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Cache

Overview

The Phalcon\Cache\Cache is a component that offers a lightweight yet flexible caching mechanism to be used with your Phalcon applications.

Frequently used data or already processed/calculated data, can be stored in a cache storage for easier and faster retrieval. Since Phalcon\Cache\Cache is written in Zephir, and therefore compiled as C code, it can achieve higher performance while reducing the overhead that comes with getting data from any storage container. Some examples that warrant the use of a cache are:

  • You are making complex calculations and the output does not change frequently
  • You are producing HTML using the same data all the time (same HTML)
  • You are accessing database data constantly which does not change often.

NOTE

Even after implementing the cache, you should always check the hit ratio of your cache backend over a period of time, to ensure that your cache strategy is optimal.

Phalcon\Cache\Cache components rely on Phalcon\Storage components. Phalcon\Storage is split into two categories: Serializers and Adapters.

Cache

In order to instantiate a new Phalcon\Cache\Cache component, you will need to pass a Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\* class in it or one that implements the Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\AdapterInterface. For a detailed explanation of adapters and serializers, see below.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Cache;
use Phalcon\Cache\AdapterFactory;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();
$adapterFactory    = new AdapterFactory($serializerFactory);

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200
];

$adapter = $adapterFactory->newInstance('apcu', $options);

$cache = new Cache($adapter);

Operations

The cache component implements methods that are inline with PSR-16, but does not implement the particular interface. A package that implements PSR-16 is available, that uses Phalcon\Cache\Cache. The package is located here. To use it, you will need to have Phalcon installed and then using composer you can install the proxy package.

composer require phalcon/proxy-psr16

Using the proxy classes allows you to follow PSR-16 and use it with any other package that needs that interface.

Each Cache component contains a supplied Cache adapter which in turn is responsible for all operations.

get - getMultiple

To get data from the cache you need to call the get() method with a key and a default value. If the key exists, or it has not expired, the data stored in it will be returned. Alternatively the passed defaultValue will be returned (default null).

$value = $cache->get('my-key');

$value = $cache->get('my-key', 'default');

If you wish to retrieve more than one key with one call, you can call getMultiple(), passing an array with the keys needed. The method will return an array of key => value pairs. Cache keys that do not exist or have expired will have defaultValue as a value (default null).

$value = $cache->getMultiple(['my-key1', 'my-key2']);

$value = $cache->getMultiple(['my-key1', 'my-key2'], 'default');

has

To check whether a key exists in the cache (or it has not expired) you can call the has() method. The method will return true if the key exists, or false otherwise.

$exists = $cache->has('my-key');

set - setMultiple

To save the data in the cache, you will need to use the set() method. The method accepts the key we wish to store the data under and the value of the item to store. The data needs to be of a type that supports serialization i.e. PHP type or an object that implements serialization. The last (optional) parameter is the TTL (time to live) value for this item. This option might not always be available if the underlying adapter does not support it. The method will return true if the key exists, or false otherwise. If even one key is not successfully stored, the method will return false.

$result = $cache->set('my-key', $data);

If you wish to store more than one element with one call, you can call setMultiple(), passing an array of key => value pairs for the multiple-set operation. As with set the last (optional) parameter is the TTL (time to live). The method will return true if the key exists, or false otherwise.

$value = $cache->setMultiple(
    [
        'my-key1' => $data1, 
        'my-key2' => $data2,
    ],
    9600
);

delete - deleteMultiple - clear

To delete an item from the cache you need to call the delete() method with a key. The method returns true on success and false on failure. `

$result = $cache->delete('my-key');

If you wish to delete more than one key with one call, you can call deleteMultiple(), passing an array with the keys needed. The method returns true on success and false on failure. If even one key is not successfully deleted, the method will return false. `

$result = $cache->deleteMultiple(['my-key1', 'my-key2']);

If you wish to clear all the keys, you can call the clear() method. The method returns true on success and false on failure.

Factory

newInstance

We can easily create a Phalcon\Cache\Cache class using the new keyword. However, Phalcon offers the Phalcon\Cache\CacheFactory class, so that developers can easily instantiate cache objects. The factory accepts a Phalcon\Cache\AdapterFactory object (which in turn requires a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object) and can instantiate the necessary Cache class with the selected adapter and options. The factory always returns a new instance of Phalcon\Cache\Cache.

