Handle-with-cache.c Apr 2026
UserProfile* get_user_profile_handle(int user_id) { pthread_mutex_lock(&cache_lock); // Check cache CacheEntry *entry = g_hash_table_lookup(handle_cache, &user_id); if (entry) { // Cache hit entry->ref_count++; entry->last_access = time(NULL); pthread_mutex_unlock(&cache_lock); printf("Cache hit for user %d\n", user_id); return entry->profile; }
// Remove stale entries for (GList *l = to_remove; l; l = l->next) { int *key = l->data; CacheEntry *entry = g_hash_table_lookup(handle_cache, key); free(entry->profile->name); free(entry->profile->email); free(entry->profile); free(entry); g_hash_table_remove(handle_cache, key); free(key); } g_list_free(to_remove);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&cache_lock); return profile; } handle-with-cache.c
This article breaks down the key components, implementation strategies, and concurrency considerations for building a robust handle cache in C. Imagine a function get_user_profile(user_id) that reads a large JSON file from disk or queries a database. If your application needs this profile multiple times per second, disk I/O or network latency becomes a bottleneck.
// Find the entry for this profile (simplified; real code needs reverse mapping) GHashTableIter iter; gpointer key, value; g_hash_table_iter_init(&iter, handle_cache); while (g_hash_table_iter_next(&iter, &key, &value)) { CacheEntry *entry = value; if (entry->profile == profile) { entry->ref_count--; if (entry->ref_count == 0) { // Last reference - we could evict immediately or mark as stale printf("No more references to user %d, marking for eviction\n", *(int*)key); } break; } } // Find the entry for this profile (simplified;
A common optimization is or using a per-key mutex:
pthread_mutex_unlock(&cache_lock); } The cache_lock mutex protects the hash table, but note that get_handle() releases the lock during the actual load_user_profile_from_disk() call. This is crucial to avoid blocking all threads during I/O. However, it introduces a race condition where two threads might simultaneously miss the cache and both load the same resource. The Handle and Cache Structures First
// Cache miss - load the resource pthread_mutex_unlock(&cache_lock); // Unlock during I/O UserProfile *profile = load_user_profile_from_disk(user_id); pthread_mutex_lock(&cache_lock);
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.
pthread_mutex_lock(&cache_lock); // Double-check: another thread might have inserted it while we were loading entry = g_hash_table_lookup(handle_cache, &user_id); if (entry) { // Discard our loaded profile and use the cached one free_user_profile(profile); entry->ref_count++; pthread_mutex_unlock(&cache_lock); return entry->profile; }