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{eac}ObjectCache - a persistent object cache using a SQLite database to cache WordPress objects.

EarthAsylum Consulting WordPress eacDoojigger

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Plugin URI: https://eacdoojigger.earthasylum.com/eacobjectcache/
Author: EarthAsylum Consulting
Stable tag: 1.4.1
Last Updated: 12-Jul-2025
Requires at least: 5.8
Tested up to: 6.8
Requires PHP: 7.4
Contributors: kevinburkholder
Donate link: https://github.com/sponsors/EarthAsylum
License: GPLv3 or later
License URI: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html
Tags: persistent object cache, object cache, wp cache, sqlite, performance, {eac}Doojigger,
WordPress URI: https://wordpress.org/plugins/eacobjectcache
GitHub URI: https://github.com/EarthAsylum/eacObjectCache

{eac}ObjectCache is a persistent object cache using a SQLite database to cache WordPress objects; A drop-in replacement to the WP_Object_Cache used by WordPress.

Description

The {eac}ObjectCache is a light-weight and very efficient drop-in persistent object cache that uses a fast SQLite database to cache WordPress objects.

See The WordPress Object Cache

The WordPress Object Cache is used to save on trips to the database. The Object Cache stores all of the cache data to memory and makes the cache contents available by using a key, which is used to name and later retrieve the cache contents.

By default, the object cache is non-persistent. This means that data stored in the cache resides in memory only and only for the duration of the request. Cached data will not be stored persistently across page loads unless you install a persistent caching plugin.

Here, an object is any piece of data - a number, text, a set of database records, an API response, etc. - that can be referenced by a name or key. Objects are categorized by a group name. Groups help identify what an object is and how it is used.

{eac}ObjectCache replaces the default WordPress object cache to not only store data in memory but to also store data persistently, across requests, in a SQLite database, increasing the likelihood of cache hits and decreasing the need for costly computations, complex MySQL database queries, and remote API requests.

SQLite is a fast, small, single-file relational database engine. By using SQLite to store objects, {eac}ObjectCache is able to manage a relatively large amount of data (groups, keys, and values) in a very efficient and fast data-store.

Features

  • Lightweight, efficient, and fast!
  • L1 (memory) and L2 (SQLite) caching.
  • Supports Write-Back (delayed transactions) or Write-Through caching.
  • Cache by object group name.
    • Preserves uniqueness of keys.
    • Manage keys by group name.
    • Supports group name attributes (:sitewide, :nocaching, :permanent, :prefetch)
  • Pre-fetch object groups from L2 to L1 cache.
  • Caches and pre-fetches L2 misses (known to not exist in L2 cache).
    • Prevents repeated, unnecessary L2 cache reads across requests.
  • Multisite / Network support:
    • Cache/flush/switch by blog id.
  • Caching statistics:
    • Cache hits typically well above 90%.
    • Overall and L1/L2 hits, misses, & ratio.
    • L1 hits by object groups.
    • L2 group keys stored.
    • L2 select/update/delete/commit counts.
  • Supports an enhanced superset of WP Object Cache functions.
  • Easily enabled or disabled from {eac}Doojigger administrator page.
    • Imports existing transients when enabled.
    • Exports cached transients when disabled.
  • Automatically cleans and optimizes SQLite database.
  • Optionally schedule periodic L2 cache rebuild.
  • Uses the PHP Data Objects (PDO) extension included with PHP.

Settings

Several cache settings can be modified by adding defined constants to the wp-config.php file. The default settings are recommended and optimal in most cases but individual settings may need to be adjusted based on traffic volume, specific requirements, or unique circumstances. Most of these settings can be adjusted in the {eac}Doojigger administrator screen.


  • To set the location of the SQLite database (default: ../wp-content/cache):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DIR', '/full/path/to/folder' );

This folder can be outside of the web-accessable folders of your site - i.e. above the document root (htdocs, www, etc.) - provided that PHP can access (read/write) the folder (see the PHP open_basedir directive).

This folder should not be on a network share or other remote media. We're caching data for quick access, the cache folder should be on fast, local media.


  • To set the name of the SQLite database (default: '.eac_object_cache.sqlite'):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_FILE', 'filename.sqlite' );

In addition to the database file, SQLite may also create temporary files using the same file name with a '-shm' and '-wal' suffix.


