| ======================== |
| Django's cache framework |
| ======================== |
| |
| A fundamental trade-off in dynamic Web sites is, well, they're dynamic. Each |
| time a user requests a page, the Web server makes all sorts of calculations -- |
| from database queries to template rendering to business logic -- to create the |
| page that your site's visitor sees. This is a lot more expensive, from a |
| processing-overhead perspective, than your standard |
| read-a-file-off-the-filesystem server arrangement. |
| |
| For most Web applications, this overhead isn't a big deal. Most Web |
| applications aren't washingtonpost.com or slashdot.org; they're simply small- |
| to medium-sized sites with so-so traffic. But for medium- to high-traffic |
| sites, it's essential to cut as much overhead as possible. |
| |
| That's where caching comes in. |
| |
| To cache something is to save the result of an expensive calculation so that |
| you don't have to perform the calculation next time. Here's some pseudocode |
| explaining how this would work for a dynamically generated Web page:: |
| |
| given a URL, try finding that page in the cache |
| if the page is in the cache: |
| return the cached page |
| else: |
| generate the page |
| save the generated page in the cache (for next time) |
| return the generated page |
| |
| Django comes with a robust cache system that lets you save dynamic pages so |
| they don't have to be calculated for each request. For convenience, Django |
| offers different levels of cache granularity: You can cache the output of |
| specific views, you can cache only the pieces that are difficult to produce, or |
| you can cache your entire site. |
| |
| Django also works well with "upstream" caches, such as `Squid |
| <http://www.squid-cache.org>`_ and browser-based caches. These are the types of |
| caches that you don't directly control but to which you can provide hints (via |
| HTTP headers) about which parts of your site should be cached, and how. |
| |
| Setting up the cache |
| ==================== |
| |
| The cache system requires a small amount of setup. Namely, you have to tell it |
| where your cached data should live -- whether in a database, on the filesystem |
| or directly in memory. This is an important decision that affects your cache's |
| performance; yes, some cache types are faster than others. |
| |
| Your cache preference goes in the ``CACHE_BACKEND`` setting in your settings |
| file. Here's an explanation of all available values for ``CACHE_BACKEND``. |
| |
| Memcached |
| --------- |
| |
| By far the fastest, most efficient type of cache available to Django, Memcached |
| is an entirely memory-based cache framework originally developed to handle high |
| loads at LiveJournal.com and subsequently open-sourced by Danga Interactive. |
| It's used by sites such as Facebook and Wikipedia to reduce database access and |
| dramatically increase site performance. |
| |
| Memcached is available for free at http://memcached.org/. It runs as a |
| daemon and is allotted a specified amount of RAM. All it does is provide a |
| fast interface for adding, retrieving and deleting arbitrary data in the cache. |
| All data is stored directly in memory, so there's no overhead of database or |
| filesystem usage. |
| |
| After installing Memcached itself, you'll need to install |
| ``python-memcached``, which provides Python bindings to Memcached. |
| This is available at ftp://ftp.tummy.com/pub/python-memcached/ |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.2 |
| In Django 1.0 and 1.1, you could also use ``cmemcache`` as a binding. |
| However, support for this library was deprecated in 1.2 due to |
| a lack of maintenance on the ``cmemcache`` library itself. Support for |
| ``cmemcache`` will be removed completely in Django 1.4. |
| |
| To use Memcached with Django, set ``CACHE_BACKEND`` to |
| ``memcached://ip:port/``, where ``ip`` is the IP address of the Memcached |
| daemon and ``port`` is the port on which Memcached is running. |
| |
| In this example, Memcached is running on localhost (127.0.0.1) port 11211:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'memcached://127.0.0.1:11211/' |
| |
| One excellent feature of Memcached is its ability to share cache over multiple |
| servers. This means you can run Memcached daemons on multiple machines, and the |
| program will treat the group of machines as a *single* cache, without the need |
| to duplicate cache values on each machine. To take advantage of this feature, |
| include all server addresses in ``CACHE_BACKEND``, separated by semicolons. |
| |
| In this example, the cache is shared over Memcached instances running on IP |
| address 172.19.26.240 and 172.19.26.242, both on port 11211:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'memcached://172.19.26.240:11211;172.19.26.242:11211/' |
| |
