Handle-with-cache.c 〈Browser WORKING〉

// The cache itself (often a global or passed context) static GHashTable *handle_cache = NULL; static pthread_mutex_t cache_lock = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; This function does the actual heavy lifting – creating a handle from scratch.

A handle cache solves this by storing active handles in a key-value store after the first access. Subsequent requests bypass the expensive operation and return the cached handle directly. A well-written handle-with-cache.c typically contains four main sections: 1. The Handle and Cache Structures First, we define our handle type (opaque to the user) and the cache entry.

// Cache entry wrapper typedef struct { UserProfile *profile; time_t last_access; unsigned int ref_count; // Reference counting for safety } CacheEntry; handle-with-cache.c

In systems programming, efficiency is paramount. Repeatedly opening, reading, or computing the same resource (a file, a network socket, a database row, or a complex calculation result) is wasteful. This is where caching becomes indispensable.

// Background thread or called periodically void evict_stale_handles(int max_age_seconds, int max_size) { pthread_mutex_lock(&cache_lock); time_t now = time(NULL); GList *to_remove = NULL; // The cache itself (often a global or

pthread_mutex_lock(&cache_lock);

// Create new cache entry CacheEntry *new_entry = malloc(sizeof(CacheEntry)); new_entry->profile = profile; new_entry->last_access = time(NULL); new_entry->ref_count = 1; A well-written handle-with-cache

The module handle-with-cache.c exemplifies a classic design pattern: the . A "handle" is an opaque pointer or identifier to a resource, and the cache stores recently accessed handles to avoid redundant initialization or I/O operations.

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