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Sharing Data Between Two Web Applications in ASP.NET

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-19 18:56 出处:网络
I have a web application (MainApplication) where many of the pages contain a custom Web Control that looks for some content in a cache. If it can\'t find any data within the cache, then it goes out to

I have a web application (MainApplication) where many of the pages contain a custom Web Control that looks for some content in a cache. If it can't find any data within the cache, then it goes out to a database for the content. After retrieving the content, the Control displays the content on the page.

There is a web ap开发者_高级运维plication (CMS) in a subdirectory within the aforementioned web application. Users use this CMS to update the content pulled in by the MainApplication.

When a user updates some content using the CMS, I need the CMS to clear the relevant portion of the cache used by the MainApplication. The problem is that, as two different web applications, they can't simply interact with the same static cache object.

The ideal solution would be to somehow share an instance of a cache object between both web applications.

Failing that, what would be the best (performance-wise) way of communicating between the two web applications? Obviously, writing/reading to a database would defeat the purpose. I was thinking about a flat file?

Update

Thank you all for your help. Your wonderful answers actually gave me the right search terms to discover that this was a duplicate question (sorry!): Cache invalidation between two web applications


We had the exact same setup in a previous project i worked on, where we had one ASP.NET Web Application (with MCMS Backing), and another ASP.NET Web Application to display data.

Completely different servers (same domain though).

However, when a "editor" updated content in the CMS application, the UI was automatically refreshed.

How? Glad you asked.

We stored the content in SQL Server, and used Replication. :)

The "frontend" Web Application would read the data from the database (which was replicated by the CMS system).

Now - we don't cache this data, because in the database, we actually stored the markup (the HTML) for the control. Therefore we dynamically re-rendered the HTML.

Why is that "defeating the purpose"?

You can't get one application to "invalidate" the cache on another application.

If you're going down this path, you need to consider a distributed caching engine (e.g Velocity).


One option that comes to my mind in such scenario is using Velocity distributed cache mechanism. Do read about it and give it a try if possible http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd861287.aspx


In ASP.NET there is the notion of Cache Dependency. You can have a look here: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/web-cache/CachingDependencies.aspx or http://www.devx.com/dotnet/Article/27865/0/page/5.

There is also the Enterprise Library Caching Block available here that adds some feature to the standard stuff: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff649093.aspx

Now, if you're running on .NET 4, there is a new System.Runtime.Caching namespace that you should definitely use: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.runtime.caching.aspx

This article here "Caching in ASP.NET with the SqlCacheDependency Class" is quite interesting: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms178604.aspx

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