Introduction
Some of the data retrieval or processing tasks performed by your application could be CPU intensive or take several seconds to complete. When this is the case, it is common to cache the retrieved data for a time so it can be retrieved quickly on subsequent requests for the same data. The cached data is usually stored in a very fast data store such as Memcached or Redis.
Thankfully, Laravel provides an expressive, unified API for various cache backends, allowing you to take advantage of their blazing fast data retrieval and speed up your web application.
Configuration
Your application's cache configuration file is located at
config/cache.php
. In this file, you may specify which cache
driver you would like to be used by default throughout your application.
Laravel supports popular caching backends like Memcached, Redis, DynamoDB, and relational
databases out of the box. In addition, a file based cache driver is
available, while array
and "null" cache drivers provide
convenient cache backends for your automated tests.
The cache configuration file also contains various other options,
which are documented within the file, so make sure to read over these
options. By default, Laravel is configured to use the file
cache driver, which stores the serialized, cached objects on the
server's filesystem. For larger applications, it is recommended that you
use a more robust driver such as Memcached or Redis. You may even
configure multiple cache configurations for the same driver.
Driver Prerequisites
Database
When using the database
cache driver, you will need to
set up a table to contain the cache items. You'll find an example
Schema
declaration for the table below:
Schema::create('cache', function ($table) {
$table->string('key')->unique();
$table->text('value');
$table->integer('expiration');
});
Note:
You may also use thephp artisan cache:table
Artisan command to generate a migration with the proper schema.
Memcached
Using the Memcached driver requires the Memcached PECL package
to be installed. You may list all of your Memcached servers in the
config/cache.php
configuration file. This file already
contains a memcached.servers
entry to get you started:
'memcached' => [
'servers' => [
[
'host' => env('MEMCACHED_HOST', '127.0.0.1'),
'port' => env('MEMCACHED_PORT', 11211),
'weight' => 100,
],
],
],
If needed, you may set the host
option to a UNIX socket
path. If you do this, the port
option should be set to
0
:
'memcached' => [
[
'host' => '/var/run/memcached/memcached.sock',
'port' => 0,
'weight' => 100
],
],
Redis
Before using a Redis cache with Laravel, you will need to either
install the PhpRedis PHP extension via PECL or install the
predis/predis
package (~1.0) via Composer. Laravel Sail already includes this extension. In
addition, official Laravel deployment platforms such as Laravel Forge and Laravel Vapor have the PhpRedis
extension installed by default.
For more information on configuring Redis, consult its Laravel documentation page.
DynamoDB
Before using the DynamoDB cache driver, you
must create a DynamoDB table to store all of the cached data. Typically,
this table should be named cache
. However, you should name
the table based on the value of the stores.dynamodb.table
configuration value within your application's cache
configuration file.
This table should also have a string partition key with a name that
corresponds to the value of the
stores.dynamodb.attributes.key
configuration item within
your application's cache
configuration file. By default,
the partition key should be named key
.
Cache Usage
Obtaining A Cache Instance
To obtain a cache store instance, you may use the Cache
facade, which is what we will use throughout this documentation. The
Cache
facade provides convenient, terse access to the
underlying implementations of the Laravel cache contracts:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Cache;
class UserController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show a list of all users of the application.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function index()
{
$value = Cache::get('key');
//
}
}
Accessing Multiple Cache Stores
Using the Cache
facade, you may access various cache
stores via the store
method. The key passed to the
store
method should correspond to one of the stores listed
in the stores
configuration array in your
cache
configuration file:
$value = Cache::store('file')->get('foo');
Cache::store('redis')->put('bar', 'baz', 600); // 10 Minutes
Retrieving Items From The Cache
The Cache
facade's get
method is used to
retrieve items from the cache. If the item does not exist in the cache,
null
will be returned. If you wish, you may pass a second
argument to the get
method specifying the default value you
wish to be returned if the item doesn't exist:
$value = Cache::get('key');
$value = Cache::get('key', 'default');
You may even pass a closure as the default value. The result of the closure will be returned if the specified item does not exist in the cache. Passing a closure allows you to defer the retrieval of default values from a database or other external service:
$value = Cache::get('key', function () {
return DB::table(/* ... */)->get();
});
Checking For Item Existence
The has
method may be used to determine if an item
exists in the cache. This method will also return false
if
the item exists but its value is null
:
if (Cache::has('key')) {
//
}
Incrementing / Decrementing Values
The increment
and decrement
methods may be
used to adjust the value of integer items in the cache. Both of these
methods accept an optional second argument indicating the amount by
which to increment or decrement the item's value:
Cache::increment('key');
Cache::increment('key', $amount);
Cache::decrement('key');
Cache::decrement('key', $amount);
Retrieve & Store
Sometimes you may wish to retrieve an item from the cache, but also
store a default value if the requested item doesn't exist. For example,
you may wish to retrieve all users from the cache or, if they don't
exist, retrieve them from the database and add them to the cache. You
may do this using the Cache::remember
method:
$value = Cache::remember('users', $seconds, function () {
return DB::table('users')->get();
});
If the item does not exist in the cache, the closure passed to the
remember
method will be executed and its result will be
placed in the cache.
