"mdoraisamy" wrote : Too good to be true!
|
| How does ICEFaces know what changed without any support from the object graph ?
| Does it manage the previous request's DOM to be able to indentify the changes ?
| Does it render the object graph into DOM and then does the comparision ?
| Is it a comparision by doing a full scan of DOM tree?
|
Of course, we reserve the right to make internal optimizations in ICEfaces or even
radically change the implementation -- such things can be done because we only need to
preserve the contract to the developer that standard JSF pages will behave as expected,
but they will be updated smoothly and efficiently via Ajax. Currently, though, ICEfaces
uses a technique called Direct-to-DOM rendering: The component tree is rendered into a
DOM on the server (the output of the components is not parsed, the responseWriter is used
like an inverse-SAX for efficiency) and a previous DOM is compared with the current DOM to
determine an incremental update. The DOMs are scanned fully, but subtrees are not
traversed when differences are found (we will be enhancing this algorithm in the future,
but I won't go into that detail here).
"mdoraisamy" wrote :
| If i have returned a value from a query (or intensive processing) in an bean getter
will it get executed irrespective of the change ? (which itself is not a problem but to
understand the behaviour, so that i can model app correctly)
|
If the getter is for a property referenced by a component rendered on the page, it will be
called (this is a JSF behavior, not an ICEfaces behavior). When an application has
expensive getters, we typically recommend some form of caching, either in the beans
themselves or in the persistence layer.
"mdoraisamy" wrote :
| Any reference/document that explains how ICEFaces does incremental UI updates should
be of great help in pushing this case forward in my company. Thanks.
|
The ICEfaces architecture is described in the Developer's guide, but the
implementation details have varied over time. It's probably best just to ask us
questions on the areas that interest you.
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