I have a class for interacting with a memcache server. I have different functions for inserting, deleting and retrieving data. Originally each function made a call to memcache_connect(), however that was unnecessary, e.g.:
mc->insert()  
mc->get()  
mc->delete() 
would make three memcache connections. I worked around this by creating a construct for the class:
function __construct() {
    $this->mem = memcache_connect( ... );
}
and then using $this->mem wherever the resource was needed, so each of the three functions use the same memcache_connect resource.
This is alright, however if I call the class inside other classes, e.g.:
class abc
{
    function __construct() {
        $this->mc = new cache_class;
    }
}    
class def
{
    function __construct() {
        $this->mc = new cache_class;
    }
}
then it is still making two memcache_connect calls, when it only needs one.
I can do this with globals but I would prefer not to use them if I don't have to.
Example globals implementation:
$resource = memcache_connect( ... );
class cache_class
{
    function insert() {
        global $resource;
        memcache_set( $resource , ... );
    }
    function get() {
        global $resource;
        return memcache_get( $resource , ... );
    }
}
Then no matter how many times the class is called there will only be one call to memcache_connect.
Is there a way to do this or should I just use globals?
I would code another class using singleton pattern for getting the only instance of memcache. Like this -
class MemCache 
{ 
  private static $instance = false;   
  private function __construct() {}
  public static function getInstance()
  { 
    if(self::$instance === false)
    { 
      self::$instance = memcache_connect(); 
    } 
    return self::$instance; 
  } 
}
and usage -
$mc = MemCache::getInstance();
memcache_get($mc, ...)
...
                        Pass in the MC instance:
class abc
{
    function __construct($mc) {
        $this->mc = $mc;
    }
}    
class def
{
    function __construct($mc) {
        $this->mc = $mc;
    }
}
$mc = new cache_class;
$abc = new abc($mc);
etc.
I think you're looking for static properties here.
class mc {
    private static $instance;
    public static function getInstance() {
        if (self::$instance== null) {
            self::$instance= new self;
        }
        return self::$instance;
    }
    private function __construct() {
        $this->mem = memcache_connect(...);
    }
}
This implements a basic singleton pattern. Instead of constructing the object call mc::getInstance(). Have a look at singletons.
You should use dependency injection. The singleton pattern and static constructs are considered bad practice because they essentially are globals (and for good reason -- they cement you to using whatever class you instantiate as opposed to some other).
Here is something like what you should do in order to have easy maintenance.
class MemCache {
    protected $memcache;
    public function __construct(){
        $this->memcache = memcache_connect();
    }
}
class Client {
    protected $MemCache;
    public function __construct( MemCache $MemCache ){
        $this->MemCache = $MemCache;
    }
    public function getMemCache(){
        return $this->MemCache;
    }
}
$MemCache = new MemCache();
$Client = new Client($MemCache);
$MemCache1 = $Client->getMemCache();
// $MemCache and $MemCache1 are the same object. 
// memcache_connect() has not been called more than once.
                        If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With