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RxCache

中文版

For the swift version go here.

The goal of this library is simple: caching your data models like Picasso caches your images, with no effort at all.

Every Android application is a client application, which means it does not make sense to create and maintain a database just for caching data.

Plus, the fact that you have some sort of legendary database for persisting your data does not solves by itself the real challenge: to be able to configure your caching needs in a flexible and simple way.

Inspired by Retrofit api, RxCache is a reactive caching library for Android and Java which turns your caching needs into an interface.

Every method acts as a provider for RxCache, and all of them are managed through observables; they are the fundamental contract between the library and its clients.

When supplying an observable which contains the data provided by an expensive task -probably an http connection, RxCache determines if it is needed to subscribe to it or instead fetch the data previously cached. This decision is made based on the providers configuration.

So, when supplying an observable you get your observable cached back, and next time you will retrieve it without the time cost associated with its underlying task.

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocks(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks);

Setup

Add the JitPack repository in your build.gradle (top level module):

allprojects {
    repositories {
        jcenter()
        maven { url "https://jitpack.io" }
    }
}

And add next dependencies in the build.gradle of the module:

dependencies {
    compile "com.github.VictorAlbertos.RxCache:core:1.4.6"
    compile "io.reactivex:rxjava:1.1.5"
}

Usage

Define an interface with as much methods as needed to create the caching providers:

interface Providers {
        Observable<List<Mock>> getMocks(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks);
    
        @LifeCache(duration = 5, timeUnit = TimeUnit.MINUTES)
        Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksWith5MinutesLifeTime(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks);
    
        Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksEvictProvider(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, EvictProvider evictProvider);
    
        Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksPaginate(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKey page);
    
        Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksPaginateEvictingPerPage(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKey page, EvictDynamicKey evictPage);
        
        Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksPaginateWithFiltersEvictingPerFilter(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKeyGroup filterPage, EvictDynamicKey evictFilter);
}

RxCache accepts as argument a set of classes to indicate how the provider needs to handle the cached data:

  • Observable is the only object required to create a provider. Observable type must be equal to the one specified by the returning value of the provider.
  • @LifeCache sets the amount of time before the data would be evicted. If @LifeCache is not supplied, the data will be never evicted unless it is required explicitly using EvictProvider, EvictDynamicKey or EvictDynamicKeyGroup .
  • EvictProvider allows to explicitly evict all the data associated with the provider.
  • EvictDynamicKey allows to explicitly evict the data of an specific DynamicKey.
  • EvictDynamicKeyGroup allows to explicitly evict the data of an specific DynamicKeyGroup.
  • DynamicKey is a wrapper around the key object for those providers which need to handle multiple records, so they need to provide multiple keys, such us endpoints with pagination, ordering or filtering requirements. To evict the data associated with one particular key use EvictDynamicKey.
  • DynamicKeyGroup is a wrapper around the key and the group for those providers which need to handle multiple records grouped, so they need to provide multiple keys organized in groups, such us endpoints with filtering AND pagination requirements. To evict the data associated with the key of one particular group, use EvictDynamicKeyGroup.

Build an instance of Providers and use it

Finally, instantiate the Providers interface using RxCache.Builder and supplying a valid file system path which would allow RxCache to write on disk.

File cacheDir = getFilesDir();
Providers providers = new RxCache.Builder()
                            .persistence(cacheDir)
                            .using(Providers.class);

Putting It All Together

interface Providers {        
    Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksEvictProvider(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, EvictProvider evictProvider);
        
    Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksPaginateEvictingPerPage(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKey page, EvictDynamicKey evictPage);
    
    Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksPaginateWithFiltersEvictingPerFilter(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKeyGroup filterPage, EvictDynamicKey evictFilter);
}
public class Repository {
    private final Providers providers;

    public Repository(File cacheDir) {
        providers = new RxCache.Builder()
                .persistence(cacheDir)
                .using(Providers.class);
    }

    public Observable<List<Mock>> getMocks(final boolean update) {
        return providers.getMocksEvictProvider(getExpensiveMocks(), new EvictProvider(update));
    }

    public Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksPaginate(final int page, final boolean update) {
        return providers.getMocksPaginateEvictingPerPage(getExpensiveMocks(), new DynamicKey(page), new EvictDynamicKey(update));
    }

    public Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksWithFiltersPaginate(final String filter, final int page, final boolean updateFilter) {
        return providers.getMocksPaginateWithFiltersEvictingPerFilter(getExpensiveMocks(), new DynamicKeyGroup(filter, page), new EvictDynamicKey(updateFilter));
    }

    //In a real use case, here is when you build your observable with the expensive operation.
    //Or if you are making http calls you can use Retrofit to get it out of the box.
    private Observable<List<Mock>> getExpensiveMocks() {
        return Observable.just(Arrays.asList(new Mock("")));
    }
}

Use cases

  • Using classic API RxCache for read actions with little write needs.
  • Using actionable API RxCache, exclusive for write actions.

Classic API RxCache:

Following use cases illustrate some common scenarios which will help to understand the usage of DynamicKey and DynamicKeyGroup classes along with evicting scopes.

