You can see other cool NuGet Packages I've mentioned on the blog here. Today's NuGet package is CacheCow, which has possibly the coolest Open Source Library name since Lawnchair.js.

"CacheCow is a library for implementing HTTP caching on both client and server in ASP.NET Web API. It uses message handlers on both client and server to intercept request and response and apply caching logic and rules."

CacheCow was started by Ali Kheyrollahi with help from Tugberk Ugurlu and the community, and is a fantastically useful piece of work. I wouldn't be surprised to see this library start showing in more places one day.

As an aside, Ali, this would be a great candidate for setting up a free AppVeyor Continuous Integration build along with a badge showing that the project is building and healthy!

CacheCow on the server can manage the cache in a number of ways. You can store it in SQL Server with the EntityTagStore, or implement your own storage handler. You can keep the cache in memcached, Redis, etc.

Consider using a library like CacheCow if you're putting together a Web API and haven't given sufficient thought to caching yet, or if you're already sprinkling cache code throughout your business logic. You might already suspect that is going to litter your code but perhaps haven't gotten around to tidying up. Now is a good time to unify your caching.

As a very simple example, here's the HTTP Headers from an HTTP GET to a Web API:

Cache-Control: no-cache

Content-Length: 19

Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8

Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2014 23:22:10 GMT

Expires: -1

Pragma: no-cache

Here's the same thing after adding the most basic caching to my ASP.NET applications config:

The HTTP Headers with the same GET with CacheCow enabled:

Cache-Control: no-transform, must-revalidate, max-age=0, private

Content-Length: 19

Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8

Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2014 23:24:16 GMT

ETag: W/"e1c5ab4f818f4cde9426c6b0824afe5b"

Last-Modified: Fri, 27 Jun 2014 23:24:16 GMT

Notice the Cache-Control header, the Last-Modified, and the ETag. The ETag is weak as indicted by "W/" which means that this response is semantically equivalent to the last response. If I was caching persistently, I could get a strong ETag indicating that the cached response was byte-for-byte identical. Also, if the client was smart about caching and added If-Modified-Since or If-None-Match for ETags, the response might be a 304 Not Modified, rather than a 200 OK. If you're going to add caching to your Web API server, you'll want to make sure your clients respect those headers fully!

From ALI's blog, you can still use HttpClient in your clients, but you use WebRequestHandler as the message handler:

Really don't want a resource cached? Remember, this is HTTP so, Cache-Control: no-cache from the client!

Of course, one of the most important aspects of caching anything is "when do I invalidate the cache?" CacheCow gives you a lot control over this, but you really need to be aware of what your actual goal is or you'll find things cache you don't want, or things not cached that you do.

Are you looking for time-based caching? Cache for 5 min after a DB access?

Are you looking for smart caching that invalidates when it sees what could be a modification? Invalidate a collection after a POST/PUT/DELETE?

Given that you're likely using REST, you'll want to make sure that the semantics of these caching headers and their intent is reflected in your behavior. Last-Modified should reflect realty when possible.

From the CacheCow Wiki, there's great features for both the Server-side and Client-side. Here's CacheCow.Server features

Managing ETag, Last Modified, Expires and other cache related headers

Implementing returning Not-Modified 304 and precondition failed 412 responses for conditional calls

Invalidating cache in case of PUT, POST, PATCH and DELETE

Flexible resource organization. Rules can be defined so invalidation of a resource can invalidate linked resources

and the CacheCow.Client features

Caching GET responses according to their caching headers

Verifying cached items for their staleness

Validating cached items if must-revalidate parameter of Cache-Control header is set to true. It will use ETag or Expires whichever exists

Making conditional PUT for resources that are cached based on their ETag or expires header, whichever exists

Another good ASP.NET caching library to explore is ASP.NET Web API "CacheOutput" by Filip Wojcieszyn. While it doesn't have an fun to say name ;) it's got some great features and is super easy to get started with. You can find CacheOutput with NuGet at

Install-Package Strathweb.CacheOutput.WebApi2

And you'll configure your caching options using the intuitive CacheOutput attributes like those you may have seen in ASP.NET MVC:

ASP.NET Web API CacheOutput has great getting started docs and clear easy to ready code.

So, you've got options. Go explore!

You can also pickup the Pro ASP.NET Web API book at Amazon. Go explore CacheCow or CacheOutput and support open source! If you find issues or feel there's work to be done in the documentation, why not do it and submit a pull request? I'm sure any project would appreciate some help with updated samples, quickstarts, or better docs.

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