Name |
Description |
AsyncCountdownEvent |
|
AsyncCountdownEvent.DebugView |
|
CacheMessageHandler |
This is a custom WebApi message handler which try to build the response if cache data is available This should create a response asap if there is the cache without waiting for the OutputCacheAttribute to do that which is quite late and quite heavy "if your controller has too many dependencies". People should try to not having heavy Controller anyway. |
CacheResponseBuilder |
Build a response from cacheItem but also take into account all cache-request-directive http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html |
ExtensionMethods |
|
FlatwhiteStatusController |
Status controller |
FlatwhiteStatusController.CacheItemStatus |
|
FlatwhiteWebApiConfiguration |
Flatwhite webapi configuration |
OutputCacheAttribute |
|
RegisteredTasks |
|
RevalidateAttribute |
|
WebApiCacheItem |
A cache item object that keeps some details about the data to be cached |
WebApiCacheStrategy |
A ICacheStrategy implementation for web api |
WebApiCacheStrategyProvider |
A provider to return WebApiCacheStrategy for WebApi request |
WebApiContextProvider |
A IContextProvider for webapi that puts request data to the context dictionary |
WebApiExtensions |
|
WebApiInvocation |
|
WebApiPhoenix |
A web api phoenix to support auto refresh for webApi It will create instance of WebApi controller and invoke the ActionMethod with cached arguments. It will not work if the controller required QueryString, Headers or anything outside these action method parameters But you can override the Phoenix MethodInfo, Arguments or method Phoenix.GetTargetInstance, Phoenix.InvokeAndGetBareResult, or completely change the way the Phoenix reborn by overriding method , Phoenix.Reborn, Idealy, keep Controller thin and use proper Model binding instead of dodgy access the Request object. |