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7d2df19
commit 7d2df19c272bc6dfe04f123e4bcd1ae0f5815602
tree 6199dcef356d42bdb44e33880510aba85d79a190
parent aba6db213b65492efdfa8c081e53219b1dc4f31f
tree 6199dcef356d42bdb44e33880510aba85d79a190
parent aba6db213b65492efdfa8c081e53219b1dc4f31f
mack-more / mack-caching
mack-caching/README
== Page Caching
Using page caching with Mack, is incredibly easy. The first thing you
need to do is turn it on. In the app_config/*.yml file of your chosing
place the following configuration setting:
use_page_caching: true
That will now enable your application to use the page caching system.
A restart of your application is required for this to take effect.
Now that your application is using page caching, provided by the
Cachetastic gem, you need to tell it which controllers/actions you want
to cache.
To cache all the actions in your controller you would do something like
the following:
class UsersController
include Mack::Controller
cache_pages
# ...
# actions omitted
# ...
end
The cache_pages method takes similar inputs to before/after filters. If
you want to be more specific you can use either the :only or :except flags.
cache_pages :only => [:index, :show]
or
cache_pages :except => [:delete, :edit, :update]
