Description
What is Late Caching?
Have you ever felt that a page having RSS feeds loads relatively slow when it renews their caches?
The current implementation of the WordPress built-in feed caching mechanism renews the cache during the page load when it is expired. When this happens, it takes some time to load while the server accesses the external feed source. This is noticeable for site visitors in most cases and they may leave the site unless they are patient enough.
What this plugin does is to put off the refresh process and to make it done later in the background process.
Immediate Caching (WordPress Default Behavior):
- A page loads and detects a feed is expired.
- Fetches new contents of the feed.
- Displays them.
The step 2 above takes time and noticeable to the viewer.
Late Caching:
- A page loads and detects a feed is expired.
- Schedules a cache renewal event in the background.
- Displays the expired contents.
- The cache gets renewed in the background and the updated contents are displayed in the next page load.
1.0.2 – 2018/11/02
- Fixed a bug with multiple feed urls passed to
fetch_feed()
.
1.0.1 – 2018/10/30
- Fixed redundant function calls.
1.0.0 – 2018/10/29
- Released initially.
Installation
Install
- Upload
0-delay-late-caching-for-feeds.php
and other files compressed in the zip folder to the/wp-content/plugins/
directory. - Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress.
Getting Started
- Only activation is required to run this plugin.
FAQ
- What happens when a feed is loaded for the first time?
-
For the first time of loading, it fetches the contents normally and return them after that.
Reviews
There are no reviews for this plugin.
Contributors & Developers
“Late Caching for Feeds” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
ContributorsTranslate “Late Caching for Feeds” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.