Book Image

CodeIgniter 2 Cookbook

By : Robert Foster
Book Image

CodeIgniter 2 Cookbook

By: Robert Foster

Overview of this book

As a developer, there are going to be times when you'll need a quick and easy solution to a coding problem. CodeIgniter is a powerful open source PHP framework which allows you to build simple yet powerful full-feature web applications. CodeIgniter 2 Cookbook will give you quick access to practical recipes and useful code snippets which you can add directly into your CodeIgniter application to get the job done. It contains over 80 ready-to-use recipes that you can quickly refer to within your CodeIgniter application or project.This book is your complete guide to creating fully functioning PHP web applications, full of easy-to-follow recipes that will aid you in any aspect of developing with CodeIgniter. CodeIgniter 2 Cookbook takes you from the basics of CodeIgniter, through e-commerce features for your applications, and ends by helping you ensure that your environment is secure for your users and SEO friendly to draw in customers. Starting with installation and setup, CodeIgniter 2 Cookbook provides quick solutions to programming problems that you can directly include in your own projects. You will be moving through databases, EU Cookie Law, caching, and everything else in-between with useful, ready-to-go recipes. You will look at image manipulation using the Image Manipulation library, user management (building a simple CRUD interface), switching languages on the fly according to the user preference, caching content to reduce server load, and much more.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
CodeIgniter 2 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Benchmarking your application


Benchmarking can be useful for you as it can let you know how your application is coping with the task of computing all your code. It can let you know where in your application something is slow, either because of memory constraints or perhaps because of a particularly computational intensive block of code. Using this information, you can identify whether there are any bottlenecks and if you are able to clear them, perhaps by reprogramming or allocating extra resources. Here's how it's done.

Getting ready

Many web applications will be linked to some sort of database and as an example of benchmarking database connectivity, we're going to query a database. To do that, we will obviously need a database to connect to. Copy the following MySQL code into your database:

CREATE TABLE `bench_table` (
  `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
  `firstname` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
  `lastname` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB  DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1...