| In the following example, the cache is shared over Memcached instances running |
| on the IP addresses 172.19.26.240 (port 11211), 172.19.26.242 (port 11212), and |
| 172.19.26.244 (port 11213):: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'memcached://172.19.26.240:11211;172.19.26.242:11212;172.19.26.244:11213/' |
| |
| A final point about Memcached is that memory-based caching has one |
| disadvantage: Because the cached data is stored in memory, the data will be |
| lost if your server crashes. Clearly, memory isn't intended for permanent data |
| storage, so don't rely on memory-based caching as your only data storage. |
| Without a doubt, *none* of the Django caching backends should be used for |
| permanent storage -- they're all intended to be solutions for caching, not |
| storage -- but we point this out here because memory-based caching is |
| particularly temporary. |
| |
| Database caching |
| ---------------- |
| |
| To use a database table as your cache backend, first create a cache table in |
| your database by running this command:: |
| |
| python manage.py createcachetable [cache_table_name] |
| |
| ...where ``[cache_table_name]`` is the name of the database table to create. |
| (This name can be whatever you want, as long as it's a valid table name that's |
| not already being used in your database.) This command creates a single table |
| in your database that is in the proper format that Django's database-cache |
| system expects. |
| |
| Once you've created that database table, set your ``CACHE_BACKEND`` setting to |
| ``"db://tablename"``, where ``tablename`` is the name of the database table. |
| In this example, the cache table's name is ``my_cache_table``:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'db://my_cache_table' |
| |
| The database caching backend uses the same database as specified in your |
| settings file. You can't use a different database backend for your cache table. |
| |
| Database caching works best if you've got a fast, well-indexed database server. |
| |
| Database caching and multiple databases |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If you use database caching with multiple databases, you'll also need |
| to set up routing instructions for your database cache table. For the |
| purposes of routing, the database cache table appears as a model named |
| ``CacheEntry``, in an application named ``django_cache``. This model |
| won't appear in the models cache, but the model details can be used |
| for routing purposes. |
| |
| For example, the following router would direct all cache read |
| operations to ``cache_slave``, and all write operations to |
| ``cache_master``. The cache table will only be synchronized onto |
| ``cache_master``:: |
| |
| class CacheRouter(object): |
| """A router to control all database cache operations""" |
| |
| def db_for_read(self, model, **hints): |
| "All cache read operations go to the slave" |
| if model._meta.app_label in ('django_cache',): |
| return 'cache_slave' |
| return None |
| |
| def db_for_write(self, model, **hints): |
| "All cache write operations go to master" |
| if model._meta.app_label in ('django_cache',): |
| return 'cache_master' |
| return None |
| |
| def allow_syncdb(self, db, model): |
| "Only synchronize the cache model on master" |
| if model._meta.app_label in ('django_cache',): |
| return db == 'cache_master' |
| return None |
| |
| If you don't specify routing directions for the database cache model, |
| the cache backend will use the ``default`` database. |
| |
| Of course, if you don't use the database cache backend, you don't need |
| to worry about providing routing instructions for the database cache |
| model. |
| |
| Filesystem caching |
| ------------------ |
| |
| To store cached items on a filesystem, use the ``"file://"`` cache type for |
| ``CACHE_BACKEND``. For example, to store cached data in ``/var/tmp/django_cache``, |
| use this setting:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'file:///var/tmp/django_cache' |
| |
| Note that there are three forward slashes toward the beginning of that example. |
| The first two are for ``file://``, and the third is the first character of the |
| directory path, ``/var/tmp/django_cache``. If you're on Windows, put the |
| drive letter after the ``file://``, like this:: |
| |
| file://c:/foo/bar |
| |
| The directory path should be absolute -- that is, it should start at the root |
| of your filesystem. It doesn't matter whether you put a slash at the end of the |
| setting. |
| |
| Make sure the directory pointed-to by this setting exists and is readable and |
| writable by the system user under which your Web server runs. Continuing the |
| above example, if your server runs as the user ``apache``, make sure the |
| directory ``/var/tmp/django_cache`` exists and is readable and writable by the |
| user ``apache``. |
| |
