Laufzeit-Konfiguration

Das Verhalten dieser Funktionen wird durch Einstellungen in der php.ini beeinflusst.

Although the default APC settings are fine for many installations, serious users should consider tuning the following parameters.

There are two primary decisions to be made configuring APC. First, how much memory is going to be allocated to APC; and second, whether APC will check if a file has been modified on every request. The two ini directives that control these settings are apc.shm_size and apc.stat, respectively. Read the sections on these two directive carefully below.

Once the server is running, the apc.php script that is bundled with the extension should be copied somewhere into the docroot and viewed with a browser as it provides a detailed analysis of the internal workings of APC. If GD is enabled in PHP, it will even display some interesting graphs. The first thing to ensure, of course, is that it is actually caching files. If APC is working, the Cache full count number (on the left) will display the number of times the cache has reached maximum capacity and has had to forcefully clean any entries that haven't been accessed in the last apc.ttl seconds. This number is minimized in a well-configured cache. If the cache is constantly being filled, and thusly forcefully freed, the resulting churning will have disparaging effects on script performance. The easiest way to minimize this number is to allocate more memory for APC. Barring that, the apc.filters ought to be used to cache fewer scripts.

When APC is compiled with mmap support (Memory Mapping), it will use only one memory segment, unlike when APC is built with SHM (SysV Shared Memory) support that uses multiple memory segments. MMAP does not have a maximum limit like SHM does in /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax. In general MMAP support is recommended because it will reclaim the memory faster when the webserver is restarted and all in all reduces memory allocation impact at startup.

APC configuration options
Name Standard Veränderbar Changelog
apc.enabled "1" PHP_INI_SYSTEM PHP_INI_SYSTEM in APC 2. PHP_INI_ALL in APC <= 3.0.12.
apc.shm_segments "1" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.shm_size "32M" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.shm_strings_buffer "4M" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.4.
apc.optimization "0" PHP_INI_ALL PHP_INI_SYSTEM in APC 2. Removed in APC 3.0.13.
apc.num_files_hint "1000" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.user_entries_hint "4096" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.0.
apc.ttl "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.0.
apc.user_ttl "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.0.
apc.gc_ttl "3600" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.cache_by_default "1" PHP_INI_ALL PHP_INI_SYSTEM in APC <= 3.0.12. Available since APC 3.0.0.
apc.filters NULL PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.mmap_file_mask NULL PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.slam_defense "1" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.0. Prior to APC 3.1.4, the default value was "0" (disabled).
apc.file_update_protection "2" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.6.
apc.enable_cli "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.7.
apc.max_file_size "1M" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.7.
apc.use_request_time "1" PHP_INI_ALL Available since APC 3.1.3.
apc.stat "1" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.10.
apc.write_lock "1" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.11.
apc.report_autofilter "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.11.
apc.serializer "default" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.0.
apc.include_once_override "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.12.
apc.rfc1867 "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.13.
apc.rfc1867_prefix "upload_" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.rfc1867_name "APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.rfc1867_freq "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM  
apc.rfc1867_ttl "3600" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.1.
apc.localcache "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available in APC 3.0.14 - 3.1.11.
apc.localcache.size "512" PHP_INI_SYSTEM vailable in APC 3.0.14 - 3.1.11.
apc.coredump_unmap "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.16.
apc.stat_ctime "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.0.13.
apc.preload_path NULL PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.1.
apc.file_md5 "0" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.1.
apc.canonicalize "1" PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.1.
apc.lazy_functions 0 PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.3.
apc.lazy_classes 0 PHP_INI_SYSTEM Available since APC 3.1.3.
Weitere Details und die Definitionen der PHP_INI_*-Konstanten finden Sie im Wo Konfigurationseinstellungen gesetzt werden können.

