Rack::Cache =========== Rack::Cache is suitable as a quick drop-in component to enable HTTP caching for Rack-based applications that produce freshness (Expires, Cache-Control) and/or validation (Last-Modified, ETag) information: * Standards-based (RFC 2616) * Freshness/expiration based caching * Validation (If-Modified-Since / If-None-Match) * Vary support * Cache-Control: public, private, max-age, s-maxage, must-revalidate, and proxy-revalidate. * Portable: 100% Ruby / works with any Rack-enabled framework * Disk, memcached, and heap memory storage backends For more information about Rack::Cache features and usage, see: http://rtomayko.github.com/rack-cache/ Rack::Cache is not overly optimized for performance. The main goal of the project is to provide a portable, easy-to-configure, and standards-based caching solution for small to medium sized deployments. More sophisticated / high-performance caching systems (e.g., Varnish, Squid, httpd/mod-cache) may be more appropriate for large deployments with significant throughput requirements. Installation ------------ gem install rack-cache Basic Usage ----------- `Rack::Cache` is implemented as a piece of Rack middleware and can be used with any Rack-based application. If your application includes a rackup (`.ru`) file or uses Rack::Builder to construct the application pipeline, simply require and use as follows: ```Ruby require 'rack/cache' use Rack::Cache, metastore: 'file:/var/cache/rack/meta', entitystore: 'file:/var/cache/rack/body', verbose: true run app ``` Assuming you've designed your backend application to take advantage of HTTP's caching features, no further code or configuration is required for basic caching. Using with Rails ---------------- ```Ruby # config/application.rb config.action_dispatch.rack_cache = true # or config.action_dispatch.rack_cache = { verbose: true, metastore: 'file:/var/cache/rack/meta', entitystore: 'file:/var/cache/rack/body' } ``` You should now see `Rack::Cache` listed in the middleware pipeline: rake middleware [more information](http://snippets.aktagon.com/snippets/302-how-to-setup-and-use-rack-cache-with-rails) Using with Dalli ---------------- Dalli is a high performance memcached client for Ruby. More information at: https://github.com/mperham/dalli ```Ruby require 'dalli' require 'rack/cache' use Rack::Cache, verbose: true, metastore: "memcached://localhost:11211/meta", entitystore: "memcached://localhost:11211/body" run app ``` Noop entity store ----------------- Does not persist response bodies (no disk/memory used).
Responses from the cache will have an empty body.
Clients must ignore these empty cached response (check for X-Rack-Cache response header).
Atm cannot handle streamed responses, patch needed. ```Ruby require 'rack/cache' use Rack::Cache, verbose: true, metastore: entitystore: "noop:/" run app ``` Ignoring tracking parameters in cache keys ----------------- It's fairly common to include tracking parameters which don't affect the content of the page. Since Rack::Cache uses the full URL as part of the cache key, this can cause unneeded churn in your cache. If you're using the default key class `Rack::Cache::Key`, you can configure a proc to ignore certain keys/values like so: ```Ruby Rack::Cache::Key.query_string_ignore = proc { |k, v| k =~ /^(trk|utm)_/ } ``` License: MIT
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/rtomayko/rack-cache.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/rtomayko/rack-cache)