This section covers the following topics:
When an applet is cached, it no longer needs to be downloaded when referenced again. This reduces applet startup time. All file types used by Java Plug-in applets are now cached.
An alternative form of applet caching is provided which allows an applet deployer to decide if an applet should be sticky A sticky applet is placed in a disk cache created and controlled by Java Plug-in which the browser cannot overwrite. The only time a sticky applet gets downloaded after caching is when it is updated on the server. Otherwise the applet is always available for fast loading. Applets providing core business applications should be made sticky to improve startup performance.
This feature is activated by including the
cache_archive
, cache_version
, and
cache_archive_ex
values in the
OBJECT/EMBED
tag as described below.
Note
|
The cache_archive attribute contains a list of the files to be cached:
<PARAM NAME="cache_archive" VALUE="a.jar,b.jar,c.jar">
Like the archive attribute in the APPLET tag,
the list of .jar
files in the cache_archive
attribute do not contain the full URL, but are always downloaded
from the codebase .
The cache_version is an optional attribute. If used, it contains a list of file versions to be cached:
<PARAM NAME="cache_version" VALUE="1.2.0.1, 2.1.1.2, 1.1.2.7">
Each version number is in the form
xxxx.xxxx.xxxx.xxxx
, where x
is a
hexadecimal number. Each version number corresponds to a respective
.jar
file in the cache_archive.
In
order to allow pre-loading of .jar
files, the HTML
parameter cache_archive_ex
can be used. This parameter
allows you to specify whether the .jar
file needs to
be pre-loaded; optionally the version of the .jar
file
can also be specified. VALUE
for
cache_archive_ex
has the following format:
VALUE="<jar_file_name>;<preload(optional)>;<jar_file_version(optional)>,<jar_file_name>; <preload(optional)>;<jar_file_version(optional)>,..."
The
optional tags preload
and
jar_file_version
can appear after the
jar_file_name
in any order separated by the
delimiter ";". ",
" separates
multiple entries.
The following shows how these tags might be used in an HTML page:
<OBJECT .... |
In the above example, a.jar
is specified in
archive
, whereas b.jar
,
c.jar
and d.jar
are specified in
cache_archive
. The versions are also specified for
b.jar
, c.jar
, and d.jar
as
0.0.0.1
, 0.0.2A.1
, and
0.3D.22.FFFE
, respectively. In
cache_archive_ex
, applet.jar
is specified
to be pre-loaded. util.jar
is also specified to be
pre-loaded but along with the version. For tools.jar
,
only version is specified.
Java Plug-In doesn't compare the versions if they are not
specified for all the .jar
files specified in HTML
parameter cache_archive
. If cache_archive
is used without cache_version
, the .jar
files specified in cache_archive
are treated no
differently than the .jar
files specified in HTML
parameter archive
. Similar treatment is given to
.jar
files specified in cache_archive_ex
when preload and version options are not provided.
Class files and resources will be searched in the following
order from the .jar
files specified by the HTML
parameters
cache_archive_ex
cache_archive
archive
By default, without the cache_version attribute, applet caching will be updated if:
However, in some situations, the "Last-Modified" value returned from the web server through HTTP/HTTPS may not reflect the actual version of the applets. For example, if the web server crashes and all the files are restored, the cache_archive may have a different modification date on the server. Even if the cache_archive has not been updated, it will still force all the Java Plug-in clients to download the cache_archive again.
To strongly enforce the version update, it is recommended that the applet deployer use the cache_version attribute.
If cache_version
is used, applet caching will be
updated if the cache_version for the
cache_archive is larger than the one stored locally in the
applet cache. Note that the version number is used for triggering
an update; there is no actual version number attached to the
.jar
file on the web server. In fact, unless version
is used to trigger an update, it is possible the applet on the web
server could be updated without the applet in cache_archive.
Using cache_version eliminates the need to connect to the web server to obtain "Modification-Date" and "Content-Length" of the cache_archive. In most cases this will speed up performance.
Although sticky applets are cached locally, they will still conform to the security policy defined by their original codebase and signer.
Java Plug-in 6 applets can use the JNLP Version Download
protocol for launching JAR resources listed in the HTML file.
Versioning also supports JarDiff. To use versioning support use the
archive_x
tag where x specifies a number. The
following is the syntax of the archive_x
tag.
preload
to indicate preloading of the jar
fileversion=
is used to specify the version string for
the jar file requestThe following are the various ways in which the archive_x tag can be used.
<PARAM NAME="archive_1" VALUE="a.jar, preload,
version=2.0+">
<PARAM NAME="archive_1" VALUE="a.jar, preload,
version=2.0*">
<PARAM NAME="archive_2" VALUE="b.jar,
version=0.0.0.3">
NoteThe archive_x tag is ignored if it found within the cache_archive, cache_version and cache_archive_ex tag. |
Applets using JNLP style version support should use the JNLPDownloadServlet to host the applet resources. More information about JNLP Version Download protocol and JNLPDownloadServlet is available in the JNLP Guide.
.jar
files specified in the
manifest's Class-Path variable using Java Plug-in's cache
is currently not supported.codebase
. Full URLs are
not supported in cache_archive.java.io.IOException: Caching not supported
for
..." is thrown because Java Plug-in could not get
the expiration and last-modification dates for a given JAR file
from the web server. If the Java Plug-in cannot get the date
information, the JAR file is downloaded every time it is
used.