  • To set SQLite journal mode (default: 'WAL'):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_JOURNAL_MODE', journal_mode )

journal_mode can be one of 'DELETE', 'TRUNCATE', 'PERSIST', 'MEMORY', 'WAL', or 'OFF'. See SQLite journal mode


  • To set SQLite Mapped Memory I/O (default: 0):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_MMAP_SIZE', int );

Sets the maximum number of bytes that are set aside for memory-mapped I/O. See SQLite memory-mapped I/O


  • To set SQLite Page Size (default: 4096):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PAGE_SIZE', int );

Sets the SQLite page size for the database. See SQLite page size


  • To set SQLite Cache Size (default: -2000 [2,048,000]):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_CACHE_SIZE', int );

Sets the maximum number of database disk pages that SQLite will hold in memory or the maximum amount of memory to use for page caching. See SQLite cache size


  • To set SQLite timeout (default: 3):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_TIMEOUT', int );

Sets the number of seconds before a SQLite transaction may timeout in error.


  • To set SQLite retries (default: 3):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_MAX_RETRIES', int );

Sets the maximum number of retries to attempt on critical actions.


  • To set delayed writes (default: 32):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DELAYED_WRITES', true|false|int );

{eac}ObjectCache caches all objects in memory and writes new or updated objects to the L2 (SQLite) cache. delayed writes simply holds objects in memory until the number of objects reaches a specified threshold, then writes them, in a single transaction, to the L2 cache (a.k.a. write-back caching). Setting delayed writes to false turns this functionality off (a.k.a. write-through caching). Setting to true writes all records only at the end of the script process/page request. Setting this to a number sets the object pending threshold to that number of objects.


  • To set the default expiration time (in seconds) (default: 0 [never]):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DEFAULT_EXPIRE', -1|0|int );

When using the default WordPress object cache, object expiration isn't very important because the entire cache expires at the end of the script process/page request. With a persistent cache, this isn't the case. When an object is cached, the developer has the option of specifying an expiration time for that object. Since we don't know the intent of the developer when not specifying an expiration time, cache persistence may sometimes cause issues. Setting default expiration may alleviate problems and/or possibly improve performance by limiting cache data. When set to -1, objects with no expiration are not saved in the L2 cache.

* Transients with no expiration overide this setting and are allowed (as that is the normal WordPress functionality).

* Usually, but not always, unexpired objects are updated when the source data has changed and do not present any issues.


  • To set the default expiration time (in seconds) by group name:
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_GROUP_EXPIRE', array( 'group' => -1|0|int, ... ) );

This option allows for setting the expiration time for specific object groups.

See also wp_cache_add_group_expire( $groups ).


  • To enable or disable pre-fetching of cache misses (default: true [enabled]):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PREFETCH_MISSES', true | false );

Pre-fetching cache misses (keys that are not in the L2 persistent cache) prevents repeated, unnecessary reads of the L2 cache.


  • To set maintenance probability (default: 1000):
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PROBABILITY', int );

Sets the probability of running maintenance (garbage collection) tasks - approximately 1 in n requests, n>=10.


  • Object groups that are global (not site-specific) in a multi-site/network environment:
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_GLOBAL_GROUPS', [ 'groupA', 'groupB', ... ] );

Global object groups are not tagged with or separated by the site/blog id.

* WordPress already defines several global groups that do not need to be duplicated here, rather the groups entered here are added to those defined by WordPress.


  • Object groups that should not be stored in the persistent cache:
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_NON_PERSISTENT_GROUPS', [ 'groupA', 'groupB', ... ] );

Non-persistent groups are object groups that do not persist across page loads. This may be another method to alleviate issues caused by cache persistence or to improve performance by limiting cache data.

* WordPress already defines several non-persistent groups that do not need to be duplicated here, rather the groups entered here are added to those defined by WordPress.


  • Object groups that are allowed permanence:
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PERMANENT_GROUPS', [ 'groupA', 'groupB', ... ] );

When setting a default expiration (EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DEFAULT_EXPIRE) for objects without an expiration, these groups are excluded from using the default, allowing them to be permanent (with no expiration). Transients and site-transients are automatically included.


