We always call staticGet statically, so we define it statically. Next
step is to remove a bunch of definitions of 'staticGet' from classes
that can instead fall back to a parent class in Managed_DataObject.
The ampersand is removed as we're returning a class anyway, which does
not need a reference (and when we return false, it means nothing).
I was storing the full objects in the cache for the listGet()
function. I've changed it to store only pkeys, and use pivotGet() to
get all the corresponding values.
This also required changing pivotGet() so it can get objects with
multi-column pkeys, which complicated the whole thing quite a bit. But
it seems to work OK.
This method lets you get all the objects with a given variable key and
another set of "fixed" keys. A good example is getting all the avatars
for a notice list; the avatar size stays the same, but the IDs change.
Since it's very similar to multiGet(), I refactored that function to
use pivotGet().
And, yes, I realize these are kind of hard to follow.
like leprous boils in our code. So, I've replaced all of them with //
comments instead. It's a massive, meaningless, and potentially buggy
change -- great one for the middle of a release cycle, eh?
$config['site']['logperf'] = true; // to record & dump total hits of each type and the runtime to syslog
$config['site']['logperf_detail'] = true; // very verbose -- dump the individual cache keys and queries as they get used (may contain private info in some queries)
Seeing 180 cache gets on a timeline page seems not unusual currently; since these run in serial, even relatively small roundtrip times can add up heavily.
We should consider ways to reduce the number of round trips, such as more frequently storing compound objects or the output of processing in memcached.
Doing parallel multi-key lookups could also help by collapsing round-trip times, but might not be easy to fit into SN's object model. (For things like streams this should actually work pretty well -- grab the list, then when it's returned go grab all the individual items in parallel and return the list)
MySQL stores TIMESTAMP columns as UTC, but with a local time interface. (SRSLY?!) DATETIME columns are always bare and assumed to be local time, but we keep only UTC in them.
Forcing the session time_zone to UTC means we won't have to worry as much about what we're sending/receiving in there.
Also will let us remove the hack in master commit a7abb2323e for session tweaks
SubMirror: redid add-mirror frontend to accept a feed URL, then pass that on to OStatus, instead of pulling from your subscriptions.
Profile: tweaked subscriberCount() so it doesn't subtract 1 for foreign profiles who aren't subscribed to themselves; instead excludes the self-subscription in the count query.
Memcached_DataObject: tweak to avoid extra error spew in the DB error raising
Work in progress: tweaking feedsub garbage collection so we can count other uses