APC dev config
[APC] | |
; Whether the CLI web server uses ANSI color coding in its terminal output. | |
apc.enabled=1 | |
apc.shm_segments=1 | |
apc.shm_size=256M | |
;Relative to the number of cached files (you may need to watch your stats for a day or two to find out a good number) | |
apc.num_files_hint=7000 | |
;Relative to the size of WordPress | |
apc.user_entries_hint=4096 | |
;The number of seconds a cache entry is allowed to idle in a slot before APC dumps the cache | |
apc.ttl=7200 | |
apc.user_ttl=7200 | |
apc.gc_ttl=3600 | |
;Setting this to 0 will give you the best performance, as APC will | |
;not have to check the IO for changes. However, you must clear | |
;the APC cache to recompile already cached files. If you are still | |
;developing, updating your site daily in WP-ADMIN, and running W3TC | |
;set this to 1 | |
apc.stat=1 | |
;This MUST be 0, WP can have errors otherwise! | |
apc.include_once_override=0 | |
;Only set to 1 while debugging | |
apc.enable_cli=0 | |
;Allow 2 seconds after a file is created before it is cached to prevent users from seeing half-written/weird pages | |
apc.file_update_protection=1 | |
;Leave at 2M or lower. WordPress does't have any file sizes close to 2M | |
apc.max_file_size=2M | |
;Ignore files | |
apc.filters = "apc.php" | |
apc.cache_by_default=1 | |
apc.use_request_time=1 | |
apc.slam_defense=0 | |
apc.mmap_file_mask=/var/www/temp/apc.XXXXXX | |
apc.stat_ctime=0 | |
apc.canonicalize=1 | |
apc.write_lock=1 | |
apc.report_autofilter=0 | |
apc.rfc1867=0 | |
apc.rfc1867_prefix =upload_ | |
apc.rfc1867_name=APC_UPLOAD_PROGRESS | |
apc.rfc1867_freq=0 | |
apc.rfc1867_ttl=3600 | |
apc.lazy_classes=0 | |
apc.lazy_functions=0 |
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