Improving performance with the dynamic cache service

Caching the output of servlets, commands, and JavaServer Pages (JSP) improves application performance. WebSphere® Application Server consolidates several caching activities including servlets, web services, and WebSphere commands into one service called the dynamic cache. These caching activities work together to improve application performance, and share many configuration parameters that are set in the dynamic cache service of an application server. You can use the dynamic cache to improve the performance of servlet and JSP files by serving requests from an in-memory cache. Cache entries contain servlet output, the results of a servlet after it runs, and metadata.

About this task

The dynamic cache service works within an application server Java™ virtual machine (JVM), intercepting calls to cacheable objects. For example, it intercepts calls through a servlet service method or a command execute method, and either stores the output of the object to the cache or serves the content of the object from the dynamic cache.

Procedure

  1. The dynamic cache service is enabled by default.
    You can configure the default cache instance in the administrative console. Refer to the Using the dynamic cache service topic for more information.
  2. Configure the type of caching that you are using:
    • Configuring servlet caching.
    • Configuring portlet fragment caching.
    • Configuring Edge Side Include caching.
    • Configuring command caching.
    • Example: Caching web services.
    • Configuring the JAX-RPC web services client cache.
  3. Monitor the results of your configuration using the dynamic cache monitor.
    Refer to the Displaying cache information topic for more information about the dynamic cache monitor.

What to do next

To use the DistributedMap and DistributedObjectCache interfaces for the dynamic cache, refer to the Using the DistributedMap and DistributedObjectCache interfaces for the dynamic cache topic.