Most J2EE application workloads have more read operations than write operations. Read operations require passing a request through several topology levels that consist of a front-end Web server, the Web container of an application server, the EJB container of an application server, and a database. WebSphere Application Server provides the ability to cache results at all levels of the network topology and J2EE programming model that include Web services.Application designers must consider caching when the application architecture is designed because caching integrates at most levels of the programming model.
Network designers must consider caching when network planning is performed because caching also integrates at most levels of the network topology. For applications that are available on the public Internet, network designers might want to consider Edge Side Include (ESI) caching when WebSphere Application Server caching extends into the public Internet. Network caching services are available in the proxy server for WebSphere Application Server, WebSphere Edge Component Caching Proxy, and the WebSphere plug-in.
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