List

List without evicting:

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocks(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks);

List evicting:

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksEvictProvider(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, EvictProvider evictProvider);

Runtime usage:

//Hit observable evicting all mocks 
getMocksEvictProvider(oMocks, new EvictProvider(true))

//This line throws an IllegalArgumentException: "EvictDynamicKey was provided but not was provided any DynamicKey"
getMocksEvictProvider(oMocks, new EvictDynamicKey(true))

List Filtering

List filtering without evicting:

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksFiltered(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKey filter);

List filtering evicting:

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksFilteredEvict(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKey filter, EvictProvider evictDynamicKey);

Runtime usage:

//Hit observable evicting all mocks using EvictProvider
getMocksFilteredEvict(oMocks, new DynamicKey("actives"), new EvictProvider(true))

//Hit observable evicting mocks of one filter using EvictDynamicKey
getMocksFilteredEvict(oMocks, new DynamicKey("actives"), new EvictDynamicKey(true))

//This line throws an IllegalArgumentException: "EvictDynamicKeyGroup was provided but not was provided any Group"
getMocksFilteredEvict(oMocks, new DynamicKey("actives"), new EvictDynamicKeyGroup(true))

List Paginated with filters

List paginated with filters without evicting:

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksFilteredPaginate(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKey filterAndPage);

List paginated with filters evicting:

Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksFilteredPaginateEvict(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks, DynamicKeyGroup filterAndPage, EvictProvider evictProvider);

Runtime usage:

//Hit observable evicting all mocks using EvictProvider
getMocksFilteredPaginateEvict(oMocks, new DynamicKeyGroup("actives", "page1"), new EvictProvider(true))

//Hit observable evicting all mocks pages of one filter using EvictDynamicKey
getMocksFilteredPaginateEvict(oMocks, new DynamicKeyGroup("actives", "page1"), new EvictDynamicKey(true))

//Hit observable evicting one page mocks of one filter using EvictDynamicKeyGroup
getMocksFilteredPaginateInvalidate(oMocks, new DynamicKeyGroup("actives", "page1"), new EvictDynamicKeyGroup(true))

As you may already notice, the whole point of using DynamicKey or DynamicKeyGroup along with Evict classes is to play with several scopes when evicting objects.

The above examples declare providers which their method signature accepts EvictProvider in order to be able to concrete more specifics types of EvictProvider at runtime.

But I have done that for demonstration purposes, you always should narrow the evicting classes in your method signature to the type which you really need. For the last example, I would use EvictDynamicKey in production code, because this way I would be able to paginate the filtered items and evict them per its filter, triggered by a pull to refresh for instance.

Nevertheless, there are complete examples for Android and Java projects.

Actionable API RxCache:

This actionable api offers an easy way to perform write operations using providers. Although write operations could be achieved using the classic api too, it's much complex and error-prone. Indeed, the Actions class it's a wrapper around the classic api which play with evicting scopes and lists.

In order to use this actionable api, first you need to add the repository compiler as a dependency to your project using an annotation processor. For Android, it would be as follows:

Add this line to your root build.gradle:

dependencies {
     // other classpath definitions here
     classpath 'com.neenbedankt.gradle.plugins:android-apt:1.8'
 }

Then make sure to apply the plugin in your app/build.gradle and add the compiler dependency:

apply plugin: 'com.neenbedankt.android-apt'

dependencies {
    // apt command comes from the android-apt plugin
    apt "com.github.VictorAlbertos.RxCache:compiler:1.4.6"
}

After this configuration, every provider annotated with @Actionable annotation will generate an accessor method in the ActionsProviders class.

The order in the params supplies must be as in the following example:

public interface RxProviders {
    @Actionable
    Observable<List<Mock.InnerMock>> mocks(Observable<List<Mock.InnerMock>> message, EvictProvider evictProvider);

    @Actionable
    Observable<List<Mock>> mocksDynamicKey(Observable<List<Mock>> message, DynamicKey dynamicKey, EvictDynamicKey evictDynamicKey);

    @Actionable
    Observable<List<Mock>> mocksDynamicKeyGroup(Observable<List<Mock>> message, DynamicKeyGroup dynamicKeyGroup, EvictDynamicKeyGroup evictDynamicKey);
}

The observable value must be a List, otherwise an error will be thrown.

The previous RxProviders interface will expose the next accessors methods in the ActionsProviders class.

ActionsProviders.mocks();
ActionsProviders.mocksDynamicKey(DynamicKey dynamicKey);
ActionsProviders.mocksDynamicKeyGroup(DynamicKeyGroup dynamicKeyGroup);

This methods return an instance of the Actions class, so now you are ready to use every write operation available in the Actions class. It is advisable to explore the ActionsTest class to see what action fits better for your case. If you feel that some action has been missed please don't hesitate to open an issue to request it.

