Darren Ethier (nerrad)
Forum Replies Created
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For fun I thought I’d do another test using the same setup as the first test bed above (just orgseries and p3 active, 2012 theme).
For this test I created a bunch of dummy posts so that I had one long series with 50 posts in it.
Here’s the results for Organize Series:
– percentage of load time: 94%
– time added to load time: 0.1934sThen I did the same test except with NO posts added to any series and here’s the results
– percentage of load time: 82%
– time added to load time: 0.0596sSo yes, having a series with a lot of posts in it will add time to the loading of pages displaying that series, but what’s interesting is that on OrganizeSeries.com I have multiple series, multiple addons running for Organize Series and multiple other plugins, all kinds of different series with varying lengths of posts in the series (I use Organize Series for documentation there) and I get the best results out of all tests!
Just thought I’d add, I didn’t add the above to dispute the results you posted but merely to illustrate that there’s a wide variety of factors that result in different results wherever p3 profiler is used to analyze a site.
My point is that the PERCENTAGE of load time is a misleading figure and not the one that you should go by. For instance,
I ran P3 profiler on a install of WP where just Organize Series and p3 Profiler were active, and the 2012 theme was active, and just a few series.
The results?
– Organize Series responsible for 87% of load time.
– Organize Series ADDED .0905 seconds to load time.Next test, I ran P3 profiler on OrganizeSeries.com which has all the organizeseries addons along with other plugins (a total of 34), multiple series throughout the site (including some relatively long ones).
The results?
– Organize Series responsible for 4% of load time.
– Organize Series ADDED .0252 seconds to load time.So my point is that the % of load time is misleading because it all depends on what you have running on your site along with Organize Series. The more helpful figure is how much time a plugin adds to the load time and as you can see Organize Series adds not as much time to the load time.
Also, the P3 profiler plugin is a great tool for initial checks on what may be adding unnecessary load time to a website but as you’ve seen yourself, is only a tool for beginning the search.
see my comments over in the reviews about this.
thanks for the review and rating!
Regarding resource usage. It depends on what you’re measuring Organize Series against. A more useful number is to give the amount of seconds(or micro seconds) Organize Series adds to page load time.
In my tests Organize Series accounted for 0.0572 seconds (avg) for site load time (using the p3 Plugin Profiler)
you can do this as per the template token descriptions listed in the series options page.
the feature as described in here is something being considered for a future release of orgseries.
as per the tweets back and forth with @organizeseries, it was determined that organize series isn’t the cause of the issues.
the usage as you described is not the intended purpose of this feature. However, you’re not alone in assuming it should work like this so we’re hoping to implement some changes in a future release.
2.4.6 has dropped and it should fix this bug.
Just a heads up that I’m packaging up a fix now and it’ll be released sometime in the next hour or so.
The problem was that WP added a new param to the
save_posthook and it broke my implementation of saving series on that hook.Thanks for reporting this. I’ve added this to our list of bugs and we’ll look into it.
I’m unable to reproduce the fatal error. What version PHP are you using?
Thanks for reporting this we’ll look into and if we can reproduce we’ll push a fix out.
You can try creating the extra parts as draft posts. That *might* do what you want it to do.