQLite drivers, for example, need to remove old data as they can't do it automatically. While this is automatically performed via WP cron, you can trigger the process manually with this command.
To test if your persistent cache works you can use WP-CLI. First, log in to your WordPress site with your user. Now run the following command in WP-CLI:
wp cache get {your-user-ID} users
(object) array(
'ID' => '1',
'user_login' => 'you',
'user_pass' => '$P$BfWcDiF3YcFfnIMAGUmiYOuxD/6eaY0',
'user_nicename' => 'you',
'user_email' => '[email protected]',
'user_url' => 'https://yourdomain.com',
'user_registered' => '2018-02-09 21:44:34',
'user_activation_key' => '',
'user_status' => '0',
'display_name' => 'Your Name',
'spam' => '0',
'deleted' => '0',
)
This has some limitations and might not work on some server setups depending on whether the web server and your console user are the same.
In that case, you could check if common transients are stored in the cache. First, delete all transients just in case there are some left:
wp transient delete --network --all
Success: No transients found.
Warning: Transients are stored in an external object cache, and this command only deletes those stored in the database. You must flush the cache to delete all transients.
Now clear the cache
wp stash flush
Now check for updates (to fill the transient) and request the cache object:
wp core check-update
Success: WordPress is at the latest version.
wp cache get update_core site-transient
(object) array(
'updates' =>
array (
0 =>
(object) array(
'response' => 'latest',
...
This package ships a DDEV configuration containing a complete WordPress installation.
To get started, run
ddev start
Then install WordPress with the following command:
ddev orchestrate
Now you can visit https://wp-stash.ddev.site/ and log in:
- User:
admin
- Password:
admin
This repository is a free software, and is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or (at your option) any later version. See LICENSE for complete license.