Some actions examples:

ActionsProviders.mocks()
    .addFirst(new Mock())
    .addLast(new Mock())
    //Add a new mock at 5 position
    .add((position, count) -> position == 5, new Mock())
    
    .evictFirst()
    //Evict first element if the cache has already 300 records
    .evictFirst(count -> count > 300)
    .evictLast()
    //Evict last element if the cache has already 300 records
    .evictLast(count -> count > 300)
    //Evict all inactive elements 
    .evictIterable((position, count, mock) -> mock.isInactive())
    .evictAll()
   
    //Update the mock with id 5
    .update(mock -> mock.getId() == 5, mock -> {
        mock.setActive();
        return mock;
    })
    //Update all inactive mocks
    .updateIterable(mock -> mock.isInactive(), mock -> { 
        mock.setActive();
        return mock;
    })
    .toObservable()
    .subscribe(processedMocks -> {})

Every one of the previous actions will be execute only after the composed observable receives a subscription. This way, the underliyng provider cache will be modified its elements without effort at all.

Migrations

RxCache provides a simple mechanism for handling migrations between releases.

You need to annotate your providers interface with @SchemeMigration. This annotation accepts an array of @Migration annotations, and, in turn, @Migration annotation accepts both, a version number and an array of Classes which will be deleted from persistence layer.

@SchemeMigration({
            @Migration(version = 1, evictClasses = {Mock.class}),
            @Migration(version = 2, evictClasses = {Mock2.class}),
            @Migration(version = 3, evictClasses = {Mock3.class})
    })
interface Providers {}

You want to annotate a new migration only when a new field has been added in a class model used by RxCache.

Deleting classes or deleting fields of classes would be handle automatically by RxCache, so you don't need to annotate a new migration when a field or an entire class has been deleted.

For instance:

A migration was added at some point. After that, a second one was added eventually.

@SchemeMigration({
            @Migration(version = 1, evictClasses = {Mock.class}),
            @Migration(version = 2, evictClasses = {Mock2.class})
    })
interface Providers {}

But now Mock class has been deleted from the project, so it is impossible to reference its class anymore. To fix this, just delete the migration annotation.

@SchemeMigration({
            @Migration(version = 2, evictClasses = {Mock2.class})
    })
interface Providers {}

Because RxCache has an internal process to clean memory when it is required, the data will be evicted eventually.

Configure general behaviour

RxCache allows to set certain parameters when building the providers instance:

Configure the limit in megabytes for the data to be persisted

By default, RxCache sets the limit in 100 megabytes, but you can change this value by calling setMaxMBPersistenceCache method when building the provider instance.

new RxCache.Builder()
            .setMaxMBPersistenceCache(maxMgPersistenceCache)
            .persistence(cacheDir)
            .using(Providers.class);

This limit ensure that the disk will no grow up limitless in case you have providers with dynamic keys which values changes dynamically, like filters based on gps location or dynamic filters supplied by your back-end solution.

When this limit is reached, RxCache will not be able to persist in disk new data. That's why RxCache has an automated process to evict any record when the threshold memory assigned to the persistence layer is close to be reached, even if the record life time has not been fulfilled.

But provider's record annotated with @Expirable annotation and set its value to false will be exclude from the process.

interface Providers {
    @Expirable(false)
    Observable<List<Mock>> getMocksNotExpirable(Observable<List<Mock>> oMocks);
}

Use expired data if loader not available

By default, RxCache will throw a RuntimeException if the cached data has expired and the data returned by the observable loader is null, preventing this way serving data which has been marked as evicted.

You can modify this behaviour, allowing RxCache serving evicted data when the loader has returned null values, by setting as true the value of useExpiredDataIfLoaderNotAvailable

new RxCache.Builder()
            .useExpiredDataIfLoaderNotAvailable(true)
            .persistence(cacheDir)
            .using(Providers.class);

Android considerations

To build an instance of the interface used as provides by RxCache, you need to supply a reference to a file system. On Android, you can get the File reference calling getFilesDir() from the Android Application class.

Also, it is recommended to use this Android Application class to provide a unique instance of RxCache for the entire life cycle of your application.

In order execute the Observable on a new thread, and emit results through onNext on the main UI thread, you should use the built in methods provided by RxAndroid.

Check the Android example

Retrofit

RxCache is the perfect match for Retrofit to create a repository of auto-managed-caching data pointing to endpoints. You can check an example of RxCache and Retrofit working together.

Internals

RxCache serves the data from one of its three layers:

  • A memory layer -> Powered by Apache ReferenceMap.
  • A persisting layer -> RxCache uses internally Gson for serialize and deserialize objects.
  • A loader layer (the observable supplied by the client library)

The policy is very simple:

  • If the data requested is in memory, and It has not been expired, get it from memory.
  • Else if the data requested is in persistence layer, and It has not been expired, get it from persistence.
  • Else get it from the loader layer.

Proguard

-dontwarn io.rx_cache.internal.**

Author

Víctor Albertos

RxCache Swift version:

RxCache: Reactive caching library for Swift.

Another author's libraries using RxJava:

  • RxPaparazzo: RxJava extension for Android to take images using camera and gallery.
  • RxGcm: A reactive wrapper for Android Google Cloud Messaging to get rid of Service(s) configuration, handling foreground and background notifications depending on application state.
  • RxActivityResult: A reactive-tiny-badass-vindictive library to break with the OnActivityResult implementation as it breaks the observables chain.

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Reactive caching library for Android and Java

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