Is there a was to specify to Rails that it should hold the contents of
a table in memory?
For instances, I have a lookup table that is a two column table (id and
description) and then lots of things that belong_to those its.
class A < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :lookup
end
I’d love to able to say a.lookup.description without needing another
SQL call. I know you can avoid the call using the :include feature, but
that means joins in the SQL backend, and I’m doing LOTS of these
queries.
Something like this would be great:
class Lookup < ActiveRecord::Base
:cache_table_in_memory
end
Then all operations on the Lookup class would be done in memory. It
would also add a refresh method that you could manually call on the
infrequent event where the lookup table changes.
If something like this exists, can someone point me in the right
direction? If not, consider it a feature suggestion.
Thanks,
Andrew
Andrew S. wrote:
If something like this exists, can someone point me in the right
direction? If not, consider it a feature suggestion.
Thanks,
Andrew
I hope you are aware of cached_model plugin on top of memcached by
honourable drbrain aka Eric H. of Holy School of Seattle.rb.
Now, of course, you can’t use the above plugin, if you are not running
memcached. Still, quite a few DRb based caching mechanisms are sprouting
all over the place.
You can use, Bakcgroundrb to cache values or else you can use this:
http://boogaloo.rubyforge.org/doc/
Or if you are unhappy with all the above shit, roll your own and have
your name embodied in golden chapters of rails development forever.
Have a look at Trevor S. enumerations mixin which allows you to
treat instances of your ActiveRecord models as though they were an
enumeration of values while caching Instances in memory.
http://svn.protocool.com/rails/plugins/enumerations_mixin/trunk/
On 12/28/06, Hemant K. [email protected] wrote:
infrequent event where the lookup table changes.
Now, of course, you can’t use the above plugin, if you are not running
–
Never be afraid to try something new. Remember, amateurs built the
ark; professionals built the Titanic!