Hier eine kurze Erklärung der Konfigurationsoptionen:

apc.enabled boolean

apc.enabled can be set to 0 to disable APC. This is primarily useful when APC is statically compiled into PHP, since there is no other way to disable it (when compiled as a DSO, the extension line in php.ini can just be commented-out).

apc.shm_segments integer

The number of shared memory segments to allocate for the compiler cache. If APC is running out of shared memory but apc.shm_size is set as high as the system allows, raising this value might prevent APC from exhausting its memory.

apc.shm_size string

The size of each shared memory segment given by a shorthand notation as described in this FAQ. By default, some systems (including most BSD variants) have very low limits on the size of a shared memory segment.

apc.shm_strings_buffer string

The size of memory to use as a shared buffer for strings used internally by APC. Size Should be suffixed by M for megabytes, G for gigabytes. Enabling this option will reduce the amount of memory used per PHP-FPM worker as strings will be stored once rather than for each worker.

apc.optimization integer

The optimization level. Zero disables the optimizer, and higher values use more aggressive optimizations. Expect very modest speed improvements. This is experimental.

apc.num_files_hint integer

A "hint" about the number of distinct source files that will be included or requested on your web server. Set to zero or omit if unsure; this setting is mainly useful for sites that have many thousands of source files.

apc.user_entries_hint integer

Just like apc.num_files_hint, a "hint" about the number of distinct user cache variables to store. Set to zero or omit if not sure.

apc.ttl integer

The number of seconds a cache entry is allowed to idle in a slot in case this cache entry slot is needed by another entry. Leaving this at zero means that APC's cache could potentially fill up with stale entries while newer entries won't be cached. In the event of a cache running out of available memory, the cache will be completely expunged if ttl is equal to 0. Otherwise, if the ttl is greater than 0, APC will attempt to remove expired entries.

apc.user_ttl integer

The number of seconds a cache entry is allowed to idle in a slot in case this cache entry slot is needed by another entry. Leaving this at zero means that APC's cache could potentially fill up with stale entries while newer entries won't be cached. In the event of a cache running out of available memory, the cache will be completely expunged if ttl is equal to 0. Otherwise, if the ttl is greater than 0, APC will attempt to remove expired entries.

apc.gc_ttl integer

The number of seconds that a cache entry may remain on the garbage-collection list. This value provides a fail-safe in the event that a server process dies while executing a cached source file; if that source file is modified, the memory allocated for the old version will not be reclaimed until this TTL reached. Set to zero to disable this feature.

apc.cache_by_default boolean

On by default, but can be set to off and used in conjunction with positive apc.filters so that files are only cached if matched by a positive filter.

apc.filters string

A comma-separated list of POSIX extended regular expressions. If any pattern matches the source filename, the file will not be cached. Note that the filename used for matching is the one passed to include/require, not the absolute path. If the first character of the expression is a + then the expression will be additive in the sense that any files matched by the expression will be cached, and if the first character is a - then anything matched will not be cached. The - case is the default, so it can be left off.

apc.mmap_file_mask string

If compiled with MMAP support by using --enable-mmap this is the mktemp-style file_mask to pass to the mmap module for determining whether your mmap'ed memory region is going to be file-backed or shared memory backed. For straight file-backed mmap, set it to something like /tmp/apc.XXXXXX (exactly 6 Xs). To use POSIX-style shm_open/mmap put a .shm somewhere in your mask. e.g. /apc.shm.XXXXXX You can also set it to /dev/zero to use your kernel's /dev/zero interface to anonymous mmap'ed memory. Leaving it undefined will force an anonymous mmap.

apc.slam_defense integer

On very busy servers whenever you start the server or modify files you can create a race of many processes all trying to cache the same file at the same time. This option sets the percentage of processes that will skip trying to cache an uncached file. Or think of it as the probability of a single process to skip caching. For example, setting apc.slam_defense to 75 would mean that there is a 75% chance that the process will not cache an uncached file. So, the higher the setting the greater the defense against cache slams. Setting this to 0 disables this feature.

