Source: ruby-actionpack-page-caching Section: ruby Priority: optional Maintainer: Debian Ruby Extras Maintainers Uploaders: Balasankar C Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 11), gem2deb, rake, ruby-actionpack (>= 4.0.0), ruby-minitest, ruby-mocha Standards-Version: 4.2.1 Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/ruby-team/ruby-actionpack-page-caching.git Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/ruby-team/ruby-actionpack-page-caching Homepage: https://github.com/rails/actionpack-page_caching Testsuite: autopkgtest-pkg-ruby XS-Ruby-Versions: all Package: ruby-actionpack-page-caching Architecture: all XB-Ruby-Versions: ${ruby:Versions} Depends: ruby | ruby-interpreter, ruby-actionpack (>= 4.0.0), ${misc:Depends}, ${shlibs:Depends} Breaks: ruby-actionpack-2.3 Replaces: ruby-actionpack-2.3 Description: static page caching for Action Pack (removed from core in Rails 4.0) Page caching is an approach to caching where the entire action output of is stored as a HTML file that the web server can serve without going through Action Pack. . This is the fastest way to cache your content as opposed to going dynamically through the process of generating the content. Unfortunately, this incredible speed-up is only available to stateless pages where all visitors are treated the same. Content management systems -- including weblogs and wikis -- have many pages that are a great fit for this approach, but account-based systems where people log in and manipulate their own data are often less likely candidates.