Use a local cache file, and just check the existence and modification time on the file before you use it. For example, if $cache_file
is a local cache filename:
if (file_exists($cache_file) && (filemtime($cache_file) > (time() - 60 * 5 ))) {
// Cache file is less than five minutes old.
// Don't bother refreshing, just use the file as-is.
$file = file_get_contents($cache_file);
} else {
// Our cache is out-of-date, so load the data from our remote server,
// and also save it over our cache for next time.
$file = file_get_contents($url);
file_put_contents($cache_file, $file, LOCK_EX);
}
(Untested, but based on code I use at the moment.)
Either way through this code, $file ends up as the data you need, and it'll either use the cache if it's fresh, or grab the data from the remote server and refresh the cache if not.
EDIT: I understand a bit more about file locking since I wrote the above. It might be worth having a read of this answer if you're concerned about the file locking here.
If you're concerned about locking and concurrent access, I'd say the cleanest solution would be to file_put_contents to a temporary file, then rename()
it over $cache_file
, which should be an atomic operation, i.e. the $cache_file
will either be the old contents or the full new contents, never halfway written.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…