Absolute Data Expiration in Cache
NCache allows you to configure absolute expiration with your cache items. This will expire the items at the exact date and time specified by the client. Absolute expiration can be specified on items that are required for a limited time in the cache. For example, a company announces flash sale for 24 hours on certain products. These items can then be cached with an absolute expiration of 24 hours so they are expired from the cache as soon as the sale ends.
Moreover, this DateTime
value is converted to UTC time to cater the case where the cache server and client are in different time zones. So the items will be expired at the exact time which has been specified by the user.
Pre-Requisites
- Include the following namespace in your application:
Alachisoft.NCache.Client
Alachisoft.NCache.Runtime.Caching
Alachisoft.NCache.Runtime.Exceptions
- The application must be connected to cache before performing the operation.
- Cache must be running.
- Make sure that the data being added is serializable.
- To ensure the operation is fail safe, it is recommended to handle any potential exceptions within your application, as explained in Handling Failures.
Add/Update Item with Absolute Expiration
You add/update the cache items to set expiration, using the Insert method.
CacheItem is a custom class provided by NCache which can be used to add data to the cache and also lets you set additional metadata associated with an object of this class. This metadata defines the properties of the item like expiration, dependencies and more. You can refer to all properties of CacheItem here.
The following example sets the value of the Expiration
property to Absolute Expiration of 5 minutes for a CacheItem and adds it to the cache if the key does not exist - and updates the item if it exists. This CacheItem will then be removed from the cache after 5 minutes. In case of Java, the setAbsoluteExpiration property of the CacheItem
is used to set absolute expiration with an item.
Tip
You can monitor/verify expiration through:
- "Cache Count" Counter in NCache Web Monitor or PerfMon Counters
- Using cache.Contains() after expiration interval has elapsed
- Using cache.Count before and after specifying expiration.
try
{
// Pre-condition: Cache is already connected
// Get product from database against given product ID
Product product = FetchProductFromDB(1001);
// Generate a unique cache key for this product
string key = $"Product:{product.ProductID}";
// Create a new CacheItem for this product
var cacheItem = new CacheItem(product);
// Set Expiration TimeSpan
var expiration = new Expiration(ExpirationType.Absolute, TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5));
cacheItem.Expiration = expiration;
// Add/Update item with expiration
cache.Insert(key, cacheItem);
// Monitor/Verify expiration through either:
// PerfMon Counters
// cache.Contains(key)
// cache.Count
}
catch (OperationFailedException ex)
{
// Exception can occur due to:
// Connection Failures
// Operation Timeout
// Operation performed during state transfer
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
// Any generic exception like ArgumentNullException or ArgumentException
}
Add/Update Item with Configured Default Expirations
Note
This feature is only available in NCache Enterprise Edition.
You can specify absolute expiration in the API using the DefaultAbsolute
and DefaultAbsoluteLonger
values configured in NCache Web Manager or config.ncconf. This provides flexibility of changing the value externally if needed, without changing the code.
The following code associates configured default expiration (DefaultAbsolute in this case) with an item and adds it to the cache if the key does not exist in cache, and updates the item with expiration if the key exists. Once the configured time has elapsed, the item is expired.
Important
To enable default expiration, it is mandatory that you enable it through NCache Web Manager or config.ncconf. If you pass the API for default expiration and it is not configured through NCache Web Manager or config.ncconf, it will not work.
Tip
You can monitor/verify expiration through:
- "Cache Count" Counter in NCache Web Monitor or PerfMon Counters
- Using cache.Contains() after expiration interval has elapsed
- Using cache.Count before and after specifying expiration
try
{
// Pre-condition: Cache is already connected
// Get product from database against given product ID
Product product = FetchProductFromDB(1001);
// Generate a unique cache key for this product
string key = $"Product:{product.ProductID}";
// Create a cacheItem instance for product
var cacheItem = new CacheItem(product);
// Set Expiration TimeSpan
var expiration = new Expiration(ExpirationType.DefaultAbsolute);
cacheItem.Expiration = expiration;
// Monitor/Verify expiration through either:
// PerfMon Counters
// cache.Contains(key)
// cache.Count
}
catch (OperationFailedException ex)
{
// Exception can occur due to:
// Connection Failures
// Operation Timeout
// Operation performed during state transfer
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
// Any generic exception like ArgumentNullException or ArgumentException
}
Set Absolute Expiration to Existing Item
NCache also provides the flexibility to set Absolute expiration to an existing cache item without having to reinsert it to cache. This is done through CacheItemAttribute class, which has the AbsoluteExpiration property to be set against the cache item. This sets the exact data and time at which the item should be invalidated from the cache.
The attribute is then set against the existing key of the item, using the UpdateAttributes method of ICache
.
The following example adds an item to cache without expiration, and then sets the absolute expiration for the item. This requires no need to add the item again to the cache.
Tip
You can monitor/verify expiration through:
- "Cache Count" Counter in NCache Web Monitor or PerfMon Counters
- Using cache.Contains() after expiration interval has elapsed
- Using cache.Count before and after specifying expiration
try
{
// Pre-condition: Cache is already connected
// Pre-condition: Item already exists in cache
string key = "Product:1001";
// Create a CacheItemAttribute for absolute expiration
// and set its value to 5 seconds
var attr = new CacheItemAttributes();
attr.AbsoluteExpiration = DateTime.Now.AddSeconds(5);
// Set Absolute Expiration of 5 seconds against existing key
cache.UpdateAttributes(key, attr);
// Monitor/Verify expiration through either:
// PerfMon Counters
// cache.Contains(key)
// cache.Count
}
catch (OperationFailedException ex)
{
// Exception can occur due to:
// Connection Failures
// Operation Timeout
// Operation performed during state transfer
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
// Any generic exception like ArgumentNullException or ArgumentException
}
See Also
Sliding Data Expiration in Cache
Cache Data Expiration
Named Tags
Data Dependency for Relationship in Cache