RabbitLoader Cache
RabbitLoader is a WordPress cache plugin that helps speed up your WordPress and WooCommerce websites. RabbitLoader’s Caching techniques improve the performance of your website, reduce the loading times, and help you score over 90 on PageSpeed Insight. It also helps you pass the Core Web Vitals by optimizing the performance of your WordPress website. To optimize your WordPress website for the best possible speed, RabbitLoader implements both browser cache & CDN cache. This makes your website load much faster, with results visible immediately after installation. This all-in-one speed optimization plugin implements cache and powerful performance optimization techniques to achieve a superfast WordPress website that loads instantly and delivers a good user experience to visitors. Watch bite size tutorial videos Why use the RabbitLoader Cache plugin? Faster Website: Make your website lightning fast without hiring a developer or learning to code. Just install the plugin to supercharge your website, with results visible immediately. Improved PageSpeed Score: Improve the PageSpeed score of your website, reach over 90 on PageSpeed Insight test instantly by just installing the RabbitLoader cache plugin. Pass Core Web Vital: Withins: With its unparalleled caching techniques rabbitLoader helps you Pass the core web vitals test, deliver your visitors a better user experience, help you rank higher on organic searches and enjoy an improved conversion rate. All-in-one plugin: No need to install 5 or 6 different plugins to optimize the performance of your WordPress or WooCommerce website. Be it implementing cache, optimising images or any other performance-impacting optimization, one plugin does everything you need for a super fast website. Keeps your WordPress admin light & eliminates the chances of conflicts among optimization plugins. Features Browser Cache: Reduces your loading time by saving the most requested contents from your website like images, code and even texts in the users’ browser cache memory for a faster loading time. CDN Caching: The integrated CDN saves copies of frequently accessed contents like images, codes and text in 300+ edge servers around the world & serves the contents from the nearest node when a user visits your website. The CDN cache reduces the loading time of your website for visitors from any part of the world. Image Optimization: Converts JPEG & PNG images to the next gen formats like WebP & AVIF to reduce the size by up to 30%. The lossless compression technique makes sure your images do not lose any quality. The images are delivered through the integrated CDN and cached for faster loading. Lazy Loading: Sets priority for loading the contents of your website. Contents like images that are in the visible area of your website are loaded immediately and others are loaded only when needed. This reduces the initial loading time. Critical CSS Generator: On average, every page on a website contains 2 MB of CSS code, which takes significant time to render. critical css is usually only 5% of the size of the original files & reduces rendering time by 90%, making it possible to achieve a very high score PageSpeed Insight & pass the Core Web Vitals. JavaScript Deferring: Execution of JavaScript files that are not needed immediately upon loading the website are delayed to load the website faster. Minification: Size of your coding file is reduced with minification to reduce the page weight, as a smaller size page loads much faster. What is Advanced Cache? Advanced cache allows your website to reach lightning-fast performance levels. It involves techniques to store the most requested content of your website like images, texts & text to be stored in the browser cache and on the CDN cache. The Content Delivery Network (CDN) serves the cached content to your visitors around the world as quickly as possible. These advanced cache invalidation techniques it make sure that your user is always served the updated content. COMPATIBILITIES RabbitLoader cache plugin is compatible with all major WordPress themes, plugins and hosting providers. It works on shared, cloud, managed & WordPress hosting providers. Plugins:- WooCommerce WPForms All-in-One SEO Yoast SEO HubSpot Elementor LiveChat Borderless Akismet Spam Protection Slider Revolution Weglot Contact Form 7 Yet Another Related Posts Plugin (YARPP) OptinMonster Formidable Forms BuddyPress bbPress WebSub RafflePress Ultimate Blocks Shoplentor Divi And More.. Themes:- Hello Elementor Athemes (sydney, Botiga) Themeisle (Neve, hestia) Astra Divi OceanWP GeneratePress Storefront Themeisle Kadence Neve ColorMag Blocksy PopularFX And more.. Hosting:- AWS WP Engine SiteGround OVHcloud Hostinger GoDaddy Hetzner IONOS DigitalOcean HostGator Bluehost Namecheap Liquid Web Bluehost Namecheap Liquid Web And more.. SHARE THE RABBITLOADER 💗 Join our- Facebook Community. Learn from our tutorials on YouTube Channel. Contribute to RabbitLoader’s translations. Or rate us on WordPress WordPress🙂
