Identity map pattern

Category:Articles needing additional references from April 2020Category:All articles needing additional references

In the design of DBMS, the identity map pattern is a database access design pattern used to improve performance by providing a context-specific, in-memory cache to prevent duplicate retrieval of the same object data from the database.[1]

If the requested data has already been loaded from the database, the identity map returns the same instance of the already instantiated object, but if it has not been loaded yet, it loads it and stores the new object in the map. In this way, it follows a similar principle to lazy loading.

There are 4 types of identity maps

  1. Explicit
  2. Generic
  3. Session
  4. Class

See also

References

  1. Fowler, Martin (2003). Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture. Addison-Wesley. pp. 195–199. ISBN 0-321-12742-0.
Category:Architectural pattern (computer science) Category:Software design patterns


Category:All articles needing additional references Category:All stub articles Category:Architectural pattern (computer science) Category:Articles needing additional references from April 2020 Category:Computer science stubs Category:Software design patterns