  • To pre-fetch specific object groups from the L2 cache at startup:
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PREFETCH_GROUPS', [ 'groupA', 'groupB', ... ] );

Pre-fetching a group of records may be much faster than loading each key individually, but may load keys that are not needed, using memory unnecessarily.


  • To prevent outside actors (scripts, plugins, etc.), including WordPress, from flushing caches.
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_FLUSH', true );
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_FULL_FLUSH', true );
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_GROUP_FLUSH', true );
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_BLOG_FLUSH', true );
    define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_RUNTIME_FLUSH', true );

  • To disable the importing and/or exporting of transients:
	define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_TRANSIENT_IMPORT', true );
	define( 'EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_DISABLE_TRANSIENT_EXPORT', true );

Utility methods

  • Outputs an html table of current stats. Use $wp_object_cache->statsCSS to style.
    $wp_object_cache->htmlStats();
  • Outputs an html table of current stats similar to that generated by the default WordPress object cache.
    $wp_object_cache->stats();
  • Returns an array of current stats.
    $cacheStats = $wp_object_cache->getStats();
  • Returns an array of stats from the last sample saved (or current).
    $cacheStats = $wp_object_cache->getLastSample();

Optional runtime settings

  • Delay writing to database until shutdown or n pending records (see delayed writes).
    $wp_object_cache->delayed_writes = true | false | n;
  • Samples (every n requests) & outputs an admin notice with htmlStats().
    $wp_object_cache->display_stats = n;
  • Change the default expiration time for objects with no expiration.
    $wp_object_cache->default_expire = n;
  • Outputs an administrator notice on error.
    $wp_object_cache->display_errors = true;
  • Log errors to {eac}Doojigger log.
    $wp_object_cache->log_errors = true;

Group Name Attributes

Specifying group attributes can be done in two ways:

  1. Using the wp_cache_add_global_groups(), wp_cache_add_non_persistent_groups(), wp_cache_add_permanent_groups() and wp_cache_add_prefetch_groups() functions.

  2. By adding group names to the EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_GLOBAL_GROUPS, EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_NON_PERSISTENT_GROUPS, EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PERMANENT_GROUPS and EAC_OBJECT_CACHE_PREFETCH_GROUPS constants in wp-config.php.

Now, in addition, a developer can set the attribute by adding a suffix to the group name when storing and accessing the object.

  • Global group - {group}:sitewide
  • Non-Persistent group - {group}:nocaching
  • Permanent group - {group}:permanent
  • Prefetch group - {group}:prefetch

Adding a group suffix makes the group distinct (i.e. {group} <> {group}:sitewide). Multiple attributes are not supported.

WP Cache Functions

Implemented Standard and Non-Standard WP-Cache API Functions:

wp_cache_init()

wp_cache_add( $key, $data, $group = '', $expire = 0 )

wp_cache_add_multiple( array $data, $group = '', $expire = 0 )

wp_cache_replace( $key, $data, $group = '', $expire = 0 )

wp_cache_replace_multiple( array $data, $group = '', $expire = 0 )

wp_cache_set( $key, $data, $group = '', $expire = 0 )

wp_cache_set_multiple( array $data, $group = '', $expire = 0 )

wp_cache_get( $key, $group = '', $force = false, &$found = null )

wp_cache_get_multiple( $keys, $group = '', $force = false )

wp_cache_get_group( $group )

wp_cache_delete( $key, $group = '' )

wp_cache_delete_multiple( array $keys, $group = '' )

wp_cache_delete_group( $group )

wp_cache_incr( $key, $offset = 1, $group = '' )

wp_cache_decr( $key, $offset = 1, $group = '' )

wp_cache_flush()

wp_cache_flush_runtime()

wp_cache_flush_group( $group )

wp_cache_flush_blog( $blog_id = null )

wp_cache_supports( $feature )

wp_cache_close()

wp_cache_add_global_groups( $groups )

wp_cache_add_non_persistent_groups( $groups )

wp_cache_add_permanent_groups( $groups )

wp_cache_add_prefetch_groups( $groups )

wp_cache_add_group_expire( $groups )

wp_cache_switch_to_blog( $blog_id )

