tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6160143283443860853.post7199278703300776551..comments2022-12-05T10:57:03.356+02:00Comments on Sarasa: Cache Solutions - The OverviewAriel Koganhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03943173847134473007noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6160143283443860853.post-41575461417393251372015-04-03T19:25:53.673+03:002015-04-03T19:25:53.673+03:00Thanks, very nice post.Thanks, very nice post.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6160143283443860853.post-41823035844389088232012-04-03T23:56:16.006+03:002012-04-03T23:56:16.006+03:00Hey Oliver and Josh! I attended your sessions at t...Hey Oliver and Josh! I attended your sessions at the Spring I/O 2012 so it's a great surprise for me to find your comments here.<br /><br />I agree that GemFire can be added to the comparison and I plan to start working on it soon. To make things clearer to the readers, VMware acquired GemStone (the company behind GemFire) in May 2010 and integrated the product to their vFabric Cloud Platform although SpringSource distributes GemFire for free.<br /><br />Josh, I think that when you mentioned Spring's cache abstraction, you were thinking of JSR 107 (not 109) and I agree that until the API will become part of Java, it's a good idea to use Spring's abstraction to allow us to switch cache solutions without introducing modifications to our code.<br /><br />Thanks guys!Ariel Koganhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03943173847134473007noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6160143283443860853.post-55105604617646658732012-04-03T23:28:46.930+03:002012-04-03T23:28:46.930+03:00Nice blog post! I work for SpringSource/VMware, so...Nice blog post! I work for SpringSource/VMware, so I'd be remiss if I didn't mention GemFire, a distributed data cache worthy of your consideration. However, I also wanted to encourage developers to check out Spring 3.1 and its fantastic cache abstraction which makes integrating many of the above caches - as well as any cache that lets you interface with it as a java.util.Map - as simple as declaratively annotating your service tier business methods. In addition, the abstraction will support JSR109 and it supports other caches not covered here like Redis through the Spring Data Redis integration. Thanks!Josh Longhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01807297950414377701noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6160143283443860853.post-22033192489868433572012-04-02T22:51:33.338+03:002012-04-02T22:51:33.338+03:00Any reason you left GemFire out of the discussion?...Any reason you left GemFire out of the discussion? Would round the otherwise impressively detailed article off quite nicely :).Olliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10119949826664398804noreply@blogger.com