You may use the rememberForever
method to retrieve an
item from the cache or store it forever if it does not exist:
$value = Cache::rememberForever('users', function () {
return DB::table('users')->get();
});
Retrieve & Delete
If you need to retrieve an item from the cache and then delete the
item, you may use the pull
method. Like the
get
method, null
will be returned if the item
does not exist in the cache:
$value = Cache::pull('key');
Storing Items In The Cache
You may use the put
method on the Cache
facade to store items in the cache:
Cache::put('key', 'value', $seconds = 10);
If the storage time is not passed to the put
method, the
item will be stored indefinitely:
Cache::put('key', 'value');
Instead of passing the number of seconds as an integer, you may also
pass a DateTime
instance representing the desired
expiration time of the cached item:
Cache::put('key', 'value', now()->addMinutes(10));
Store If Not Present
The add
method will only add the item to the cache if it
does not already exist in the cache store. The method will return
true
if the item is actually added to the cache. Otherwise,
the method will return false
. The add
method
is an atomic operation:
Cache::add('key', 'value', $seconds);
Storing Items Forever
The forever
method may be used to store an item in the
cache permanently. Since these items will not expire, they must be
manually removed from the cache using the forget
method:
Cache::forever('key', 'value');
Note:
If you are using the Memcached driver, items that are stored "forever" may be removed when the cache reaches its size limit.
Removing Items From The Cache
You may remove items from the cache using the forget
method:
Cache::forget('key');
You may also remove items by providing a zero or negative number of expiration seconds:
Cache::put('key', 'value', 0);
Cache::put('key', 'value', -5);
You may clear the entire cache using the flush
method:
Cache::flush();
Warning!!
Flushing the cache does not respect your configured cache "prefix" and will remove all entries from the cache. Consider this carefully when clearing a cache which is shared by other applications.
The Cache Helper
In addition to using the Cache
facade, you may also use
the global cache
function to retrieve and store data via
the cache. When the cache
function is called with a single,
string argument, it will return the value of the given key:
$value = cache('key');
If you provide an array of key / value pairs and an expiration time to the function, it will store values in the cache for the specified duration:
cache(['key' => 'value'], $seconds);
cache(['key' => 'value'], now()->addMinutes(10));
When the cache
function is called without any arguments,
it returns an instance of the
Illuminate\Contracts\Cache\Factory
implementation, allowing
you to call other caching methods:
cache()->remember('users', $seconds, function () {
return DB::table('users')->get();
});
Note:
When testing call to the globalcache
function, you may use theCache::shouldReceive
method just as if you were testing the facade.
Cache Tags
Warning!!
Cache tags are not supported when using thefile
,dynamodb
, ordatabase
cache drivers. Furthermore, when using multiple tags with caches that are stored "forever", performance will be best with a driver such asmemcached
, which automatically purges stale records.
Storing Tagged Cache Items
Cache tags allow you to tag related items in the cache and then flush
all cached values that have been assigned a given tag. You may access a
tagged cache by passing in an ordered array of tag names. For example,
let's access a tagged cache and put
a value into the
cache:
Cache::tags(['people', 'artists'])->put('John', $john, $seconds);
Cache::tags(['people', 'authors'])->put('Anne', $anne, $seconds);
Accessing Tagged Cache Items
Items stored via tags may not be accessed without also providing the
tags that were used to store the value. To retrieve a tagged cache item,
pass the same ordered list of tags to the tags
method and
then call the get
method with the key you wish to
retrieve:
$john = Cache::tags(['people', 'artists'])->get('John');
$anne = Cache::tags(['people', 'authors'])->get('Anne');
Removing Tagged Cache Items
You may flush all items that are assigned a tag or list of tags. For
example, this statement would remove all caches tagged with either
people
, authors
, or both. So, both
Anne
and John
would be removed from the
cache:
Cache::tags(['people', 'authors'])->flush();
In contrast, this statement would remove only cached values tagged
with authors
, so Anne
would be removed, but
not John
:
Cache::tags('authors')->flush();
Atomic Locks
Warning!!
To utilize this feature, your application must be using thememcached
,redis
,dynamodb
,database
,file
, orarray
cache driver as your application's default cache driver. In addition, all servers must be communicating with the same central cache server.
Driver Prerequisites
Database
When using the database
cache driver, you will need to
setup a table to contain your application's cache locks. You'll find an
example Schema
declaration for the table below:
Schema::create('cache_locks', function ($table) {
$table->string('key')->primary();
$table->string('owner');
$table->integer('expiration');
});
Managing Locks
Atomic locks allow for the manipulation of distributed locks without
worrying about race conditions. For example, Laravel Forge uses atomic locks to
ensure that only one remote task is being executed on a server at a
time. You may create and manage locks using the Cache::lock
method:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Cache;
$lock = Cache::lock('foo', 10);
if ($lock->get()) {
// Lock acquired for 10 seconds...
