I think for now i will leave it :) i have just simulated 426,000 clicks per hour to my server (i don't have access to many stress test tools) on a stock wordpress site and it handles it, 100% cpu but it handled it, and used around 200mb ram in its entirity.
If i had access to better tools i would test it more but sadly i don't, and as this is just my home server (with no paying users on it atall) it seems to have made an amazing difference.
here is an example of a website using my framework
http://www.cudamining.co.uk/
and here is an example of a wordpress install for you to see the load times
http://wordpress-test.evans-hosting.com/
the caching system seems to delay the php script a while on first load but after that makes a huge difference.
my own framework is managing to handle 1.05million page views per hours, which is amazing at 25 million per day! with the average click time between 7ms and 90ms
If i had access to better tools i would test it more but sadly i don't, and as this is just my home server (with no paying users on it atall) it seems to have made an amazing difference.
here is an example of a website using my framework
http://www.cudamining.co.uk/
and here is an example of a wordpress install for you to see the load times
http://wordpress-test.evans-hosting.com/
the caching system seems to delay the php script a while on first load but after that makes a huge difference.
my own framework is managing to handle 1.05million page views per hours, which is amazing at 25 million per day! with the average click time between 7ms and 90ms