Home Backend Development PHP Tutorial Optimization practice of a PHP application_PHP tutorial

Optimization practice of a PHP application_PHP tutorial

Jul 13, 2016 pm 05:53 PM
php optimization practice use of still Pass

I recently reviewed an optimization practice I did before and found that some common optimization methods can still be reused. As the system runs for a long time, there will always be problems and bottlenecks of one kind or another. It’s not scary to have problems. We have something to do with "beating the tiger" - it’s nothing more than locating the problem ->analyzing the problem->proposing a solution ->Practice->Result feedback->Summary and then optimize.
Problem description: The system was developed using PHP5 + Zend framework. After the data scale and access volume increased (tens of millions), the background apache server load became too high. During peak access hours (such as the period from get off work to 10pm every day) (especially on Friday), the machine CPU load will soar to more than 170. The high CPU load causes the processing of requests to slow down accordingly, so this problem needs to be solved urgently.
Problem analysis: After several consecutive days of observation and analysis, when the CPU usage reaches 100%, the system CPU usage accounts for a large proportion, and the user CPU usage is not very high. In addition, the front-end haproxy and squid cache CPUs The load is very low, and the hit ratio of memcached and Squid can generally reach about 60%.
Analyzing the backend's access-log, we found that a large portion of requested User-Agents are search crawlers;
At the same time, xdebug was configured on apache, and a set of performance data was measured on the main pages during the idle period. By using kcachegrind to analyze the measured data (how to configure xdebug, you can search with soso) and found:
The performance data is not stable enough, and the test data will vary greatly between the same requests
The slow points are scattered
In most cases, memcached access is relatively slow (more than 100ms)
Solution Through the above preliminary analysis, a series of adjustments were gradually made to the existing procedures.
The first thing to consider is whether we can find a way to increase the Hit ratio of the front-end Squid cache, thereby reducing the number of requests that penetrate Squid and reach the back-end Apache.
Considering that a considerable number of requests originate from Crawler, previously Squid cache would only cache requests with a language cookie set, and requests from Crawler did not have cookie information. So I thought of defaulting all requests from Crawler to the language of zh_CN, and then modifying the configuration of haproxy to transfer all requests from common Crawler with User-Agent to squid cache.
Modify the php code and set the cache time of some pages to be longer
After the above two steps, the number of requests reaching apache has indeed been reduced, but this does little to help the problem of excessive CPU load, so I looked for another method.
Secondly, according to the results of using xdebug profiling, the interaction with memcached takes a long time, so I wonder if I can find a way to make memcached respond to requests faster, so that each request can be completed faster, thereby reducing concurrency.
Through code analysis, it was found that online memcached uses poll(), and the number of memcached connections remains around 1,000 during busy times, and memcached's CPU usage is around 30%. Obviously, the poll() method is very inefficient when handling so many concurrent connections. So I recompiled memcached to use epoll() to process requests. After replacing it with epoll, memcached's cpu usage dropped from about 30% to about 3%, which is 10 times!
In addition, the hit ratio of memcached is not particularly high, and the number of items swapped out is also relatively high, so I thought of partitioning the contents of the cache. I originally planned to do manual partitioning, but later I found that the latest memcache extension of PHP can support cache-based partitioning. The key is automatically partitioned, and new memcached instances can be added without modifying the program code (need to modify the configuration file:-)). So I upgraded the php memcache extension of each apache, and then added a new memcached to the configuration file. This completes the content partition of memcached. The effect after the modification is more significant, and the loading time of the page is much shorter than before the modification.
After these two steps of adjustment, the efficiency of memcached is higher than before, but the load of apache is still high. I have no choice but to think of other solutions!
Further in-depth analysis mentioned earlier that the CPU usage of the main system is very high. To find the reason, we can only go deep into the kernel:) From now on, our strace journey begins. To paraphrase a Nike advertising slogan: Just strace it!
Strace was performed on the httpd process during peak hours, using the following methods
strace -p PID -c gives summary
strace -p PID -o output.log Write to file and study slowly
strace -p PID -e trace=file Only look at syscalls related to filesystem operations
strace -p PID -elstat64,stat64,open,getcwd only traces these syscalls

From the above strace analysis, the following conclusions are drawn:
lstat64, stat64, open, etc. There are so many syscalls
The above syscalls do take up a lot of time! More than 60% of the time is robbed by them, orz
The vast majority of syscalls fail. It’s really a case of repeated failure
With the above data, we have found the direction of the problem, which is to find where these meaningless system calls come from.
After analysis, when PHP wants to load a certain class, it will search for the files corresponding to the class in a series of directories defined in include_path, and try each directory until it is found. Well, this method is obviously relatively inefficient. Is there a better way to accomplish this? The answer is yes, there is! And there’s more than one way!
When calling require_once(), write the absolute path as the parameter (Guys write Zend Framework didn’t understand this at first; it was updated later))
Use __autoload() to lazy load the class, which means that it will be loaded only when it is really needed, instead of requiring_once all the class files that may be used.
The problem has been found, but there is another problem to solve. Pay attention to using absolute paths in the code during development. The only thing that can be improved is to change it to lazy loading. However, a large number of require_once in Zend Framework use relative paths, which causes problems - the problem I am talking about here is the CPU load we are talking about in this article. The root cause of the excessive problem.
OK, now that the problem is found, let’s solve it. Write a script to automatically generate the Class -> File Path correspondence, and generate the correspondence files between all classes in the code and all classes in Zend Framework. Comment out all require_once in the code and in the Zend Framework library. Then conduct detailed testing before going live. The results were astonishing, the load dropped to within 3! ! Problem solved.
Summary:
Anyone who writes code knows that there will always be problems wherever there may be problems. There will be a cause for any problem (even if it is not found yet). Solving it from the root is the best way. It doesn’t matter what problem is solved. I hope everyone can learn this solution. Ideas and good use of tools. ok, that’s it for this case.

