WP Super Cache
By Automattic
Description
WP Super Cache generates static HTML files from your dynamic WordPress blog. Once a static HTML file is created, your web server serves that file instead of processing heavier PHP scripts.
This means that 99% of your visitors will receive static HTML files, significantly reducing server load and increasing speed. The plugin offers three caching methods, with the fastest being Apache mod_rewrite, which bypasses PHP entirely.
For ease of use, the recommended setting is simple caching, which is quick to set up and effective. The plugin also includes features for garbage collection, CDN support, and preloading of cache files.
Other Notable Features
Here are a few other notable features of this free WP Super Cache plugin.
FAQ
Go to Settings -> WP Super Cache and look for the “Cache Tester” form on the easy settings page. Click “Test Cache” and the plugin will request the front page of the site twice, comparing a timestamp on each to make sure they match.
If you want to do it manually, enable debugging in the plugin settings page and load the log file in a new browser tab. Then view your blog while logged in and logged out. You should see activity in the log. View the source of any page on your site. When a page is first created, you’ll see the text “Dynamic page generated in XXXX seconds.” and “Cached page generated by WP-Super-Cache on YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS” at the end of the source code. On reload, a cached page will show the same timestamp so wait a few seconds before checking.
If Supercaching is disabled and you have compression enabled, the text “Compression = gzip” will be added. If compression is disabled and the page is served as a static html file, the text “super cache” will be added. The only other way to check if your cached file was served by PHP script or from the static cache is by looking at the HTTP headers. PHP cached pages will have the header “WP-Super-Cache: Served supercache file from PHP”. WPCache cached files will have the header, “WP-Super-Cache: Served WPCache cache file”. You should also check your cache directory in wp-content/cache/supercache/hostname/ for static cache files.
If the plugin rules are missing from your .htaccess file, the plugin will attempt to serve the super cached page if it’s found. The header “WP-Super-Cache: Served supercache file from PHP” if this happens.
The pagespeed module for Apache may cause problems when testing. Disable it if you notice any problems running the cache tester.
Contributors and developers
“WP Super Cache” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
WPS
7.43
Very Good
Ratings
4.3 out of 5 | 1340Version
3.0.3Last updated
2 months agoActive installations
1,000,000+WordPress version
6.9 or higherPHP version
7.2 or higherLanguages
33Tags
Cache,Caching,Performance,WP Cache,WP Super CacheOther plugins you might like
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