I’m developing a DSL using Eclipse’s Xtext framework.
For the content assist/code completion, I have an expensive process which generates me a list of strings.
How do I cache the result of that process?
Long story: My DSL interfaces with Groovy scripts. The scripts provide methods which I offer in certain places in my DSL. This is pretty slow, even when I use a regexp to parse the methods of the scripts. So I’d like to cache the results of the script analysis.
From my analysis, the analysis code is called during validation (so I don’t always have an editor) and when the user opens a DSL file.
There is no way to tell when the validation is over (the code is in a private method and the Xtext developers refuse to change that). But I figure that this must be a common problem when writing editors/compilers for Eclipse. How do other people solve this problem? Is there some caching service in the Eclipse framework?
You could make use of the JVM model Xtext provides. As long as you have the groovy plugin installed, its types and methods should be available through it.
Caching:
On the resource there is a cache which is automatically evicted if there’s a change in it.
The cache can also be injected :