| Each cache value will be stored as a separate file whose contents are the |
| cache data saved in a serialized ("pickled") format, using Python's ``pickle`` |
| module. Each file's name is the cache key, escaped for safe filesystem use. |
| |
| Local-memory caching |
| -------------------- |
| |
| If you want the speed advantages of in-memory caching but don't have the |
| capability of running Memcached, consider the local-memory cache backend. This |
| cache is multi-process and thread-safe. To use it, set ``CACHE_BACKEND`` to |
| ``"locmem://"``. For example:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'locmem://' |
| |
| Note that each process will have its own private cache instance, which means no |
| cross-process caching is possible. This obviously also means the local memory |
| cache isn't particularly memory-efficient, so it's probably not a good choice |
| for production environments. It's nice for development. |
| |
| Dummy caching (for development) |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Finally, Django comes with a "dummy" cache that doesn't actually cache -- it |
| just implements the cache interface without doing anything. |
| |
| This is useful if you have a production site that uses heavy-duty caching in |
| various places but a development/test environment where you don't want to cache |
| and don't want to have to change your code to special-case the latter. To |
| activate dummy caching, set ``CACHE_BACKEND`` like so:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'dummy://' |
| |
| Using a custom cache backend |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| While Django includes support for a number of cache backends out-of-the-box, |
| sometimes you might want to use a customized cache backend. To use an external |
| cache backend with Django, use a Python import path as the scheme portion (the |
| part before the initial colon) of the ``CACHE_BACKEND`` URI, like so:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = 'path.to.backend://' |
| |
| If you're building your own backend, you can use the standard cache backends |
| as reference implementations. You'll find the code in the |
| ``django/core/cache/backends/`` directory of the Django source. |
| |
| Note: Without a really compelling reason, such as a host that doesn't support |
| them, you should stick to the cache backends included with Django. They've |
| been well-tested and are easy to use. |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND arguments |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Each cache backend may take arguments. They're given in query-string style on |
| the ``CACHE_BACKEND`` setting. Valid arguments are as follows: |
| |
| * ``timeout``: The default timeout, in seconds, to use for the cache. |
| This argument defaults to 300 seconds (5 minutes). |
| |
| * ``max_entries``: For the ``locmem``, ``filesystem`` and ``database`` |
| backends, the maximum number of entries allowed in the cache before old |
| values are deleted. This argument defaults to 300. |
| |
| * ``cull_frequency``: The fraction of entries that are culled when |
| ``max_entries`` is reached. The actual ratio is ``1/cull_frequency``, so |
| set ``cull_frequency=2`` to cull half of the entries when ``max_entries`` |
| is reached. |
| |
| A value of ``0`` for ``cull_frequency`` means that the entire cache will |
| be dumped when ``max_entries`` is reached. This makes culling *much* |
| faster at the expense of more cache misses. |
| |
| In this example, ``timeout`` is set to ``60``:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = "memcached://127.0.0.1:11211/?timeout=60" |
| |
| In this example, ``timeout`` is ``30`` and ``max_entries`` is ``400``:: |
| |
| CACHE_BACKEND = "locmem://?timeout=30&max_entries=400" |
| |
| Invalid arguments are silently ignored, as are invalid values of known |
| arguments. |
| |
| The per-site cache |
| ================== |
| |
| Once the cache is set up, the simplest way to use caching is to cache your |
| entire site. You'll need to add |
| ``'django.middleware.cache.UpdateCacheMiddleware'`` and |
| ``'django.middleware.cache.FetchFromCacheMiddleware'`` to your |
| ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` setting, as in this example:: |
| |
| MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = ( |
| 'django.middleware.cache.UpdateCacheMiddleware', |
| 'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware', |
| 'django.middleware.cache.FetchFromCacheMiddleware', |
| ) |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| No, that's not a typo: the "update" middleware must be first in the list, |
| and the "fetch" middleware must be last. The details are a bit obscure, but |
| see `Order of MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`_ below if you'd like the full story. |
| |
| Then, add the following required settings to your Django settings file: |