Examples

    /*
     * add custom groups to global (not blog-specific)
     */
    wp_cache_add_global_groups( [ 'ridiculous', 'absurd' ] );

    /*
     * calculate the sum of all digits in Pi multiplied by each known prime number...
     *  only do this once a year (or when cache is cleared) 'cause it may take a while.
     */
    if ( ! $result = wp_cache_get('calculation_result','ridiculous') ) {
        $result = do_calculation();
        wp_cache_set( 'calculation_result', $result, 'ridiculous', YEAR_IN_SECONDS );
    }

    /*
     * get all objects in the 'ridiculous' group.
     */
    if (wp_cache_supports( 'get_group' )) {
        $ridiculous = wp_cache_get_group( 'ridiculous' );
    }

    /*
     * erase the 'ridiculous' group
     */
    wp_cache_flush_group( 'ridiculous' );

    /*
     * erase the cache for this blog only (multisite)
     */
    if (wp_cache_supports( 'flush_blog' )) {
        wp_cache_flush_blog();
    }

    /*
     * using a group suffix to make the group global (site-wide).
     */
    if ( ! $result = wp_cache_get('my_query_result','my_query_group:sitewide') ) {
        $result = $wpdb->query( $wpdb->prepare( 'SELECT...' ) );
        wp_cache_set( 'my_query_result', $result, 'my_query_group:sitewide', DAY_IN_SECONDS );
    }

    /*
     * set a default expiration time by group
     */
    if (wp_cache_supports( 'group_expire' )) {
        wp_cache_add_group_expire( [ 
            'comment-queries'		=> WEEK_IN_SECONDS,
            'site-queries'			=> WEEK_IN_SECONDS,
            'network-queries'		=> WEEK_IN_SECONDS,
            'post-queries'			=> WEEK_IN_SECONDS,
            'term-queries'			=> WEEK_IN_SECONDS,
            'user-queries'			=> WEEK_IN_SECONDS,
        ] );
    }

Installation

{eac}ObjectCache is an extension plugin to and is fully functional with installation and registration of {eac}Doojigger.

However, the core object-cache.php file may be installed without {eac}Doojigger (referred to as 'detached' mode).

In detached mode, the plugin will attempt to copy the object-cache.php file to the /wp-content folder on activation, or you may manually copy the object-cache.php file from the plugin /src folder to the /wp-content folder to activate. Options can then be set using the documented PHP constants in the wp-config.php file.

Automatic Plugin Installation

This plugin is available from the WordPress Plugin Repository and can be installed from the WordPress Dashboard » Plugins » Add New page. Search for 'EarthAsylum', click the plugin's [Install] button and, once installed, click [Activate].

See Managing Plugins -> Automatic Plugin Installation

Upload via WordPress Dashboard

Installation of this plugin can be managed from the WordPress Dashboard » Plugins » Add New page. Click the [Upload Plugin] button, then select the eacobjectcache.zip file from your computer.

See Managing Plugins -> Upload via WordPress Admin

Manual Plugin Installation

You can install the plugin manually by extracting the eacobjectcache.zip file and uploading the 'eacobjectcache' folder to the 'wp-content/plugins' folder on your WordPress server.

See Managing Plugins -> Manual Plugin Installation

Settings

Once installed and activated, options for this extension will show in the 'Object Cache' tab of {eac}Doojigger settings.

Screenshots

  1. Object Cache {eac}ObjectCache

  2. Object Cache (Advanced Options) {eac}ObjectCache Advanced

  3. Object Cache (Cache Stats) {eac}ObjectCache Stats

Other Notes

Additional Information

{eac}ObjectCache is an extension plugin to and is fully functional with installation and registration of {eac}Doojigger.

However, the core object-cache.php file may be installed without {eac}Doojigger - referred to as 'detached' mode.

In detached mode, the plugin will attempt to copy the object-cache.php file to the /wp-content folder on activation, or you may manually copy the object-cache.php file from the plugin /src folder to the /wp-content folder to activate. Options can then be set using the documented PHP constants in the wp-config.php file.

See Also

{eac}KeyValue - An easy to use, efficient, key-value pair storage mechanism for WordPress that takes advatage of the WP Object Cache.

About

{eac}ObjectCache - A WordPress drop-in persistent object cache using a SQLite database

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