if you are going to still use JPA, Spring Boot works very well with camel and makes caching jpa entities seamless (implementation is in property files)
On Sat, Oct 7, 2017 at 11:31 AM, Rafael Soares <[email protected]> wrote: > If you choose Hibernate as your JPA provider you can activate entity 2nd > level caching [1] with Infinispan [2]. Or use Infinispan as a general > purpose (not only for JPA entities) Distributed cache. In the latter case, > there is a Camel component to interact with Infinispan caches [3]. > > [1] > https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/5.2/userguide/ > html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#caching > [2] http://infinispan.org > [3] http://camel.apache.org/infinispan.html > > ________________________ > Rafael Torres Coelho Soares > > On Sat, Oct 7, 2017 at 7:58 AM, Imran Raza Khan <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > I have currently project to which i planning to migrate to Apache camel. > > > > It exposes API to inquire for different Inventory stored in DB. > > These Inventory model doesn't change frequently and new Inventory got > > update once in two months. > > Currently at start of Application i load all entities(Inventory, > > SystemConfig, and couple of related entities ) from DB and stored in > > HashMap's of my developed CacheManager class. > > For any new changes we restart the application. > > > > Now looking for some more better options in ApacheCamel > > > > Should I cache the data or hit the database? > > Use Cache providers like Redis, EhCache, Hazelcast or custom cache. > > But should not overkill too or keeping future growth in mind i should > > try some third party provider so in future i would not require to re > > design from scratch if go for clustering. Currently its deployed on > > two individual servers with hardware load balance on front. > > >
