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Posted to dev@cocoon.apache.org by "Francesco Chicchiriccò (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2012/05/29 14:59:23 UTC

[jira] [Assigned] (COCOON-2320) CachingServletServiceSerializer

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COCOON-2320?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Francesco Chicchiriccò reassigned COCOON-2320:
----------------------------------------------

    Assignee: Francesco Chicchiriccò
    
> CachingServletServiceSerializer
> -------------------------------
>
>                 Key: COCOON-2320
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COCOON-2320
>             Project: Cocoon
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: * Cocoon Core, - Servlet service framework
>    Affects Versions: 2.2-dev (Current SVN)
>            Reporter: Javier Puerto
>            Assignee: Francesco Chicchiriccò
>            Priority: Minor
>         Attachments: CachingServletServiceSerializer.patch
>
>
> Hello Cocoon developers,
> We are using Apache Cocoon 2.2 for a project and I've found a bottleneck in our template system. We use servlet service components to render our pages in the same way you can see for Style Block. The current Cocoon Welcome block is an example.
> This way of rendering is very useful but as currently the servlet services components doesn't implement CacheableServiceComponent interface, all the request will be processed completely at the end.
> For our usecase, here is an example:
> <map:match pattern="x">
>   <map:generate ...
>   <map:transform ...
>   <map:include ...
>   <map:serialize type="servletService">
>     <map:parameter name="service" value="servlet:style:/service/common/simple-page2html"/>
>   </map:serialize>
> </map:match>
> The most expensive part is the serialization process because we use i18n, Link rewriter and some transformations. We can configure everything to be cacheable but at the end, the serialization process must be performed entirely. I've simply extended the current ServletServiceSerializer in CachingServletServiceSerializer adding the cache key as requested service URL and NOPValidity as validity object. This approach has a problem, due to the nature of the servlet service components we need to move all the dynamically generated content from our GUI block since if we detect that the content hasn't changed, the CachingServletServiceSerializer will not perform any process and will return the cached content. Also, as there's a little hack for serializer output mime type, if you want to use the new component you must set the serialization content type explicitly. See http://article.gmane.org/gmane.text.xml.cocoon.devel/73261
> <map:match pattern="x">
>   <map:generate ...
>   <map:transform ...
>   <map:include ...
>   <map:serialize type="caching-servletService" mime-type="text/html">
>     <map:parameter name="service" value="servlet:style:/service/common/simple-page2html"/>
>   </map:serialize>
> </map:match>
> For our usecase seems to fit well and will allow us to enable the powerful cocoon caching system for a lot of pages. IMO, it's a problem when you want to use the ServletServiceSerializer to have a clean and common output for the template system and you can't use the caching even with static files.
> Attached is the patch for cocoon-servlet-service-components block.

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