| |
| * ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS`` -- The number of seconds each page should be |
| cached. |
| * ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_KEY_PREFIX`` -- If the cache is shared across multiple |
| sites using the same Django installation, set this to the name of the site, |
| or some other string that is unique to this Django instance, to prevent key |
| collisions. Use an empty string if you don't care. |
| |
| The cache middleware caches every page that doesn't have GET or POST |
| parameters. Optionally, if the ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_ANONYMOUS_ONLY`` setting is |
| ``True``, only anonymous requests (i.e., not those made by a logged-in user) |
| will be cached. This is a simple and effective way of disabling caching for any |
| user-specific pages (include Django's admin interface). Note that if you use |
| ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_ANONYMOUS_ONLY``, you should make sure you've activated |
| ``AuthenticationMiddleware``. |
| |
| Additionally, the cache middleware automatically sets a few headers in each |
| :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`: |
| |
| * Sets the ``Last-Modified`` header to the current date/time when a fresh |
| (uncached) version of the page is requested. |
| |
| * Sets the ``Expires`` header to the current date/time plus the defined |
| ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS``. |
| |
| * Sets the ``Cache-Control`` header to give a max age for the page -- |
| again, from the ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS`` setting. |
| |
| See :doc:`/topics/http/middleware` for more on middleware. |
| |
| If a view sets its own cache expiry time (i.e. it has a ``max-age`` section in |
| its ``Cache-Control`` header) then the page will be cached until the expiry |
| time, rather than ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS``. Using the decorators in |
| ``django.views.decorators.cache`` you can easily set a view's expiry time |
| (using the ``cache_control`` decorator) or disable caching for a view (using |
| the ``never_cache`` decorator). See the `using other headers`__ section for |
| more on these decorators. |
| |
| .. _i18n-cache-key: |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.2 |
| |
| If :setting:`USE_I18N` is set to ``True`` then the generated cache key will |
| include the name of the active :term:`language<language code>`. |
| This allows you to easily cache multilingual sites without having to create |
| the cache key yourself. |
| |
| See :doc:`/topics/i18n/deployment` for more on how Django discovers the active |
| language. |
| |
| __ `Controlling cache: Using other headers`_ |
| |
| The per-view cache |
| ================== |
| |
| A more granular way to use the caching framework is by caching the output of |
| individual views. ``django.views.decorators.cache`` defines a ``cache_page`` |
| decorator that will automatically cache the view's response for you. It's easy |
| to use:: |
| |
| from django.views.decorators.cache import cache_page |
| |
| @cache_page(60 * 15) |
| def my_view(request): |
| ... |
| |
| ``cache_page`` takes a single argument: the cache timeout, in seconds. In the |
| above example, the result of the ``my_view()`` view will be cached for 15 |
| minutes. (Note that we've written it as ``60 * 15`` for the purpose of |
| readability. ``60 * 15`` will be evaluated to ``900`` -- that is, 15 minutes |
| multiplied by 60 seconds per minute.) |
| |
| The per-view cache, like the per-site cache, is keyed off of the URL. If |
| multiple URLs point at the same view, each URL will be cached separately. |
| Continuing the ``my_view`` example, if your URLconf looks like this:: |
| |
| urlpatterns = ('', |
| (r'^foo/(\d{1,2})/$', my_view), |
| ) |
| |
| then requests to ``/foo/1/`` and ``/foo/23/`` will be cached separately, as |
| you may expect. But once a particular URL (e.g., ``/foo/23/``) has been |
| requested, subsequent requests to that URL will use the cache. |
| |
| ``cache_page`` can also take an optional keyword argument, ``key_prefix``, which |
| works in the same way as the ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_KEY_PREFIX`` setting for the |
| middleware. It can be used like this:: |
| |
| @cache_page(60 * 15, key_prefix="site1") |
| def my_view(request): |
| ... |
| |
| Specifying per-view cache in the URLconf |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| The examples in the previous section have hard-coded the fact that the view is |
| cached, because ``cache_page`` alters the ``my_view`` function in place. This |
| approach couples your view to the cache system, which is not ideal for several |
| reasons. For instance, you might want to reuse the view functions on another, |
| cache-less site, or you might want to distribute the views to people who might |