Deprecated by apc.write_lock.

apc.file_update_protection integer

When a file is modified on a live web server it really ought to be done in an atomic manner. That is, written to a temporary file and renamed (mv) the file into its permanent position when it is ready. Many text editors, cp, tar and other such programs don't do this. This means that there is a chance that a file is accessed (and cached) while it is still being written to. This apc.file_update_protection setting puts a delay on caching brand new files. The default is 2 seconds, which means that if the modification timestamp (mtime) on a file shows that it is less than 2 seconds old when it is accessed, it will not be cached. The unfortunate person who accessed this half-written file will still see weirdness, but at least it won't persist. If all of the webserver's files are atomically updated, via some method like rsync (which updates correctly), this protection can be disabled by setting this directive to 0. If the system is flooded with i/o and some update procedures are taking longer than 2 seconds, this setting should be increased to enable the protection on those slower update operations.

apc.enable_cli integer

Mostly for testing and debugging. Setting this enables APC for the CLI version of PHP. Under normal circumstances, it is not ideal to create, populate and destroy the APC cache on every CLI request, but for various test scenarios it is useful to be able to enable APC for the CLI version of PHP easily.

apc.max_file_size integer

Prevent files larger than this value from getting cached. Defaults to 1M.

apc.stat integer

Be careful changing this setting. This defaults to on, forcing APC to stat (check) the script on each request to determine if it has been modified. If it has been modified it will recompile and cache the new version. If this setting is off, APC will not check, which usually means that to force APC to recheck files, the web server will have to be restarted or the cache will have to be manually cleared. Note that FastCGI web server configurations may not clear the cache on restart. On a production server where the script files rarely change, a significant performance boost can be achieved by disabled stats.

For included/required files this option applies as well, but note that for relative path includes (any path that doesn't start with / on Unix) APC has to check in order to uniquely identify the file. If you use absolute path includes APC can skip the stat and use that absolute path as the unique identifier for the file.

apc.write_lock boolean

On busy servers, when the web server is first started, or when many files have been modified at the same time, APC may try to compile and cache the same file multiple times. Write_lock guarantees that only one process will attempt to compile and cache an uncached script. The other processes attempting to use the script will run without using the opcode cache, rather than locking and waiting for the cache to prime.

apc.report_autofilter boolean

Logs any scripts that were automatically excluded from being cached due to early/late binding issues.

apc.serializer string

Used to configure APC to use a third party serializer.

apc.include_once_override boolean

Optimize include_once and require_once calls and avoid the expensive system calls used.

Warnung

This feature is EXPERIMENTAL. The behaviour of this directive, its name, and surrounding documentation may change without notice in a future release of APC. This feature should be used at your own risk.

apc.rfc1867 boolean

RFC1867 File Upload Progress hook handler is only available if APC was compiled against PHP 5.2.0 or later. When enabled, any file uploads which includes a field called APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS before the file field in an upload form will cause APC to automatically create an upload_key user cache entry where key is the value of the APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS form entry.

Note that the hidden field specified by APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS must come before the file field, otherwise the upload progress will not work correctly.

Note that the file upload tracking is not threadsafe at this point, so new uploads that happen while a previous one is still going will disable the tracking for the previous.

Note that the rate is only available once all file transfers are completed.

Beispiel #1 An apc.rfc1867 example

<?php
print_r
(apc_fetch("upload_$_POST[APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS]"));
?>

Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt eine ähnliche Ausgabe wie:

Array
(
    [total] => 1142543
    [current] => 1142543
    [rate] => 1828068.8
    [filename] => test
    [name] => file
    [temp_filename] => /tmp/php8F
    [cancel_upload] => 0
    [done] => 1
)

apc.rfc1867_prefix string

Key prefix to use for the user cache entry generated by rfc1867 upload progress functionality.

apc.rfc1867_name string

Specify the hidden form entry name that activates APC upload progress and specifies the user cache key suffix.

apc.rfc1867_freq string

The frequency that updates should be made to the user cache entry for upload progress. This can take the form of a percentage of the total file size or a size in bytes optionally suffixed with "k", "m", or "g" for kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes respectively (case insensitive). A setting of 0 updates as often as possible, which may cause slower uploads.

apc.rfc1867_ttl integer

TTL for rfc1867 entries.

apc.localcache boolean

This enables a lock-free local process shadow-cache which reduces lock contention when the cache is being written to.

apc.localcache.size integer

The size of the local process shadow-cache, should be set to a sufficiently large value, approximately half of apc.num_files_hint.

apc.coredump_unmap boolean

Enables APC handling of signals, such as SIGSEGV, that write core files when signaled. When these signals are received, APC will attempt to unmap the shared memory segment in order to exclude it from the core file. This setting may improve system stability when fatal signals are received and a large APC shared memory segment is configured.

