By the way, some Apache configurations already include the REQUEST_MICROTIME
parameter
Errr... I mean, REQUEST_TIME.
Regards,
- Nicolas
Nicolas Grevet wrote:
[...] but a simple timer could be build as a
Zend_Controller_Plugin where in the routeStartup() you set a parameter
to the value of mi
[...] but a simple timer could be build as a
Zend_Controller_Plugin where in the routeStartup() you set a parameter
to the value of microtime and then at the end of your layout, subtract
the value from routeStartup() from the current value of microtime().
Yeah, except that the routeStartup() is
If you're looking to detect slow database queries so that you know
where to target further profiling efforts, you should probably start
by looking Zend_Db_Profiler. It will allow you to time each query and
optionally filter the results so you only display those that pass a
specified time threshold
Hi Guys
I'm developing a web app using the Zend Framework and want to be able to
measure my page load times so that I can tweak my database queries and
caching to maximum effect.
Essentially, all I'm looking for is a string at the bottom of every page
saying: page generated in
Cheers guys