• Resolved monitor

    (@oomskaap)


    Hi, I am a bit confused. Your plugin describes perfectly what we need on our site, which has a lot of dynamic sidebars.

    Using any other caching plugin renders the site useless because it caches every single page.

    I don’t understand the warning:

    This plugin can’t be activated without a persistent cache.

    because if you use any of the persistent cache plugins, it caches everything, so it defeats the purpose of have an additional plugin that caches page fragments?

    https://wordpress.org/plugins/wp-fragment-cache/

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Plugin Author mariuspass

    (@mariuspass)

    This plugin can’t be activated without a persistent cache.

    Did you follow the link? You need a persistent cache of WP Object Cache. A simple excerpt from the WP Object Cache page:

    By default, the object cache is non-persistent. This means that data stored in the cache resides in memory only and only for the duration of the request. Cached data will not be stored persistently across page loads unless you install a persistent caching plugin.

    Plugin Author mariuspass

    (@mariuspass)

    I’ve improved the description of the persistent cache requirement to avoid any confusion.

    Also once you install w3 total cache and activate it, you still have to enable object caching within the plugin.

    Thanks mariuspass !

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • The topic ‘Persistant cache paradox’ is closed to new replies.