Re: [appengine-java] Re: Caching pages.

2010-02-17 Thread Stephan Hartmann
You may consider using OSCache (http://www.opensymphony.com/oscache/) for caching parts of JSPs with its JSP tags or whole responses (don't know if it works with GAE). Cheers, Stephan 2010/2/13 abhi abhishek9...@gmail.com @ bimbo jones - Thanx , thats a good idea, i guess i found out how to

[appengine-java] Re: Caching pages.

2010-02-13 Thread abhi
@ bimbo jones - Thanx , thats a good idea, i guess i found out how to use memcache for jsps , jsp has a buffer , so i can save it to memcache :) @Brain - The server should cache JSP's for you- what do you mean by that? Do you mean browser cache? -- You received this message because you are

[appengine-java] Re: Caching pages.

2010-02-11 Thread Brian
The server should cache JSP's for you, you would only cache any stuff that is needed by the page and sent to it from your action On Feb 11, 9:33 am, abhi abhishek9...@gmail.com wrote: Caching objects in App engine is easy  Cache cache; Cache cache ;         try {             cache =

Re: [appengine-java] Re: Caching pages.

2010-02-11 Thread bimbo jones
Hey there, I cached some html pages with tags like #MESSAGE# in a string, then used, htmlstring = htmlstring.replaceall(#MESSAGE#,new message); then just print the whole string. BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(pagetobecached.html)); while (in.ready()) htmlstring=

[appengine-java] Re: Caching pages.

2010-02-11 Thread Brian
Not sure that would really save any time unless your page is super complex to render and the app engine app server is super dumb, but I guess it is possible with app engine. On Feb 11, 5:40 pm, bimbo jones bimbojone...@gmail.com wrote: Hey there, I cached some html pages with tags like

Re: [appengine-java] Re: Caching pages.

2010-02-11 Thread Ikai L (Google)
I'm actually pretty sure that's worse than just serving the static file from the filesystem. Prove me wrong with benchmarks ... On Thu, Feb 11, 2010 at 5:24 PM, Brian bwa...@gmail.com wrote: Not sure that would really save any time unless your page is super complex to render and the app engine