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    <title>The Strangebuzz PHP/Symfony blog.</title>
    <subtitle>Articles for the "watcher" tag.</subtitle>
    <updated>2026-03-10T19:50:06+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name>COil</name>
        <email>coil@strangebuzz.com</email>
    </author>
    <link href="https://www.strangebuzz.com/en/blog/tag/watcher.xml" rel="self" />
    <id>https://www.strangebuzz.com/en/blog/tag/watcher.xml</id>
    <icon>https://www.strangebuzz.com/img/strangebuzz_132.jpg?6.4.9</icon>
    <logo>https://www.strangebuzz.com/img/strangebuzz_1024.jpg?6.4.9</logo>
    <rights> © 2026 Strangebuzz</rights>
                            <entry>
            <title>Introducing CW: a cache watcher for Symfony
</title>
            <link href="https://www.strangebuzz.com/en/blog/introducing-cw-a-cache-watcher-for-symfony" />
            <id>https://www.strangebuzz.com/en/blog/introducing-cw-a-cache-watcher-for-symfony</id>
            <published>2020-05-15T00:00:00+02:00</published>
            <updated>2020-12-05T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <author>
                <name>COil</name>
                <email>coil@strangebuzz.com</email>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">In this post, I will introduce you to Cw which is an acronym for &quot;Cache Watcher&quot;. Cw is a small Go (Golang) program that watches your Symfony files and warms your cache when needed, so you don&#039;t have to wait when refreshing your browser.
</summary>
        </entry>
    </feed>