| want to use them without being cached. The solution to these problems is to |
| specify the per-view cache in the URLconf rather than next to the view functions |
| themselves. |
| |
| Doing so is easy: simply wrap the view function with ``cache_page`` when you |
| refer to it in the URLconf. Here's the old URLconf from earlier:: |
| |
| urlpatterns = ('', |
| (r'^foo/(\d{1,2})/$', my_view), |
| ) |
| |
| Here's the same thing, with ``my_view`` wrapped in ``cache_page``:: |
| |
| from django.views.decorators.cache import cache_page |
| |
| urlpatterns = ('', |
| (r'^foo/(\d{1,2})/$', cache_page(my_view, 60 * 15)), |
| ) |
| |
| If you take this approach, don't forget to import ``cache_page`` within your |
| URLconf. |
| |
| Template fragment caching |
| ========================= |
| |
| If you're after even more control, you can also cache template fragments using |
| the ``cache`` template tag. To give your template access to this tag, put |
| ``{% load cache %}`` near the top of your template. |
| |
| The ``{% cache %}`` template tag caches the contents of the block for a given |
| amount of time. It takes at least two arguments: the cache timeout, in seconds, |
| and the name to give the cache fragment. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: html+django |
| |
| {% load cache %} |
| {% cache 500 sidebar %} |
| .. sidebar .. |
| {% endcache %} |
| |
| Sometimes you might want to cache multiple copies of a fragment depending on |
| some dynamic data that appears inside the fragment. For example, you might want a |
| separate cached copy of the sidebar used in the previous example for every user |
| of your site. Do this by passing additional arguments to the ``{% cache %}`` |
| template tag to uniquely identify the cache fragment: |
| |
| .. code-block:: html+django |
| |
| {% load cache %} |
| {% cache 500 sidebar request.user.username %} |
| .. sidebar for logged in user .. |
| {% endcache %} |
| |
| It's perfectly fine to specify more than one argument to identify the fragment. |
| Simply pass as many arguments to ``{% cache %}`` as you need. |
| |
| If :setting:`USE_I18N` is set to ``True`` the per-site middleware cache will |
| :ref:`respect the active language<i18n-cache-key>`. For the ``cache`` template |
| tag you could use one of the |
| :ref:`translation-specific variables<template-translation-vars>` available in |
| templates to archieve the same result: |
| |
| .. code-block:: html+django |
| |
| {% load i18n %} |
| {% load cache %} |
| |
| {% get_current_language as LANGUAGE_CODE %} |
| |
| {% cache 600 welcome LANGUAGE_CODE %} |
| {% trans "Welcome to example.com" %} |
| {% endcache %} |
| |
| The cache timeout can be a template variable, as long as the template variable |
| resolves to an integer value. For example, if the template variable |
| ``my_timeout`` is set to the value ``600``, then the following two examples are |
| equivalent: |
| |
| .. code-block:: html+django |
| |
| {% cache 600 sidebar %} ... {% endcache %} |
| {% cache my_timeout sidebar %} ... {% endcache %} |
| |
| This feature is useful in avoiding repetition in templates. You can set the |
| timeout in a variable, in one place, and just reuse that value. |
| |
| The low-level cache API |
| ======================= |
| |
| .. highlight:: python |
| |
| Sometimes, caching an entire rendered page doesn't gain you very much and is, |
| in fact, inconvenient overkill. |
| |
| Perhaps, for instance, your site includes a view whose results depend on |
| several expensive queries, the results of which change at different intervals. |
| In this case, it would not be ideal to use the full-page caching that the |
| per-site or per-view cache strategies offer, because you wouldn't want to |
| cache the entire result (since some of the data changes often), but you'd still |
| want to cache the results that rarely change. |
| |
| For cases like this, Django exposes a simple, low-level cache API. You can use |
| this API to store objects in the cache with any level of granularity you like. |
| You can cache any Python object that can be pickled safely: strings, |
| dictionaries, lists of model objects, and so forth. (Most common Python objects |
| can be pickled; refer to the Python documentation for more information about |
| pickling.) |
| |
| The cache module, ``django.core.cache``, has a ``cache`` object that's |
| automatically created from the ``CACHE_BACKEND`` setting:: |
| |
| >>> from django.core.cache import cache |
| |
| The basic interface is ``set(key, value, timeout)`` and ``get(key)``:: |
| |
| >>> cache.set('my_key', 'hello, world!', 30) |
| >>> cache.get('my_key') |
| 'hello, world!' |
| |
| The ``timeout`` argument is optional and defaults to the ``timeout`` |
| argument in the ``CACHE_BACKEND`` setting (explained above). It's the number of |
| seconds the value should be stored in the cache. |
