platform/README.md
2018-04-01 22:29:36 -04:00

2 KiB

cache

Pub build status

Support for server-side caching in Angel.

CacheService

TODO: Documentation

A Service class that caches data from one service, storing it in another. An imaginable use case is storing results from MongoDB or another database in MemcacheD/Redis.

ResponseCache

A flexible response cache for Angel.

Use this to improve real and perceived response of Web applications, as well as to memoize expensive responses.

Supports the If-Modified-Since header, as well as storing the contents of response buffers in memory.

To initialize a simple cache:

Future configureServer(Angel app) async {
  // Simple instance.
  var cache = new ResponseCache();
  
  // You can also pass an invalidation timeout.
  var cache = new ResponseCache(timeout: const Duration(days: 2));
  
  // Close the cache when the application closes.
  app.shutdownHooks.add((_) => cache.close());
  
  // Use `patterns` to specify which resources should be cached.
  cache.patterns.addAll([
    'robots.txt',
    new RegExp(r'\.(png|jpg|gif|txt)$'),
    new Glob('public/**/*'),
  ]);
  
  // REQUIRED: The middleware that serves cached responses
  app.use(cache.handleRequest);
  
  // REQUIRED: The response finalizer that saves responses to the cache
  app.responseFinalizers.add(cache.responseFinalizer);
}

Purging the Cache

Call invalidate to remove a resource from a ResponseCache.

Some servers expect a reverse proxy or caching layer to support PURGE requests. If this is your case, make sure to include some sort of validation (maybe IP-based) to ensure no arbitrary attacker can hack your cache:

Future configureServer(Angel app) async {
  app.addRoute('PURGE', '*', (req, res) {
    if (req.ip != '127.0.0.1')
      throw new AngelHttpException.forbidden();
    return cache.purge(req.uri.path);
  });
}