How to Install and Uninstall ruby-actionpack-page-caching Package on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)

Last updated: November 25,2024

1. Install "ruby-actionpack-page-caching" package

Please follow the guidance below to install ruby-actionpack-page-caching on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)

$ sudo apt update $ sudo apt install ruby-actionpack-page-caching

2. Uninstall "ruby-actionpack-page-caching" package

This tutorial shows how to uninstall ruby-actionpack-page-caching on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla):

$ sudo apt remove ruby-actionpack-page-caching $ sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove

3. Information about the ruby-actionpack-page-caching package on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)

Package: ruby-actionpack-page-caching
Architecture: all
Version: 1.2.2-1
Priority: optional
Section: universe/ruby
Origin: Ubuntu
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers
Original-Maintainer: Debian Ruby Extras Maintainers
Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
Installed-Size: 39
Depends: ruby | ruby-interpreter, ruby-actionpack (>= 2:5.0.0)
Breaks: ruby-actionpack-2.3
Replaces: ruby-actionpack-2.3
Filename: pool/universe/r/ruby-actionpack-page-caching/ruby-actionpack-page-caching_1.2.2-1_all.deb
Size: 10216
MD5sum: 82b9db4707c3791f112a766055fd58a9
SHA1: b801289e69f24075bab960f603833ae31043a117
SHA256: f13cd32ac7c062467a3369cd87acbe868604fb75c75a21e5df0175249ce68961
SHA512: 48ee754e63073f9624fdbbfce760a063108ced56e5b4c303e1afe81e3c03ea80df7882b56395194fc3df619fd9d35ffabe8de162babb445bfb9708189fd7e74e
Homepage: https://github.com/rails/actionpack-page_caching
Description-en: static page caching for Action Pack (removed from core in Rails 4.0)
Page caching is an approach to caching where the entire action output of is
stored as a HTML file that the web server can serve without going through
Action Pack.
.
This is the fastest way to cache your content as opposed to going dynamically
through the process of generating the content. Unfortunately, this incredible
speed-up is only available to stateless pages where all visitors are treated
the same. Content management systems -- including weblogs and wikis -- have
many pages that are a great fit for this approach, but account-based systems
where people log in and manipulate their own data are often less likely
candidates.
Description-md5: e5890602c5c001803bca1dfe7d066c7d
Ruby-Versions: all