| |
| If the object doesn't exist in the cache, ``cache.get()`` returns ``None``:: |
| |
| # Wait 30 seconds for 'my_key' to expire... |
| |
| >>> cache.get('my_key') |
| None |
| |
| We advise against storing the literal value ``None`` in the cache, because you |
| won't be able to distinguish between your stored ``None`` value and a cache |
| miss signified by a return value of ``None``. |
| |
| ``cache.get()`` can take a ``default`` argument. This specifies which value to |
| return if the object doesn't exist in the cache:: |
| |
| >>> cache.get('my_key', 'has expired') |
| 'has expired' |
| |
| To add a key only if it doesn't already exist, use the ``add()`` method. |
| It takes the same parameters as ``set()``, but it will not attempt to |
| update the cache if the key specified is already present:: |
| |
| >>> cache.set('add_key', 'Initial value') |
| >>> cache.add('add_key', 'New value') |
| >>> cache.get('add_key') |
| 'Initial value' |
| |
| If you need to know whether ``add()`` stored a value in the cache, you can |
| check the return value. It will return ``True`` if the value was stored, |
| ``False`` otherwise. |
| |
| There's also a ``get_many()`` interface that only hits the cache once. |
| ``get_many()`` returns a dictionary with all the keys you asked for that |
| actually exist in the cache (and haven't expired):: |
| |
| >>> cache.set('a', 1) |
| >>> cache.set('b', 2) |
| >>> cache.set('c', 3) |
| >>> cache.get_many(['a', 'b', 'c']) |
| {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3} |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.2 |
| |
| To set multiple values more efficiently, use ``set_many()`` to pass a dictionary |
| of key-value pairs:: |
| |
| >>> cache.set_many({'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}) |
| >>> cache.get_many(['a', 'b', 'c']) |
| {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3} |
| |
| Like ``cache.set()``, ``set_many()`` takes an optional ``timeout`` parameter. |
| |
| You can delete keys explicitly with ``delete()``. This is an easy way of |
| clearing the cache for a particular object:: |
| |
| >>> cache.delete('a') |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.2 |
| |
| If you want to clear a bunch of keys at once, ``delete_many()`` can take a list |
| of keys to be cleared:: |
| |
| >>> cache.delete_many(['a', 'b', 'c']) |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.2 |
| |
| Finally, if you want to delete all the keys in the cache, use |
| ``cache.clear()``. Be careful with this; ``clear()`` will remove *everything* |
| from the cache, not just the keys set by your application. :: |
| |
| >>> cache.clear() |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.1 |
| |
| You can also increment or decrement a key that already exists using the |
| ``incr()`` or ``decr()`` methods, respectively. By default, the existing cache |
| value will incremented or decremented by 1. Other increment/decrement values |
| can be specified by providing an argument to the increment/decrement call. A |
| ValueError will be raised if you attempt to increment or decrement a |
| nonexistent cache key.:: |
| |
| >>> cache.set('num', 1) |
| >>> cache.incr('num') |
| 2 |
| >>> cache.incr('num', 10) |
| 12 |
| >>> cache.decr('num') |
| 11 |
| >>> cache.decr('num', 5) |
| 6 |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| ``incr()``/``decr()`` methods are not guaranteed to be atomic. On those |
| backends that support atomic increment/decrement (most notably, the |
| memcached backend), increment and decrement operations will be atomic. |
| However, if the backend doesn't natively provide an increment/decrement |
| operation, it will be implemented using a two-step retrieve/update. |
| |
| Cache key warnings |
| ------------------ |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.3 |
| |
| Memcached, the most commonly-used production cache backend, does not allow |
| cache keys longer than 250 characters or containing whitespace or control |
| characters, and using such keys will cause an exception. To encourage |
| cache-portable code and minimize unpleasant surprises, the other built-in cache |
| backends issue a warning (``django.core.cache.backends.base.CacheKeyWarning``) |
| if a key is used that would cause an error on memcached. |
| |
| If you are using a production backend that can accept a wider range of keys (a |
| custom backend, or one of the non-memcached built-in backends), and want to use |
| this wider range without warnings, you can silence ``CacheKeyWarning`` with |
| this code in the ``management`` module of one of your |
| :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`:: |
| |
| import warnings |
| |
| from django.core.cache import CacheKeyWarning |
| |
| warnings.simplefilter("ignore", CacheKeyWarning) |
| |
| If you want to instead provide custom key validation logic for one of the |