The example below shows how you can create a cache object using the Apcu adapter and Json serializer:

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\CacheFactory;
use Phalcon\Cache\AdapterFactory;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
];

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();
$adapterFactory    = new AdapterFactory(
    $serializerFactory,
    $options
);

$cacheFactory = new CacheFactory($adapterFactory);

$cache = $cacheFactory->newInstance('apcu');

load

The Cache Factory also offers the load method, which accepts a configuration object. This object can be an array or a Phalcon\Config\Config object, with directives that are used to set up the cache. The object requires the adapter element, as well as the options element with the necessary directives.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\CacheFactory;
use Phalcon\Cache\AdapterFactory;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
];

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();
$adapterFactory    = new AdapterFactory(
    $serializerFactory,
    $options
);

$cacheFactory = new CacheFactory($adapterFactory);

$cacheOptions = [
    'adapter' => 'apcu',
    'options' => [
        'prefix' => 'my-prefix',
    ],
];

$cache = $cacheFactory->load($cacheOptions);

Exceptions

Any exceptions thrown in the Cache component will be of type Phalcon\Cache\Exception\Exception which implements Psr\SimpleCache\CacheException. Additionally the Phalcon\Cache\Exception\InvalidArgumentException which implements also the Psr\SimpleCache\CacheException. It is thrown when the data supplied to the component or any subcomponents is not valid. You can use these exceptions to selectively catch exceptions thrown only from this component.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Exception\Exception;
use Phalcon\Mvc\Controller;

class IndexController extends Controller
{
    public function index()
    {
        try {
            $content = $this->cache->get('some-key');
        } catch (Exception $ex) {
            echo $ex->getMessage();
        }
    }
}

Serializers

The Phalcon\Storage\Serializer namespace offers classes that implement the Serializable interface and thus expose the serialize and unserialize methods. The purpose of these classes is to transform the data before saving it to the storage and after retrieving it from the storage.

NOTE

The default serializer for all adapters is Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Php which uses PHP's serialize and unserialize methods. These methods can suit most applications. However, the developer might want to use something more efficient such as igbinary which is faster and achieves better compression.

The cache adapter can be configured to use a different serializer. The available serializers are:

Base64

This serializer uses the base64_encode and base64_decode methods to serialize data. The input must be of type string, therefore this serializer has obvious limitations

Igbinary

The igbinary serializes relies on the igbinary_serialize and igbinary_unserialize methods. Those methods are exposed via the igbinary PHP extension, which has to be installed and loaded on the target system.

Json

The JSON serializer uses json_encode and json_decode. The target system must have JSON support available for PHP.

MemcachedIgbinary

This serializer can be used when using Memcached. It corresponds to the built-in Igbinary serializer that Memcached has.

MemcachedJson

This serializer can be used when using Memcached. It corresponds to the built-in JSON serializer that Memcached has.

MemcachedPhp

This serializer can be used when using Memcached. It corresponds to the built-in PHP serializer that Memcached has.

Msgpack

Similar to igbinary the msgpack serializer uses msgpack_pack and msgpack_unpack for serializing and unserializing data. This, along with igbinary is one of the fastest and most efficient serializers. However, it requires that the msgpack PHP extension is loaded on the target system.

None

This serializer does not transform the data at all. Both its serialize and unserialize get and set the data without altering it.

Php

This is the default serializer. It uses PHP's serialize and unserialize methods for data transformations.

RedisIgbinary

This serializer can be used when using Redis. It corresponds to the built-in Igbinary serializer that Redis has.

RedisJson

This serializer can be used when using Redis. It corresponds to the built-in JSON serializer that Redis has.

RedisMsgpack

This serializer can be used when using Redis. It corresponds to the built-in Msgpack serializer that Redis has.

RedisNone

This serializer can be used when using Redis. It corresponds to the built-in None serializer that Redis has.

RedisPhp

This serializer can be used when using Redis. It corresponds to the built-in PHP serializer that Redis has.

Custom

Phalcon also offers the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\SerializerInterface` which can be implemented in a custom class. The class can offer the serialization you require.

