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Home/ Questions/Q 5847923
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T12:47:14+00:00 2026-05-22T12:47:14+00:00

Well, this is the thing. Let’s say that my future PHP CMS need to

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Well, this is the thing. Let’s say that my future PHP CMS need to drive 500k visitors daily and I need to record them all in MySQL database (referrer, ip address, time etc.). This way I need to insert 300-500 rows per minute and update 50 more. The main problem is that script would call database every time I want to insert new row, which is every time someone hits a page.

My question, is there any way to locally cache incoming hits first (and what is the best solution for that apc, csv…?) and periodically send them to database every 10 minutes for example? Is this good solution and what is the best practice for this situation?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T12:47:15+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 12:47 pm

    500k daily it’s just 5-7 queries per second. If each request will be served for 0.2 sec, then you will have almost 0 simultaneous queries, so there is nothing to worry about.
    Even if you will have 5 times more users – all should work fine.
    You can just use INSERT DELAYED and tune your mysql.
    About tuning: http://www.day32.com/MySQL/ – there is very useful script (will change nothing, just show you the tips how to optimize settings).

    You can use memcache or APC to write log there first, but with using INSERT DELAYED MySQL will do almost same work, and will do it better 🙂

    Do not use files for this. DB will serve locks much better, than PHP. It’s not so trivial to write effective mutexes, so let DB (or memcache, APC) do this work.

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