Reputation: 28664
What's the best way (ways?) to speed up a php web site and how much faster it can using this or that way?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 399
Reputation: 8289
Yahoo has got some good basic advice on speeding up web pages, much of it very easy to implement. You may also want to download yslow + firebug for firefox; they will help indicate possible basic bottlenecks from a client request perspective.
The rest of the advice here is good, so I wont add much else other than; don't bother optimising any code until you're 100% sure that you've found a bottleneck. I can't stress that enough. Don't waste time tweaking code or implementing new things (ie caching) because you "feel" will make things quicker, act only on real evidence (ie performance profiling).
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3208
PHP isn't really the kind of language where you can do micro-optimizations, or just work on the code alone. There's really no point. Although PHP isn't particularly fast, PHP itself is rarely the bottleneck in a given web site.
You need to work out where that bottleneck is before you can fix it. There are a lot of common bottlenecks, with common solutions. It's difficult to generalize, given so few details, but there are a lot of performance hints that apply to most web sites.
The first good place to look is actually on the client side, rather than the server side. How large are your pages (including images, CSS, JavaScript and the like)? How many HTTP requests does a single page view require? Use something like Firebug (and the YSlow add-on for Firebug) to see how long your page actually takes to load, and which bits of your page cause the problem. Some general hints:
Once you've got the client side out of the way, you might have to turn your attention to the server side.
Install an opcode cache, like APC, XCache, or Zend Optimizer. It's very easy to do, and will always provide some improvement. Once you've done that, profile your pages, to find out where the time is actually being spent.
More likely than not, you'll be spending most of your time waiting for the database to return results. So, at a bare minimum:
Once you've done that, it's usually best to start working out how to use caching. The best way to speed PHP code up is to reduce the amount of work it has to do.
After that point, the general approach is to start using more servers, and the problem becomes one of scaling, rather than raw speed. The general plan is to make sure that your website has a shared-nothing architecture - all persistent data is stored in the database. Then, you install multiple webservers, move the database server to a separate machine, and run the entire thing behind a caching reverse proxy. To add more capacity, you add more machines.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 5012
Filesize.
A file of 500 KB takes longer to download then a file of 300 KB. So optimize and crop as much as you can.
Accelators
Self explainable: List of PHP accelerators
Server upgrade
Though this costs money, when dealing with a lot of traffic, it will have impact on how fast the .php files gets processes and how fast data will be send to the user. I don't recommend this though since there are other (free) ways to improve speed.
Don't user external resources
If you are linking some images trough other sites, the speed of the downloading will not be in your control. Instead, if you plan on using images from others download them to your own server first (or upload them to your own provider) and load them that way.
Review and improve your code
Find short cuts, remove unnecessary code, delete unused variables, reuse others etc.
There are other ways but I believe the above information has the most impact on your speed
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 5335
A general question i would say. Try looking for optimazation tips online...
Several parameters are involved:
You can use benchmarking tools to test your environment before and after the optimizations.
Try apache bench for example.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 43864
You should probably do some search for existing answers to this question, however...
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 188164
One way: php accelerators, e.g. APC.
Another; read blog articles, e.g. performance tuning overview.
Upvotes: 1