| built-in backends, you can subclass it, override just the ``validate_key`` |
| method, and follow the instructions for `using a custom cache backend`_. For |
| instance, to do this for the ``locmem`` backend, put this code in a module:: |
| |
| from django.core.cache.backends.locmem import CacheClass as LocMemCacheClass |
| |
| class CacheClass(LocMemCacheClass): |
| def validate_key(self, key): |
| """Custom validation, raising exceptions or warnings as needed.""" |
| # ... |
| |
| ...and use the dotted Python path to this module as the scheme portion of your |
| :setting:`CACHE_BACKEND`. |
| |
| Upstream caches |
| =============== |
| |
| So far, this document has focused on caching your *own* data. But another type |
| of caching is relevant to Web development, too: caching performed by "upstream" |
| caches. These are systems that cache pages for users even before the request |
| reaches your Web site. |
| |
| Here are a few examples of upstream caches: |
| |
| * Your ISP may cache certain pages, so if you requested a page from |
| http://example.com/, your ISP would send you the page without having to |
| access example.com directly. The maintainers of example.com have no |
| knowledge of this caching; the ISP sits between example.com and your Web |
| browser, handling all of the caching transparently. |
| |
| * Your Django Web site may sit behind a *proxy cache*, such as Squid Web |
| Proxy Cache (http://www.squid-cache.org/), that caches pages for |
| performance. In this case, each request first would be handled by the |
| proxy, and it would be passed to your application only if needed. |
| |
| * Your Web browser caches pages, too. If a Web page sends out the |
| appropriate headers, your browser will use the local cached copy for |
| subsequent requests to that page, without even contacting the Web page |
| again to see whether it has changed. |
| |
| Upstream caching is a nice efficiency boost, but there's a danger to it: |
| Many Web pages' contents differ based on authentication and a host of other |
| variables, and cache systems that blindly save pages based purely on URLs could |
| expose incorrect or sensitive data to subsequent visitors to those pages. |
| |
| For example, say you operate a Web e-mail system, and the contents of the |
| "inbox" page obviously depend on which user is logged in. If an ISP blindly |
| cached your site, then the first user who logged in through that ISP would have |
| his user-specific inbox page cached for subsequent visitors to the site. That's |
| not cool. |
| |
| Fortunately, HTTP provides a solution to this problem. A number of HTTP headers |
| exist to instruct upstream caches to differ their cache contents depending on |
| designated variables, and to tell caching mechanisms not to cache particular |
| pages. We'll look at some of these headers in the sections that follow. |
| |
| .. _using-vary-headers: |
| |
| Using Vary headers |
| ================== |
| |
| The ``Vary`` header defines which request headers a cache |
| mechanism should take into account when building its cache key. For example, if |
| the contents of a Web page depend on a user's language preference, the page is |
| said to "vary on language." |
| |
| By default, Django's cache system creates its cache keys using the requested |
| path (e.g., ``"/stories/2005/jun/23/bank_robbed/"``). This means every request |
| to that URL will use the same cached version, regardless of user-agent |
| differences such as cookies or language preferences. However, if this page |
| produces different content based on some difference in request headers -- such |
| as a cookie, or a language, or a user-agent -- you'll need to use the ``Vary`` |
| header to tell caching mechanisms that the page output depends on those things. |
| |
| To do this in Django, use the convenient ``vary_on_headers`` view decorator, |
| like so:: |
| |
| from django.views.decorators.vary import vary_on_headers |
| |
| @vary_on_headers('User-Agent') |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| In this case, a caching mechanism (such as Django's own cache middleware) will |
| cache a separate version of the page for each unique user-agent. |
| |
| The advantage to using the ``vary_on_headers`` decorator rather than manually |
| setting the ``Vary`` header (using something like |
| ``response['Vary'] = 'user-agent'``) is that the decorator *adds* to the |
| ``Vary`` header (which may already exist), rather than setting it from scratch |
| and potentially overriding anything that was already in there. |
| |
| You can pass multiple headers to ``vary_on_headers()``:: |
| |
| @vary_on_headers('User-Agent', 'Cookie') |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| This tells upstream caches to vary on *both*, which means each combination of |
| user-agent and cookie will get its own cache value. For example, a request with |
