I'm trying to accomplish something like a facebook news feed wall, loading N number of results from the overall dataset, starting with the most recent, date descending. When you click “more”, it displays the next N underneath and so on until you finish the dataset.
I’m struggling to come up with the best design to accomplish this. Ive always been told that stateless web services are the only way to build a scalable enterprise application, which means that as I understand it, keeping the whole results object cached serverside on the first call to the page, and just taking N results from it with each subsequent web service call is a no no?
If that’s the case, then something like GetResults(int pageindex, int pagesize) would work.... and thats how I WAS going to do it but then I realised it would not work if someone added a new DB record in between calls. Eg you start with 23 wall feed items in the DB and want to display them 10 at a time.
- First call, page 1, page size 10 will return results 14-23 (most recent first)
- Someone then adds 2 new posts, so you have 25 now in the DB
- Second call, page 2, page size 10 will return results 6-15, two of which were already returned in the first call.
So this offsetting approach doesn’t work because you can’t guarantee the underlying dataset will remain the same between calls.
Im confused, how do I accomplish this?
Edit: Sorry a little more info. To avoid the problem of huge data table lookups, I had considered the option of pre-populating a "transient" table with the last few days data for that user when you first load the screen, then just reading the results a page at a time from that transient table to make it faster reading, with a slightly slower load time. Then when you exhaust that data, you bring in the next period (say 2 weeks) into the transient table and continue reading.
The difficulty is that users will "Post" items which then automatically will be picked up by users who match their search criteria. Eg if your criteria state you want to meet people between 25 and 32 and within 50 miles of you, then when you load up your news feed, you want it to show posts from all users who match your criteria. Kindof like a dynamic friends list.
How I was going to achieve this was at time of login, a stored proc would run which would populate a transient table in the DB by selecting all users and filtering down based on age and location criteria which I have in static lookup tables (postcode distances etc), then it will save the list of Users who match your criteria to this transient table for use whenever you then need to filter posts or search users. If you update your preferences, it will also recalculate this but only when you update prefs or re-login. So any new users signing up won't appear until you next login, which is fine I think.
Then when it comes time to display your news feed, all it does is retrieves this list of User Ids from the DB who match your criteria, then brings back all NewsFeedPosts which were posted by those users. Hey presto, dynamic news feed!
But obviously this is a subset of the entire NewsFeedPost table which is generated on the fly, so it doesn't make sense to recalculate this every time a user clicks "more", so this was how I was thinking about implementing it.
Tables - NewsFeedCurrent, NewsFeedRecent, NewsFeedArchive New posts are created in the current table. Every night a batch job runs that moves all data from current that is 2 days old, to the recent table, and any data in the recent table that is a week old to the archive table.
The thinking being that 90% of the time, the user will only be interested in the last 2 days of data. So keep table small for access time. Another 9% of the time the user may want the last weeks data. So keep that separate in a secondary table. Then only 1% of the time the user wants data more than a week old so keep that in a larger, slow archive table that will be slower, but gives you performance boost by keeping current and recent tables small.
So when you first hit the news feed page, what it was going to do is take the pre-generated user list for your account and pull out all NewsFeedCurrent items and put them in a transient table, say TempNewsFeed under your user ID. You can then work with this resultset just by pulling back everything for your user id, no filtering required for items you arent interested in as they are pre-filtered. this will add a second or so to the page load but will improve response time when fetching results. Then when that data is exhausted, it will then - again using the list of users matching your criteria - pull out all relevant data from the Recent table, adding it to the TempNewsFeed table, allowing you to continue fetching data up to a week old. When thats exhausted, it will finally go to the archive table and using the user id list, pull out all data matching this and put in the temp table, allowing you to continue navigating the remaining data. This will give a fairly significant delay as it populates the archive data but if you are going back a week, then you will have to accept 5-10 seconds wait while it populates the data and says "loading data...". Once it has though, navigating historical data will be just as quick as recent data as it will all be in the transient table.
If you refresh the screen or go back onto it from another screen, it clears out the transient table and starts again from the Current table data.