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I'm looking to swap out the AFImageCache used by default in the UIImageView+AFNetworking category for something that's disk based and that can managed a little more accurately (something like NSURLCache). Unfortunately, since UIImageView+AFNetworking is a category and not a subclass, I can't just override af_sharedImageCache with a sublclass of UIImageView OR another category.

Is there any other way to achieve this functionality without copying and pasting most of UIImageView+AFNetworking into my own subclass?

2 Answers 2

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The SDWebImage project provides a similar UIImageView category, but offers both in-memory (using NSCache) and on-disk (using NSFileManager) caching. I'd recommend just using that when you need to cache to disk.

The downside to this implementation is that your network requests won't go through your AFHTTPClient subclass, so depending on what your needs are you might need to implement your own operation queue, authentication, etc. If you're just using it for something basic, like displaying avatar images in a table view, it should be fine.

If that downside bothers you, an alternate idea would be to use SDImageCache (included in the SDWebImage project) to cache the images, and download them yourself using AFNetworking.

Finally, note that AFNetworking has built-in support for NSURLCache, and if you create one it will cache your images to disk. However, image caching is typically used for showing lots of images in a UIScrollView, and NSURLCache doesn't have good enough performance for smooth scrolling.

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  • Thanks for this, I'll definitely take a closer look at SDWebImage. Out of curiosity, why does NSURLCache have suboptimal performance? I was under the impression it used both memory and disk caching kind of like an L1 and L2 cache where the web request itself would be L3, which would in theory be pretty speedy.
    – jpredham
    Jun 14, 2013 at 14:21
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    This is a good explaination: github.com/rs/SDWebImage/wiki/…
    – jpredham
    Jun 14, 2013 at 14:43
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I have a fork of AFNetworking that includes file cache in the NSCachesDirectory.

You can find it here: https://github.com/andyast/AFNetworking_FileCache There is a branch that is compatible with V1.3.3 if you need that as well.

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  • Cool, works, would be best if AfNetworking works this way !!! Is it hard to modify directly latest AfNetworking ?
    – Renetik
    Oct 30, 2014 at 14:58

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