aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/actionpack/lib/action_controller/caching/actions.rb
blob: 667ba15cc9152a4baf2651e9234cdc611aaa3d03 (plain) (blame)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
require 'set'

module ActionController #:nodoc:
  module Caching
    # Action caching is similar to page caching by the fact that the entire
    # output of the response is cached, but unlike page caching, every
    # request still goes through Action Pack. The key benefit of this is
    # that filters run before the cache is served, which allows for
    # authentication and other restrictions on whether someone is allowed
    # to execute such action. Example:
    #
    #   class ListsController < ApplicationController
    #     before_filter :authenticate, :except => :public
    #
    #     caches_page   :public
    #     caches_action :index, :show
    #   end
    #
    # In this example, the +public+ action doesn't require authentication
    # so it's possible to use the faster page caching. On the other hand
    # +index+ and +show+ require authentication. They can still be cached,
    # but we need action caching for them.
    #
    # Action caching uses fragment caching internally and an around
    # filter to do the job. The fragment cache is named according to
    # the host and path of the request. A page that is accessed at
    # <tt>http://david.example.com/lists/show/1</tt> will result in a fragment named
    # <tt>david.example.com/lists/show/1</tt>. This allows the cacher to
    # differentiate between <tt>david.example.com/lists/</tt> and
    # <tt>jamis.example.com/lists/</tt> -- which is a helpful way of assisting
    # the subdomain-as-account-key pattern.
    #
    # Different representations of the same resource, e.g.
    # <tt>http://david.example.com/lists</tt> and
    # <tt>http://david.example.com/lists.xml</tt>
    # are treated like separate requests and so are cached separately.
    # Keep in mind when expiring an action cache that
    # <tt>:action => 'lists'</tt> is not the same as
    # <tt>:action => 'list', :format => :xml</tt>.
    #
    # You can set modify the default action cache path by passing a
    # <tt>:cache_path</tt> option. This will be passed directly to
    # <tt>ActionCachePath.path_for</tt>. This is handy for actions with
    # multiple possible routes that should be cached differently. If a
    # block is given, it is called with the current controller instance.
    #
    # And you can also use <tt>:if</tt> (or <tt>:unless</tt>) to pass a
    # proc that specifies when the action should be cached.
    #
    # Finally, if you are using memcached, you can also pass <tt>:expires_in</tt>.
    #
    # The following example depicts some of the points made above:
    #
    #   class ListsController < ApplicationController
    #     before_filter :authenticate, :except => :public
    #
    #     caches_page :public
    #
    #     caches_action :index, :if => proc do
    #       !request.format.json?  # cache if is not a JSON request
    #     end
    #
    #     caches_action :show, :cache_path => { :project => 1 },
    #       :expires_in => 1.hour
    #
    #     caches_action :feed, :cache_path => proc do
    #       if params[:user_id]
    #         user_list_url(params[:user_id, params[:id])
    #       else
    #         list_url(params[:id])
    #       end
    #     end
    #   end
    #
    # If you pass <tt>:layout => false</tt>, it will only cache your action
    # content. That's useful when your layout has dynamic information.
    #
    # Warning: If the format of the request is determined by the Accept HTTP
    # header the Content-Type of the cached response could be wrong because
    # no information about the MIME type is stored in the cache key. So, if
    # you first ask for MIME type M in the Accept header, a cache entry is
    # created, and then perform a second request to the same resource asking
    # for a different MIME type, you'd get the content cached for M.
    #
    # The <tt>:format</tt> parameter is taken into account though. The safest
    # way to cache by MIME type is to pass the format in the route.
    module Actions
      extend ActiveSupport::Concern

      module ClassMethods
        # Declares that +actions+ should be cached.
        # See ActionController::Caching::Actions for details.
        def caches_action(*actions)
          return unless cache_configured?
          options = actions.extract_options!
          options[:layout] = true unless options.key?(:layout)
          filter_options = options.extract!(:if, :unless).merge(:only => actions)
          cache_options  = options.extract!(:layout, :cache_path).merge(:store_options => options)

          around_filter ActionCacheFilter.new(cache_options), filter_options
        end
      end

      def _save_fragment(name, options)
        content = response_body
        content = content.join if content.is_a?(Array)

        if caching_allowed?
          write_fragment(name, content, options)
        else
          content
        end
      end

    protected
      def expire_action(options = {})
        return unless cache_configured?

        actions = options[:action]
        if actions.is_a?(Array)
          actions.each {|action| expire_action(options.merge(:action => action)) }
        else
          expire_fragment(ActionCachePath.new(self, options, false).path)
        end
      end

      class ActionCacheFilter #:nodoc:
        def initialize(options, &block)
          @cache_path, @store_options, @cache_layout =
            options.values_at(:cache_path, :store_options, :layout)
        end

        def filter(controller)
          path_options = if @cache_path.respond_to?(:call)
            controller.instance_exec(controller, &@cache_path)
          else
            @cache_path
          end

          cache_path = ActionCachePath.new(controller, path_options || {})

          body = controller.read_fragment(cache_path.path, @store_options)

          unless body
            controller.action_has_layout = false unless @cache_layout
            yield
            controller.action_has_layout = true
            body = controller._save_fragment(cache_path.path, @store_options)
          end

          body = controller.render_to_string(:text => body, :layout => true) unless @cache_layout

          controller.response_body = body
          controller.content_type = Mime[cache_path.extension || :html]
        end
      end

      class ActionCachePath
        attr_reader :path, :extension

        # If +infer_extension+ is true, the cache path extension is looked up from the request's
        # path and format. This is desirable when reading and writing the cache, but not when
        # expiring the cache - expire_action should expire the same files regardless of the
        # request format.
        def initialize(controller, options = {}, infer_extension = true)
          if infer_extension
            @extension = controller.params[:format]
            options.reverse_merge!(:format => @extension) if options.is_a?(Hash)
          end

          path = controller.url_for(options).split(%r{://}).last
          @path = normalize!(path)
        end

      private
        def normalize!(path)
          path << 'index' if path[-1] == ?/
          path << ".#{extension}" if extension and !path.ends_with?(extension)
          URI.parser.unescape(path)
        end
      end
    end
  end
end