Context: .Net 3.5, C#
I'd like to have caching mechanism in my Console application.
Instead of re-inventing the wheel, I'd like to use System.Web.Caching.Cache
(and that's a final decision, I can't use other caching framework, don't ask why).
However, it looks like System.Web.Caching.Cache
is supposed to run only in a valid HTTP context. My very simple snippet looks like this:
using System;
using System.Web.Caching;
using System.Web;
Cache c = new Cache();
try
{
c.Insert("a", 123);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine("cannot insert to cache, exception:");
Console.WriteLine(ex);
}
and the result is:
cannot insert to cache, exception: System.NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object. at System.Web.Caching.Cache.Insert(String key, Object value) at MyClass.RunSnippet()
So obviously, I'm doing something wrong here. Any ideas?
Update: +1 to most answers, getting the cache via static methods is the correct usage, namely HttpRuntime.Cache
and HttpContext.Current.Cache
. Thank you all!
I ended on this page wondering the same thing. Here's what I'm doing (which I don't like but seems to work just fine):
Just use the Caching Application Block if you don't want to reinvent the wheel. If you still want to use the ASP.NET cache- see here. I'm pretty sure this only works with .NET 2.0 and above though. It simply wasn't possible to use the cache outside of ASP.NET in .NET 1.
MSDN has a nice big warning on the page for the cache documentation too:
For a very lightweight solution, where you don't have to worry about expiration etc, then a dictionary object could suffice.
While the OP specified v3.5, the question was asked before v4 was released. To help anyone who finds this question and can live with a v4 dependency, the framework team created a new general purpose cache for this type of scenario. It's in the System.Runtime.Caching namespace: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd997357%28v=VS.100%29.aspx
The static reference to the default cache instance is: MemoryCache.Default
The documentation for the Cache constructor says that it is for internal use only. To get your Cache object, call HttpRuntime.Cache rather than creating an instance via the constructor.
Try
The System.Web.Caching.Cache class relies on having its member "_cacheInternal" set by the HttpRuntime object.
To use the System.Web.Caching classes you'd have to create an HttpRuntime object and setup the HttpRuntime.Cache property. You'd effectively have to emulate IIS.
You're better off using other caching frameworks like: