cache_set

Definition

cache_set($cid, $data, $table = 'cache', $expire = CACHE_PERMANENT, $headers = NULL)
includes/cache.inc, line 101

Description

Store data in the persistent cache.

The persistent cache is split up into four database tables. Contributed modules can add additional tables.

'cache_page': This table stores generated pages for anonymous users. This is the only table affected by the page cache setting on the administrator panel.

'cache_menu': Stores the cachable part of the users' menus.

'cache_filter': Stores filtered pieces of content. This table is periodically cleared of stale entries by cron.

'cache': Generic cache storage table.

The reasons for having several tables are as follows:

  • smaller tables allow for faster selects and inserts
  • we try to put fast changing cache items and rather static ones into different tables. The effect is that only the fast changing tables will need a lot of writes to disk. The more static tables will also be better cachable with MySQL's query cache

Parameters

$cid The cache ID of the data to store.

$data The data to store in the cache. Complex data types will be automatically serialized before insertion. Strings will be stored as plain text and not serialized.

$table The table $table to store the data in. Valid core values are 'cache_filter', 'cache_menu', 'cache_page', or 'cache'.

$expire One of the following values:

  • CACHE_PERMANENT: Indicates that the item should never be removed unless explicitly told to using cache_clear_all() with a cache ID.
  • CACHE_TEMPORARY: Indicates that the item should be removed at the next general cache wipe.
  • A Unix timestamp: Indicates that the item should be kept at least until the given time, after which it behaves like CACHE_TEMPORARY.
$headers A string containing HTTP header information for cached pages.

Code

<?php
function cache_set($cid, $data, $table = 'cache', $expire = CACHE_PERMANENT, $headers = NULL) {
  $serialized = 0;
  if (is_object($data) || is_array($data)) {
    $data = serialize($data);
    $serialized = 1;
  }
  $created = time();
  db_query("UPDATE {". $table ."} SET data = %b, created = %d, expire = %d, headers = '%s', serialized = %d WHERE cid = '%s'", $data, $created, $expire, $headers, $serialized, $cid);
  if (!db_affected_rows()) {
    @db_query("INSERT INTO {". $table ."} (cid, data, created, expire, headers, serialized) VALUES ('%s', %b, %d, %d, '%s', %d)", $cid, $data, $created, $expire, $headers, $serialized);
  }
}
?>
 
 

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