<?php

namespace MyApp\Storage\Serializer;

use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerInterface;

class Garble implements SerializerInterface
{
    /**
     * Data storage
     * 
     * @var string
     */
    private $data = '';

    /**
     * Return the stored data
     * 
     * @return string
     */
    public function getData(): string
    {
        return $this->data;
    }       

    /**
     * Serializes data
     */
    public function serialize(): string
    {
        return rot13($this->data);
    }

    /**
     * Set the data
     * 
     * @var Garble
     *
     * @return Garble
     */
    public function setData($data): Garble
    {
        $this->data = (string) $data;

        return $this;
    }       

    /**
     * Unserializes data
     */
    public function unserialize($data): void
    {
        $this->data = str_rot13($data);
    }
}

Using it:

<?php

namespace MyApp;

use MyApp\Storage\Serializer\Garble;

$data = 'I came, I saw, I conquered.';
$garble = new Garble();

$garble
    ->setData($data)
    ->serialize()  
;

echo $garble->getData(); // "V pnzr, V fnj, V pbadhrerq."

$encrypted = 'V pnzr, V fnj, V pbadhrerq.';

$garble->unserialize($encrypted);

echo $garble->getData(); // "I came, I saw, I conquered."

Serializer Factory

Although all serializer classes can be instantiated using the new keyword, Phalcon offers the Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory class, so that developers can easily instantiate serializer classes. All the above serializers are registered in the factory and lazy loaded when called. The factory also allows you to register additional (custom) serializer classes. The only thing to consider is choosing the name of the serializer in comparison to the existing ones. If you define the same name, you will overwrite the built-in one. The objects are cached in the factory so if you call the newInstance() method with the same parameters during the same request, you will get the same object back.

The example below shows how you can create a Json serializer either using the new keyword or the factory:

<?php

use Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json; 
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$jsonSerializer = new Json();

$factory        = new SerializerFactory();
$jsonSerializer = $factory->newInstance('json');

The parameters you can use for the factory are:

Name Class
base64 Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Base64
igbinary Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Igbinary
json Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json
memcached_igbinary Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\MemcachedIgbinary
memcached_json Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\MemcachedJson
memcached_php Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\MemcachedPhp
msgpack Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Msgpack
none Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\None
php Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Php
redis_igbinary Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisIgbinary
redis_json Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisJson
redis_msgpack Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisMsgpack
redis_none Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisNone
redis_php Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisPhp

Adapters

The Phalcon\Cache\Adapter namespace offers classes that implement the Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\AdapterInterface interface. It exposes common methods that are used to perform operations on the storage adapter or cache backend. These adapters act as wrappers to respective backend code.

The available methods are:

Method Description
clear Flushes/clears the cache
decrement Decrements a stored number
delete Deletes data from the adapter
get Reads data from the adapter
getAdapter Returns the already connected adapter or connects to the backend server(s)
getKeys Returns all the keys stored (optional filter parameter)
getPrefix Returns the prefix for the keys
has Checks if an element exists in the cache
increment Increments a stored number
set Stores data in the adapter

NOTE

The getAdapter() method returns the connected adapter. This offers more flexibility to the developer since it can be used to execute additional methods that each adapter offers. For instance, for the Redis adapter you can use the getAdapter() to obtain the connected object and call zAdd, zRange, and other methods not exposed by the Phalcon adapter.

To construct one of these objects, you will need to pass a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object in the constructor and optionally some parameters required for the adapter of your choice. The list of options is outlined below.

The available adapters are:

Apcu

This adapter uses Apcu to store the data. In order to use this adapter, you will need to have apcu enabled in your target system. This class does not use an actual adapter, since the apcu functionality is exposed using the apcu_* PHP functions.

Option Default
defaultSerializer Php
lifetime 3600
serializer null
prefix ph-apcu-

The following example demonstrates how to create a new Apcu cache adapter, which will use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json serializer and have a default lifetime of 7200.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Apcu;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
];

$adapter = new Apcu($serializerFactory, $options);

The above example used a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object and the defaultSerializer option to tell the adapter to instantiate the relevant serializer.

Libmemcached

This adapter utilizes PHP's memcached extension to connect to Memcached servers. The adapter used is an instance of the Memcached class, created after the first event that requires the connection to be active.

Option Default
defaultSerializer Php
lifetime 3600
serializer null
prefix ph-memc-
servers[0]['host'] 127.0.0.1
servers[0]['port'] 11211
servers[0]['weight'] 1
persistentId ph-mcid-
saslAuthData['user']
saslAuthData['pass']
client[\Memcached::OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT] 10
client[\Memcached::OPT_DISTRIBUTION] \Memcached::DISTRIBUTION_CONSISTENT
client[\Memcached::OPT_SERVER_FAILURE_LIMIT] 2
client[\Memcached::OPT_REMOVE_FAILED_SERVERS] true
client[\Memcached::OPT_RETRY_TIMEOUT] 1

You can specify more than one server in the options array passed in the constructor. If SASL data is defined, the adapter will try to authenticate using the passed data. If there is an error in the options or the class cannot add one or more servers in the pool, a Phalcon\Storage\Exception will be thrown.

