Pergunta

I've got a web application that is 99% read-only, with a separate service that updates the database at specific intervals (like every 10 minutes). How can this service tell the application to invalidate it's second-level cache? Is it actually important? (I don't actually care if I have too much stale data) If I don't invalidate the cache how much time is needed to the records to get updated (if using SysCache)

Foi útil?

Solução

You can manually dispose your 2nd level cache for a specific entity, entity type or a collection.

From http://knol.google.com/k/fabio-maulo/nhibernate-chapter-16-improving/1nr4enxv3dpeq/19#

For the second-level cache, there are methods defined on ISessionFactory for evicting the cached state of an instance, entire class, collection instance or entire collection role.

sessionFactory.Evict(typeof(Cat), catId); //evict a particular Cat
sessionFactory.Evict(typeof(Cat));  //evict all Cats
sessionFactory.EvictCollection("Eg.Cat.Kittens", catId); //evict a particular collection of kittens
sessionFactory.EvictCollection("Eg.Cat.Kittens"); //evict all kitten collections

Outras dicas

If you are OK with the possibility of having some stale data, just set the default expiration to something you are comfortable with, and you'll be set.

Example:

<property name="cache.default_expiration">120</property>

This sets the default expiration to two minutes, so you'll never see stale data older than that.

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