Warnung

This feature is potentially dangerous. Unmapping the shared memory segment in a fatal signal handler may cause undefined behaviour if a fatal error occurs.

Hinweis:

Although some kernels may provide a facility to ignore various types of shared memory when generating a core dump file, these implementations may also ignore important shared memory segments such as the Apache scoreboard.

apc.stat_ctime integer

Verification with ctime will avoid problems caused by programs such as svn or rsync by making sure inodes haven't changed since the last stat. APC will normally only check mtime.

apc.canonicalize bool

If on, then relative paths are canonicalized in no-stat mode. If set, then files included via stream wrappers can not be cached as realpath() does not support stream wrappers.

apc.preload_path string

Optionally, set a path to the directory that APC will load cache data at startup.

apc.use_request_time bool

Use the SAPI request start time for TTL.

apc.file_md5 bool

Records a md5 hash of files.

apc.lazy_functions integer

Enables lazy loading for functions.

apc.lazy_classes integer

Enables lazy loading for classes.

add a note add a note

User Contributed Notes 11 notes

up
2
bishop
15 years ago
The apc.rfc1867 example code above is a little fast and loose for those running in environments where APC RFC1867 may or may not be available.  This is a little more expressive:

<?php

// if we have PHP and APC
$havePHP = (1 === version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.2.0') ? true : false);
$haveAPC = (extension_loaded('apc') && 1 === version_compare(phpversion('apc'), '3.0.13') ? true : false);
if (
$havePHP && $haveAPC) {
   
// if APC and upload tracking is enabled
   
if (ini_get('apc.enabled') && ini_get('apc.rfc1867')) {
       
// get the stats
       
$key = ini_get('apc.rfc1867_prefix') . $_REQUEST['apcid'];
       
$stats = apc_fetch($key);
    }
}

?>
up
2
danbettles at yahoo dot co dot uk
16 years ago
To automatically cache only PHP class files named "<class name>.class.php", add the following lines to php.ini.

apc.cache_by_default = "Off"
apc.filters = "+\.class\.php$"

Notes:
- The regexp is case /sensitive/, so if, say, your project contains filenames with mixed case, you'll need something like "+\.(class|CLASS)\.(php|PHP)$".  I've tried delimiting patterns and using the "i" modifier, but that doesn't seem to work.
- Setting cache_by_default to "On" and applying the positive filter will /not/ work.

If you have more complicated requirements and, like me, you're not familiar with POSIX Extended Regular Expressions (ERE) inparticular, you may find the following link useful.  http://www.regular-expressions.info/refflavors.html
up
1
lamperz at gmail dot com
16 years ago
I'm trying to get upload progress with apc_fetch.
I founded apc_fetch always return false till the upload completed.After fews hours debug, I finally notice that my APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS was set after the file form.

SO, You should write your form like this
<input type="hidden" id="file_id" name="APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS" value="blablabla"/>
<input type="file" id="select_file" name="file" value="upload" onchange="parent.test();"/>

the hidden field with name="APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS" SHOULD be ALWAYS BEFORE input type="file"
up
-1
klaus at hax dot at
11 years ago
Note: If you want to run a script on Windows with apc.enabled=1 as a scheduled task whilst another instance of php is running (like on a webserver) apparently you have to disable apc for this scheduled task, otherwise it will not run and you will have something in your error log like: PHP Fatal error: PHP Startup: apc_shm_create: shmget(0, 33554432, 658) failed: No such file or directory.