www.bkjia.comtruehttp: //www.bkjia.com/PHPjc/478024.htmlTechArticleAn optimization practice I did before. I recently checked it out and found that some common optimization methods can still be reused. . When the system runs for a long time, there will always be problems and bottlenecks of one kind or another,...
Statement of this Website
The content of this article is voluntarily contributed by netizens, and the copyright belongs to the original author. This site does not assume corresponding legal responsibility. If you find any content suspected of plagiarism or infringement, please contact admin@php.cn

Hot AI Tools

Undresser.AI Undress

Undresser.AI Undress

AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover

AI Clothes Remover

Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Undress AI Tool

Undress AI Tool

Undress images for free

Clothoff.io

Clothoff.io

AI clothes remover

Video Face Swap

Video Face Swap

Swap faces in any video effortlessly with our completely free AI face swap tool!

Hot Tools

Notepad++7.3.1

Notepad++7.3.1

Easy-to-use and free code editor

SublimeText3 Chinese version

SublimeText3 Chinese version

Chinese version, very easy to use

Zend Studio 13.0.1

Zend Studio 13.0.1

Powerful PHP integrated development environment

Dreamweaver CS6

Dreamweaver CS6

Visual web development tools

SublimeText3 Mac version

SublimeText3 Mac version

God-level code editing software (SublimeText3)

PHP 8.4 Installation and Upgrade guide for Ubuntu and Debian PHP 8.4 Installation and Upgrade guide for Ubuntu and Debian Dec 24, 2024 pm 04:42 PM

PHP 8.4 brings several new features, security improvements, and performance improvements with healthy amounts of feature deprecations and removals. This guide explains how to install PHP 8.4 or upgrade to PHP 8.4 on Ubuntu, Debian, or their derivati

How To Set Up Visual Studio Code (VS Code) for PHP Development How To Set Up Visual Studio Code (VS Code) for PHP Development Dec 20, 2024 am 11:31 AM

Visual Studio Code, also known as VS Code, is a free source code editor — or integrated development environment (IDE) — available for all major operating systems. With a large collection of extensions for many programming languages, VS Code can be c

7 PHP Functions I Regret I Didn't Know Before 7 PHP Functions I Regret I Didn't Know Before Nov 13, 2024 am 09:42 AM

If you are an experienced PHP developer, you might have the feeling that you’ve been there and done that already.You have developed a significant number of applications, debugged millions of lines of code, and tweaked a bunch of scripts to achieve op

Explain JSON Web Tokens (JWT) and their use case in PHP APIs. Explain JSON Web Tokens (JWT) and their use case in PHP APIs. Apr 05, 2025 am 12:04 AM

JWT is an open standard based on JSON, used to securely transmit information between parties, mainly for identity authentication and information exchange. 1. JWT consists of three parts: Header, Payload and Signature. 2. The working principle of JWT includes three steps: generating JWT, verifying JWT and parsing Payload. 3. When using JWT for authentication in PHP, JWT can be generated and verified, and user role and permission information can be included in advanced usage. 4. Common errors include signature verification failure, token expiration, and payload oversized. Debugging skills include using debugging tools and logging. 5. Performance optimization and best practices include using appropriate signature algorithms, setting validity periods reasonably,

How do you parse and process HTML/XML in PHP? How do you parse and process HTML/XML in PHP? Feb 07, 2025 am 11:57 AM

This tutorial demonstrates how to efficiently process XML documents using PHP. XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is a versatile text-based markup language designed for both human readability and machine parsing. It's commonly used for data storage an

PHP Program to Count Vowels in a String PHP Program to Count Vowels in a String Feb 07, 2025 pm 12:12 PM

A string is a sequence of characters, including letters, numbers, and symbols. This tutorial will learn how to calculate the number of vowels in a given string in PHP using different methods. The vowels in English are a, e, i, o, u, and they can be uppercase or lowercase. What is a vowel? Vowels are alphabetic characters that represent a specific pronunciation. There are five vowels in English, including uppercase and lowercase: a, e, i, o, u Example 1 Input: String = "Tutorialspoint" Output: 6 explain The vowels in the string "Tutorialspoint" are u, o, i, a, o, i. There are 6 yuan in total

Explain late static binding in PHP (static::). Explain late static binding in PHP (static::). Apr 03, 2025 am 12:04 AM

Static binding (static::) implements late static binding (LSB) in PHP, allowing calling classes to be referenced in static contexts rather than defining classes. 1) The parsing process is performed at runtime, 2) Look up the call class in the inheritance relationship, 3) It may bring performance overhead.

What are PHP magic methods (__construct, __destruct, __call, __get, __set, etc.) and provide use cases? What are PHP magic methods (__construct, __destruct, __call, __get, __set, etc.) and provide use cases? Apr 03, 2025 am 12:03 AM

What are the magic methods of PHP? PHP's magic methods include: 1.\_\_construct, used to initialize objects; 2.\_\_destruct, used to clean up resources; 3.\_\_call, handle non-existent method calls; 4.\_\_get, implement dynamic attribute access; 5.\_\_set, implement dynamic attribute settings. These methods are automatically called in certain situations, improving code flexibility and efficiency.

See all articles