A Web caching primer |
| |
Authors: | Davison B.D. |
| |
Affiliation: | Rutgers Univ., NJ; |
| |
Abstract: | The article provides a primer on Web resource caching, one technology used to make the Web scalable. Web caching can reduce bandwidth usage, decrease user-perceived latencies, and reduce Web server loads transparently. As a result, caching has become a significant part of the Web's infrastructure. Caching has even spawned a new industry: content delivery networks, which are also growing at a fantastic rate. Readers familiar with relatively advanced Web caching topics such as the Internet Cache Protocol (ICP), invalidation, and interception proxies are not likely to learn much here. Instead, the article is designed for the general audience of Web users. Rather than a how-to guide to caching technology deployment, it is a high-level argument for the value of Web caching to content consumers and producers. The article defines caching, explains how it applies to the Web, and describes when and why it is useful |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|