See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.
Tip
Take a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions, determine version and generate changelogs
See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.
Tip
Take a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions, determine version and generate changelogs
IMPORTANT: Read this before implementing one of the configuration files below (for either Varnish 3.x or 4.x+).
USE: Replace the contents of the main Varnish configuration file located in /etc/varnish/default.vcl (root server access required - obviously) with the contents of the configuration you'll use (depending on your Varnish version) from the 2 examples provided below.
IMPORTANT: The following setup assumes a 3 minute (180 sec) cache time. You can safely increase this to 5 mins for less busier sites or drop it to 1 min or even 30s for high traffic sites.
This configuration requires an HTTP Header and a user cookie to identify if a user is logged in a site, in order to bypass caching overall (see how it's done in the Joomla section). If your CMS provides a way to add these 2 requirements, then you can use this configuration to speed up your site or entire server. You can even exclude the domains you don't want to cach
varnishlog -g request -q 'ReqMethod eq "PURGE"' |
-- delete any usermeta specific to the other subsites | |
delete from wp_usermeta where meta_key regexp '^wp_([0-9]+)_'; | |
-- duplicate the wp_usermeta structure in a working data table, | |
-- but add a unique index for filtering out duplicates | |
create table _fix_usermeta like wp_usermeta; | |
-- fix to allow larger keys on InnoDB | |
set global innodb_large_prefix = 1; | |
set global innodb_file_format = BARRACUDA; | |
alter table _fix_usermeta ENGINE=InnoDB; |
#!/bin/bash | |
ps -C $1 -O rss | awk '{ count ++; sum += $2 }; END {count --; print "Number of processes =",count; print "Memory usage per process =",sum/1024/count, "MB"; print "Total memory usage =", sum/1024, "MB" ;};' |