+++ noatcards = True isdraft = False +++ # Database caching, what to cache ## Introduction There are multiple levels you can cache that fall into two general categories: database queries and objects: - Row level - Query-level - Fully-formed serializable objects - Fully-rendered HTML Generaly, you should try to avoid file-based caching, as it makes cloning and auto-scaling more difficult. ## Caching at the database query level Whenever you query the database, hash the query as a key and store the result to the cache. This approach suffers from expiration issues: - Hard to delete a cached result with complex queries - If one piece of data changes such as a table cell, you need to delete all cached queries that might include the changed cell ## Caching at the object level See your data as an object, similar to what you do with your application code. Have your application assemble the dataset from the database into a class instance or a data structure(s) : - Remove the object from cache if its underlying data has changed - Allows for asynchronous processing: workers assemble objects by consuming the latest cached object Suggestions of what to cache: - User sessions - Fully rendered web pages - Activity streams - User graph data