The following example demonstrates how to create a new Libmemcached cache adapter, which will use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json serializer and have a default lifetime of 7200. It will use the 10.4.13.100 as the first server with weight 1 connecting to port 11211 and 10.4.13.110 as the second server with weight 5 again connecting to port 11211.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Libmemcached;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
    'servers'           => [
        0 => [
            'host'   => '10.4.13.100',
            'port'   => 11211,
            'weight' => 1,
        ],
        1 => [
            'host'   => '10.4.13.110',
            'port'   => 11211,
            'weight' => 5,
        ],
    ],
];

$adapter = new Libmemcached($serializerFactory, $options);

The above example used a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object and the defaultSerializer option to tell the adapter to instantiate the relevant serializer.

Serializers: The Memcached class which is the adapter that the Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Libmemcached uses, offers support for serializing out of the box. The built-in serializers are:

  • \Memcached::SERIALIZER_PHP
  • \Memcached::SERIALIZER_JSON
  • \Memcached::SERIALIZER_IGBINARY

The igbinary built-in serializer is only available if igbinary is present in the target system and Memcached extension is compiled with it. To enable these serializers, you can use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\MemcachedIgbinary, Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\MemcachedJson or Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\MemcachedPhp

Memory

This adapter uses the computer's memory to store the data. As all data is stored in memory, there is no persistence, meaning that once the request is completed, the data is lost. This adapter can be used for testing or temporary storage during a particular request. The options available for the constructor are:

Option Default
defaultSerializer Php
lifetime 3600
serializer null
prefix ph-memo-

The following example demonstrates how to create a new Memory cache adapter, which will use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json serializer and have a default lifetime of 7200.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Memory;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
];

$adapter = new Memory($serializerFactory, $options);

The above example used a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object and the defaultSerializer option to tell the adapter to instantiate the relevant serializer.

Redis

This adapter utilizes PHP's redis extension to connect to a Redis server. The adapter used is an instance of the Redis class, created after the first event that requires the connection to be active.

Option Default
defaultSerializer Php
lifetime 3600
serializer null
prefix ph-reds-
host 127.0.0.1
port 6379
index 1
persistent false
auth
socket

If auth data is defined, the adapter will try to authenticate using the passed data. If there is an error in the options, or the server cannot connect or authenticate, a Phalcon\Storage\Exception will be thrown.

The following example demonstrates how to create a new Redis cache adapter, which will use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json serializer and have a default lifetime of 7200. It will use the 10.4.13.100 as the host, connect to port 6379, and select the index 1.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Redis;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
    'host'              => '10.4.13.100',
    'port'              => 6379,
    'index'             => 1,
];

$adapter = new Redis($serializerFactory, $options);

The above example used a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object and the defaultSerializer option to tell the adapter to instantiate the relevant serializer.

Serializers: The Redis class which is the adapter that the Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Redis uses, offers support for serializing out of the box. The built-in serializers are:

  • \Redis::SERIALIZER_NONE
  • \Redis::SERIALIZER_PHP
  • \Redis::SERIALIZER_IGBINARY
  • \Redis::SERIALIZER_MSGPACK

The igbinary and built-in serializer are only available if igbinary is present in the target system and Redis extension is compiled with it. The same applies to msgpack built-in serializer. It is only available if msgpack is present in the target system and the Redis extension is compiled with it. To enable these serializers, you can use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisIgbinary, Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisJson, Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisMsgpack, Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisNone or Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\RedisPhp.

NOTE increment - decrement

At this point in time, there is an issue with Redis, where the internal Redis serializer does not skip scalar values because it can only store strings. As a result, if you use increment after a set for a number, will not return a number:

The way to store numbers and use the increment (or decrement) is to either remove the internal serializer for Redis

$cache->getAdapter()->setOption(\Redis::OPT_SERIALIZER, \Redis::SERIALIZER_NONE);

or you could use increment instead of using set at the first setting of the value to the key:

$cache->delete('my-key');
$cache->increment('my-key', 2);
echo $cache->get('my-key');      // 2
$cache->increment('my-key', 3);
echo $cache->get('my-key');      // 3

Stream

This adapter is the simplest to set up since it uses the target system's file system (it only requires a cache path that is writeable). It is one of the slowest cache adapters since the data has to be written to the file system. Each file created corresponds to a key stored. The file contains additional metadata to calculate the lifetime of the cache element, resulting in additional reads and writes to the file system.

