ls-cache
This is a library that emulates memcache
functions using HTML5 localStorage
, so that you can cache data on the client and associate an expiration time with each piece of data. If the localStorage
limit (~5MB) is exceeded, it tries to create space by removing the items that are closest to expiring anyway. If localStorage
is not available at all in the browser, the library degrades by simply not caching and all cache requests return null.
Entries which have no expiry are never removed automatically from the cache.
Entries in the cache are optionally stored in a hierarchy of buckets, each of which is independant of the others.
Based on: [https://github.com/pamelafox/lscache]
Methods
The library exposes methods: set()
, get()
, remove()
, flush()
, flushRecursive()
, createBucket()
and keys()
.
lscache.set
Stores the value in localStorage. Expires after specified number of minutes.
Arguments
key
(string)value
(Object)time
(number: optional)
lscache.get
Retrieves specified value from localStorage, if not expired.
Arguments
key
(string)
Returns
Object : The stored value.
lscache.keys
Gets list of all keys in bucket
Returns
Array : Key names
lscache.remove
Removes a value from localStorage.
Arguments
key
(string)
lscache.flush
Removes all ls-cache items in current bucket from localStorage without affecting other data.
lscache.flushRecursive
Removes all ls-cache items in current bucket from localStorage and all sub-buckets
lscache.createBucket
Creates a sub-bucket which is completely independent. However, its expirable items may be cleared to make room for more keys.
Arguments
bucket
(string)
Usage
The interface should be familiar to those of you who have used memcache
, and should be easy to understand for those of you who haven't.
For example, you can store a string for 2 minutes using lscache.set()
:
lscache;
You can then retrieve that string with lscache.get()
:
;
You can remove that string from the cache entirely with lscache.remove()
:
lscache;
You can remove all items from the cache entirely with lscache.flush()
:
lscache;
The library also takes care of serializing objects, so you can store more complex data:
lscache;
And then when you retrieve it, you will get it back as an object:
;
If you have multiple instances of ls-cache running on the same domain, you can partition data in a certain bucket via:
bucket = lscache;bucket;lscache;lscache; //only removes 'path' which was set in the root bucket, not the sub-bucket
Buckets are nestable:
bucket = lscache;bucket2 = bucket;
Browser Support
The lscache
library should work in all browsers where localStorage
is supported.
A list of those is here:
http://www.quirksmode.org/dom/html5.html