Skip to main content

Notice: this Wiki will be going read only early in 2024 and edits will no longer be possible. Please see: https://gitlab.eclipse.org/eclipsefdn/helpdesk/-/wikis/Wiki-shutdown-plan for the plan.

Jump to: navigation, search

EclipseLink/UserGuide/JPA/Basic JPA Development/Caching/Expiration

< EclipseLink‎ | UserGuide‎ | JPA‎ | Basic JPA Development‎ | Caching
Revision as of 15:19, 10 May 2012 by James.sutherland.oracle.com (Talk | contribs) (Cache Expiration and Invalidation)

EclipseLink JPA

Eclipselink-logo.gif
EclipseLink
Website
Download
Community
Mailing ListForumsIRCmattermost
Issues
OpenHelp WantedBug Day
Contribute
Browse Source

Cache Expiration and Invalidation

By default, entities remain in the shared cache until they are explicitly deleted or garbage collected.

You can configure any entity with a expiry that lets you specify, either the number of milliseconds after which an entity instance should expire from the cache, or a time of day that all instances of the entity class should expire from the cache. Expiry is set on the @Cache annotation or <cache> XML element, and can be configured in two ways:

  • expiry - The number of milliseconds to expiry an entity instance in the cache after it has been read.
  • expiryTimeOfDay - The @TimeOfDay represent the 24h time of day to expiry all instances of the entity class in the cache.

When an instance expires, it is only invalidated in the cache. It is not removed from the cache, but when next accessed it will be refreshed from the database as part of the query that was used to access it.

The application can also explicitly invalidate objects in the cache using the JPA Cache API, or the EclipseLink JpaCache API (see Cache API).

Expiry can also be used in the query results cache (see Query Results Cache).

Invalidation can also be used in a cluster through cache coordination (see Cache Coordination), or from database events using database event notification (see Database Events Notification).

Advanced Cache Invalidation

EclipseLink's cache expiry and invalidation support is provided through the CacheInvalidationPolicy class and its subclasses. The EclipseLink API offers a few advanced features that are not available through annotations or XML. It is also possible to define your own expiry or invalidation policy by defining your own CacheInvalidationPolicy. Advanced configuration can be done through using a DescriptorCustomizer to customize your entity's ClassDescriptor.

Advanced options:

  • isInvalidationRandomized - This allows the invalidation time to be randomized by 10% to avoid a large number of instances becoming invalid at the same time and causing a bottleneck in the database load. This is not used by default.
  • shouldRefreshInvalidObjectsOnClone - This ensures that an invalid object accessed through a relationship from another object will be refresh in the persistence context. This is enabled by default.
  • shouldUpdateReadTimeOnUpdate - This updates an objects read time when the object is successfully updated. This is not enabled by default.

Eclipselink-logo.gif
Version: 2.4 DRAFT
Other versions...

Back to the top