Option Default
defaultSerializer Php
lifetime 3600
serializer null
prefix phstrm-
storageDir

If the storageDir is not defined a Phalcon\Storage\Exception will be thrown.

NOTE

The adapter utilizes logic to store files in separate subdirectories based on the name of the key passed, thus avoiding the too many files in one folder limit present in Windows or Linux-based systems.

The following example demonstrates how to create a new Stream cache adapter, which will use the Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json serializer and have a default lifetime of 7200. It will store the cached data in /data/storage/cache.

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Stream;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
    'storageDir'        => '/data/storage/cache',
];

$adapter = new Stream($serializerFactory, $options);

The above example used a Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory object and the defaultSerializer option to tell the adapter to instantiate the relevant serializer.

Custom

Phalcon also offers the Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\AdapterInterface which can be implemented in a custom class. The class can offer the cache adapter functionality you require.

<?php

namespace MyApp\Cache\Adapter;

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\AdapterInterface;

class Custom implements AdapterInterface
{
    /**
     * Flushes/clears the cache
     */
    public function clear(): bool
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Decrements a stored number
     */
    public function decrement(string $key, int $value = 1)
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Deletes data from the adapter
     */
    public function delete(string $key): bool
    {
        Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Reads data from the adapter
     */
    public function get(string $key)
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Returns the already connected adapter or connects to the backend server(s)
     */
    public function getAdapter()
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Returns all the keys stored. If a filter has been passed the 
     * keys that match the filter will be returned
     */
    public function getKeys(string $prefix = ""): array
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Returns the prefix for the keys
     */
    public function getPrefix(): string
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Checks if an element exists in the cache
     */
    public function has(string $key): bool
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Increments a stored number
     */
    public function increment(string $key, int $value = 1)
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }

    /**
     * Stores data in the adapter
     */
    public function set(string $key, $value, $ttl = null): bool
    {
        // Custom implementation
    }
}

Using it:

<?php

namespace MyApp;

use MyApp\Cache\Adapter\Custom;

$custom = new Custom();

$custom->set('my-key', $data);

Adapter Factory

Although all adapter classes can be instantiated using the new keyword, Phalcon offers the Phalcon\Cache\AdapterFactory class, so that you can easily instantiate cache adapter classes. All the above adapters are registered in the factory and lazy loaded when called. The factory also allows you to register additional (custom) adapter classes. The only thing to consider is choosing the name of the adapter in comparison to the existing ones. If you define the same name, you will overwrite the built-in one. The objects are cached in the factory so if you call the newInstance() method with the same parameters during the same request, you will get the same object back.

The example below shows how you can create an Apcu cache adapter with the new keyword or the factory:

<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Apcu;
use Phalcon\Storage\Serializer\Json;

$jsonSerializer = new Json();

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
    'serializer'        => $jsonSerializer,
];

$adapter = new Apcu(null, $options);
<?php

use Phalcon\Cache\AdapterFactory;
use Phalcon\Storage\SerializerFactory;

$serializerFactory = new SerializerFactory();
$adapterFactory    = new AdapterFactory($serializerFactory);

$options = [
    'defaultSerializer' => 'Json',
    'lifetime'          => 7200,
];

$adapter = $adapterFactory->newInstance('apcu', $options);

The parameters you can use for the factory are:

Name Adapter
apcu Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Apcu
libmemcached Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Libmemcached
memory Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Memory
redis Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Redis
stream Phalcon\Cache\Adapter\Stream

Events

The Phalcon\Cache\AbstractCache object implements the Phalcon\Events\EventsAware interfaces. As a result getEventsManager() and setEventsManager() are available for you to use.

Event Description Can stop operation
beforeSet Fires before the value is set No
afterSet Fires after the value has been set No
beforeGet Fires before the value is requested No
afterGet Fires after the value has been requested No
beforeHas Fires before the value is requested No
afterHas Fires after the value has been requested No
beforeDelete Fires before the value is deleted No
afterDelete Fires after the value has been deleted No
beforeIncrement Fires before the value has been incremented No
afterIncrement Fires after the value has been incremented No
beforeDecrement Fires before the value has been decremented No
afterDecrement Fires after the value has been decremented No