$lock->release();
}
The get
method also accepts a closure. After the closure
is executed, Laravel will automatically release the lock:
Cache::lock('foo', 10)->get(function () {
// Lock acquired for 10 seconds and automatically released...
});
If the lock is not available at the moment you request it, you may
instruct Laravel to wait for a specified number of seconds. If the lock
can not be acquired within the specified time limit, an
Illuminate\Contracts\Cache\LockTimeoutException
will be
thrown:
use Illuminate\Contracts\Cache\LockTimeoutException;
$lock = Cache::lock('foo', 10);
try {
$lock->block(5);
// Lock acquired after waiting a maximum of 5 seconds...
} catch (LockTimeoutException $e) {
// Unable to acquire lock...
} finally {
optional($lock)->release();
}
The example above may be simplified by passing a closure to the
block
method. When a closure is passed to this method,
Laravel will attempt to acquire the lock for the specified number of
seconds and will automatically release the lock once the closure has
been executed:
Cache::lock('foo', 10)->block(5, function () {
// Lock acquired after waiting a maximum of 5 seconds...
});
Managing Locks Across Processes
Sometimes, you may wish to acquire a lock in one process and release it in another process. For example, you may acquire a lock during a web request and wish to release the lock at the end of a queued job that is triggered by that request. In this scenario, you should pass the lock's scoped "owner token" to the queued job so that the job can re-instantiate the lock using the given token.
In the example below, we will dispatch a queued job if a lock is
successfully acquired. In addition, we will pass the lock's owner token
to the queued job via the lock's owner
method:
$podcast = Podcast::find($id);
$lock = Cache::lock('processing', 120);
if ($lock->get()) {
ProcessPodcast::dispatch($podcast, $lock->owner());
}
Within our application's ProcessPodcast
job, we can
restore and release the lock using the owner token:
Cache::restoreLock('processing', $this->owner)->release();
If you would like to release a lock without respecting its current
owner, you may use the forceRelease
method:
Cache::lock('processing')->forceRelease();
Adding Custom Cache Drivers
Writing The Driver
To create our custom cache driver, we first need to implement the
Illuminate\Contracts\Cache\Store
contract. So, a MongoDB cache implementation
might look something like this:
<?php
namespace App\Extensions;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Cache\Store;
class MongoStore implements Store
{
public function get($key) {}
public function many(array $keys) {}
public function put($key, $value, $seconds) {}
public function putMany(array $values, $seconds) {}
public function increment($key, $value = 1) {}
public function decrement($key, $value = 1) {}
public function forever($key, $value) {}
public function forget($key) {}
public function flush() {}
public function getPrefix() {}
}
We just need to implement each of these methods using a MongoDB
connection. For an example of how to implement each of these methods,
take a look at the Illuminate\Cache\MemcachedStore
in the
Laravel framework source
code. Once our implementation is complete, we can finish our custom
driver registration by calling the Cache
facade's
extend
method:
Cache::extend('mongo', function ($app) {
return Cache::repository(new MongoStore);
});
Note:
If you're wondering where to put your custom cache driver code, you could create anExtensions
namespace within yourapp
directory. However, keep in mind that Laravel does not have a rigid application structure and you are free to organize your application according to your preferences.
Registering The Driver
To register the custom cache driver with Laravel, we will use the
extend
method on the Cache
facade. Since other
service providers may attempt to read cached values within their
boot
method, we will register our custom driver within a
booting
callback. By using the booting
callback, we can ensure that the custom driver is registered just before
the boot
method is called on our application's service
providers but after the register
method is called on all of
the service providers. We will register our booting
callback within the register
method of our application's
App\Providers\AppServiceProvider
class:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use App\Extensions\MongoStore;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Cache;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class CacheServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Register any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function register()
{
$this->app->booting(function () {
Cache::extend('mongo', function ($app) {
return Cache::repository(new MongoStore);
});
});
}
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
//
}
}
The first argument passed to the extend
method is the
name of the driver. This will correspond to your driver
option in the config/cache.php
configuration file. The
second argument is a closure that should return an
Illuminate\Cache\Repository
instance. The closure will be
passed an $app
instance, which is an instance of the service container.
Once your extension is registered, update your
config/cache.php
configuration file's driver
option to the name of your extension.
Events
To execute code on every cache operation, you may listen for the events fired by the cache. Typically, you should
place these event listeners within your application's
App\Providers\EventServiceProvider
class:
use App\Listeners\LogCacheHit;
use App\Listeners\LogCacheMissed;
use App\Listeners\LogKeyForgotten;
use App\Listeners\LogKeyWritten;
use Illuminate\Cache\Events\CacheHit;
use Illuminate\Cache\Events\CacheMissed;
use Illuminate\Cache\Events\KeyForgotten;
use Illuminate\Cache\Events\KeyWritten;
/**
* The event listener mappings for the application.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $listen = [
CacheHit::class => [
LogCacheHit::class,
],
CacheMissed::class => [
LogCacheMissed::class,
],
KeyForgotten::class => [
LogKeyForgotten::class,
],
KeyWritten::class => [
LogKeyWritten::class,
],
];