Velocity was the codename for Microsoft's AppFabric distributed caching technology. Very similar to memcache, it is used for caching objects across multiple computers.
This has no real bearing on how IIS processes requests. All requests are satisfied by IIS, AppFabric is a mechanism for storing data, not processing requests.
In answer to your second question; You can use AppFabric is a first-call check for data. If the data does not exist in the cache, call the database to populate the cache, and then return the data.
var factory = DataCacheFactory();
var cache = factory.GetCache("AutoSuggest");
List<Region> regions = cache.Get("Regions") as List<Region>;
if (regions == null) {
regions = // Get regions from database.
cache.Add("Regions", regions);
}
return regions;
Checking the cache first enables the app to get a faster response, as the database is only hit on the first instance (ideally), and the result data is pushed back into the cache.
You could wrap this up a bit more:
public T Get<T>(string cacheName, string keyName, Func<T> itemFactory)
where T : class
{
var cache = dataFactory.GetCache(cacheName);
T value = cache.Get(keyName) as T;
if (value == null) {
value = itemFactory();
cache.Add(keyName, value);
}
return value;
}
That way you can change your lookup calls to something similar to:
var regions = Get<List<Region>>("AutoSuggest", "Regions", () => GetRegions());