So simply execute your scheduled task with:

c:\php\php.exe -d apc.enabled=0 and all will be fine.
up
-1
d_inkubus at yahoo dot com
14 years ago
apc.include_once_override=1 can cause more problems than it solves.  If you're running into weird errors regarding relative paths, make sure this setting is off.  PHP 5.3 already implements most of the speed ups in these calls anyway.
up
-1
fusionstream [a](t) gmail.com
14 years ago
If you are getting 0kb out of 0kb for your upload progress with large files, make sure that upload_max_filesize and post_max_size are larger than the file you are uploading. As far as I can tell, apc.max_file_size does not affect it.
up
-2
neorush at gmail dot com
15 years ago
apc_fetch always returned false.  Turns out that "apc.rfc1867" was set to "0".  I added this line to my php.ini:
apc.rfc1867 = 1
but it could have certainly been changed with ini_set().  That took me way to long to figure out.
up
-2
Will
14 years ago
For anyone wondering why shm_segments is being ignored on their setup, it could be because of the following:

If you've configured APC to use memory mapped files (with the --enable-mmap option), the shm_segments setting is ignored unless you specify a file mask via the mmap_file_mask setting.

This is because APC won't attempt to create multiple anonymous files to map into memory without a mask (since it has no way of naming them sensibly). To set up multiple segments you have to give a file mask so they can be named separately.

apc.mmap_file_mask=/tmp/apc.XXXXXX

Make sure to use exactly 6 "X"s (this is the part that is changed by APC). You can place these files anywhere, they don't have to go in /tmp.

With that said, I'm not sure what the performance impact of having multiple MMAP segments would be. I'm guessing it would probably be negative so you probably don't want to do this.
up
-2
amir w of colnect dot com TIPS
14 years ago
Want to avoid segmentation with apc.shm_segments?If your linux server limits the shared memory block size and you're forced to use apc.shm_segments instead, change the setting by using (here is 512M but change it as you like):
# sysctl -w kernel.shmmax=536870912

(but if you want the change to be permanent after a restart you would have to add the following line in /etc/sysctl.conf

kernel.shmmax=536870912)

and updating apc.ini

apc.shm_segments="1"
apc.shm_size="512"


apc.stat is an extremely important setting for a production server, especially if many files are accessed on every request, which is quite normal on complicated web applications.

Always aspire to use:
apc.stat="0"
so that APC does not try to check that each and every file exists on every request you make. It also means you can update files on your server without crashing incoming requests on that time fragment. Whenever you wish to force APC to re-read all the files, simply clear the cache or restart your server.
up
-3
bas_vijfiwinkel
12 years ago
I took some time to look at the preload_path option.

At the moment of writing the preload_path option is broken because of a bug in the APC source code
which will not allow you to properly preload the cache.

The way to fix it :
Inside 'main_apc.c' in the method called 'static int apc_load_data(const char *data_file TSRMLS_DC)', the length of the key of the value that needs to be stored is determined with the following line :
key_len = strlen(key);
If I am correct this is only the length of the string itself without the null-terminator
However, "_apc_store" seems to want the length of the key string including the terminator.
If I change the line above to :
key_len = strlen(key)+1;
then the preload function works as expected.
You can also notice that 1 character is missing when looking at the user cache entries apc.php. But if you try to use that as a key then APC will not return the contents so that didn't work as a workaround.

If one is able to compile the apc library from source, then one can of course easily fix this option by changing the source code.

Files in the specified path should have the extension '.data'.
The filename itself will become the key for the data that is in that specific file.
The data in the file is a serialized string representing what you want to assign to the specific key. For example s:2:"123" will generate the string "123".
One can only specify 1 value for each key and it should be null-terminated.

It is not possible to preload PHP scripts.
Only values that one retrieved with apc_fetch can be preloaded.
up
-4
amir w of colnect dot com TIPS
14 years ago
apc.stat is an extremely important setting for a production server, especially if many files are accessed on every request, which is quite normal on complicated web applications.

Always aspire to use:
apc.stat="0"
so that APC does not try to check that each and every file exists on every request you make. It also means you can update files on your server without crashing incoming requests on that time fragment. Whenever you wish to force APC to re-read all the files, simply clear the cache or restart your server.
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