Top keywords
- website21×2.76%
- cache16×2.11%
- wordpress11×1.45%
- loading9×1.18%
- rabbitloader9×1.18%
- images8×1.05%
- cdn7×0.92%
- faster6×0.79%
- time6×0.79%
- web6×0.79%
- contents5×0.66%
- optimization5×0.66%
SQLite Object Cache
A persistent object cache helps your site perform well. This one uses the widely available SQLite3 extension, and optionally the igbinary and APCu extensions to php. Many hosting services offer those extensions, and they are easy to install on a server you control. What is this about? It’s about making your site’s web server perform better. An object cache does that by reducing the workload on your MariaDB or MySQL database. This is not a page cache; these persistent objects go into a different kind of cache. These objects aren’t chunks of web pages ready for people to view in their browsers, they are data objects for use by the WordPress software. Caches are ubiquitous in computing, and WordPress has its own caching subsystem. Caches contain short-term copies of the results of expensive database lookups or computations, and allow software to use the copy rather than repeating the expensive operation. This plugin (like other object-caching plugins) extends WordPress’s caching subsystem to save those short-term copies from page view to page view. WordPress’s cache happens to be a memoization cache. Without a persistent object cache, every WordPress page view must use your MariaDB or MySQL database server to retrieve everything about your site. When a user requests a page, WordPress starts from scratch and loads everything it needs from your database server. Only then can it deliver content to your user. With a persistent object cache, WordPress immediately loads much of the information it needs. This lightens the load on your database server and delivers content to your users faster. Who should use this? If your site runs on a single web server machine, and that server provides the SQLite3 and igbinary extensions to php, this plugin will almost certainly make your site work faster. And if that server provides the APCu extension, this plugin uses it too. Some hosting providers offer redis cache servers. If your provider offers redis, it may be a good choice. You can use it via the Redis Object Cache plugin. Sites using redis have one SQL database and another non-SQL storage server: redis. Other hosting providers offer memcached, which has the Memcached Object Cache plugin. And some large multipurpose cache plugins, such as the LiteSpeed Cache, also offer object caching based on one of those cache server software packages. The cache-server approach to object caching comes into its own when you have multiple load-balanced web server machines handling your site. SQLite doesn’t work correctly in a multiple-web-server environment. But, for single-server site configurations, SQLite, possibly assisted by APCu, performs well. And the vast majority of sites are single-server. APCu APCu is an in-memory storage medium. It lets php programs, like WordPress, store data in shared memory so it’s very fast to retrieve when needed. If APCu is available on your host server, you can configure this plugin to use it. It reduces the typical cache lookup time to one-fifth or less of the SQLite lookup time, which is itself a few tens of microseconds. Performance counts, especially on busy web sites. Please look at Installation to learn how to configure this plugin to use APCu. The plugin works fast without it, and faster with it. WP-CLI: Even if APCu is in use, caching with SQLite is necessary when your web site uses WP-CLI, because WP-CLI programs do not have access to the APCu cache. This plugin writes all cached data both to APCu and to SQLite and makes sure the two are synchronized. WP-CLI You can control this plugin via WP-CLI once you activate it. Please type this command into your shell for details. wp help sqlite-object-cache Credits Thanks to Till Krüss. His Redis Object Cache plugin serves as a model for this one. And thanks to Ari Stathopoulos and Jonny Harris for reviewing this. Props to Matt Jones for finding and fixing a bug that appeared on a heavily loaded system. Thanks to Massimo Villa for testing help, and to nickchomey for a comprehensive code review. All defects are, of course, entirely the author’s responsibility. And thanks to Jetbrains for the use of their software development tools, especially PhpStorm. It’s hard to imagine how a plugin like this one could be developed without PhpStorm’s tools for exploring epic code bases like WordPress’s. How can I learn more about making my WordPress site more efficient? We offer several plugins to help with your site’s database efficiency. You can read about them here.