| the user-agent ``Mozilla`` and the cookie value ``foo=bar`` will be considered |
| different from a request with the user-agent ``Mozilla`` and the cookie value |
| ``foo=ham``. |
| |
| Because varying on cookie is so common, there's a ``vary_on_cookie`` |
| decorator. These two views are equivalent:: |
| |
| @vary_on_cookie |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| @vary_on_headers('Cookie') |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| The headers you pass to ``vary_on_headers`` are not case sensitive; |
| ``"User-Agent"`` is the same thing as ``"user-agent"``. |
| |
| You can also use a helper function, ``django.utils.cache.patch_vary_headers``, |
| directly. This function sets, or adds to, the ``Vary header``. For example:: |
| |
| from django.utils.cache import patch_vary_headers |
| |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| response = render_to_response('template_name', context) |
| patch_vary_headers(response, ['Cookie']) |
| return response |
| |
| ``patch_vary_headers`` takes an :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` instance as |
| its first argument and a list/tuple of case-insensitive header names as its |
| second argument. |
| |
| For more on Vary headers, see the `official Vary spec`_. |
| |
| .. _`official Vary spec`: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.44 |
| |
| Controlling cache: Using other headers |
| ====================================== |
| |
| Other problems with caching are the privacy of data and the question of where |
| data should be stored in a cascade of caches. |
| |
| A user usually faces two kinds of caches: his or her own browser cache (a |
| private cache) and his or her provider's cache (a public cache). A public cache |
| is used by multiple users and controlled by someone else. This poses problems |
| with sensitive data--you don't want, say, your bank account number stored in a |
| public cache. So Web applications need a way to tell caches which data is |
| private and which is public. |
| |
| The solution is to indicate a page's cache should be "private." To do this in |
| Django, use the ``cache_control`` view decorator. Example:: |
| |
| from django.views.decorators.cache import cache_control |
| |
| @cache_control(private=True) |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| This decorator takes care of sending out the appropriate HTTP header behind the |
| scenes. |
| |
| There are a few other ways to control cache parameters. For example, HTTP |
| allows applications to do the following: |
| |
| * Define the maximum time a page should be cached. |
| |
| * Specify whether a cache should always check for newer versions, only |
| delivering the cached content when there are no changes. (Some caches |
| might deliver cached content even if the server page changed, simply |
| because the cache copy isn't yet expired.) |
| |
| In Django, use the ``cache_control`` view decorator to specify these cache |
| parameters. In this example, ``cache_control`` tells caches to revalidate the |
| cache on every access and to store cached versions for, at most, 3,600 seconds:: |
| |
| from django.views.decorators.cache import cache_control |
| |
| @cache_control(must_revalidate=True, max_age=3600) |
| def my_view(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| Any valid ``Cache-Control`` HTTP directive is valid in ``cache_control()``. |
| Here's a full list: |
| |
| * ``public=True`` |
| * ``private=True`` |
| * ``no_cache=True`` |
| * ``no_transform=True`` |
| * ``must_revalidate=True`` |
| * ``proxy_revalidate=True`` |
| * ``max_age=num_seconds`` |
| * ``s_maxage=num_seconds`` |
| |
| For explanation of Cache-Control HTTP directives, see the `Cache-Control spec`_. |
| |
| (Note that the caching middleware already sets the cache header's max-age with |
| the value of the :setting:`CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS` setting. If you use a custom |
| ``max_age`` in a ``cache_control`` decorator, the decorator will take |
| precedence, and the header values will be merged correctly.) |
| |
| If you want to use headers to disable caching altogether, |
| ``django.views.decorators.cache.never_cache`` is a view decorator that adds |
| headers to ensure the response won't be cached by browsers or other caches. |
| Example:: |
| |
| from django.views.decorators.cache import never_cache |
| |
| @never_cache |
| def myview(request): |
| # ... |
| |
| .. _`Cache-Control spec`: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.9 |
| |
| Other optimizations |
| =================== |
| |
| Django comes with a few other pieces of middleware that can help optimize your |
| site's performance: |
| |
| * ``django.middleware.http.ConditionalGetMiddleware`` adds support for |
| modern browsers to conditionally GET responses based on the ``ETag`` |
| and ``Last-Modified`` headers. |
| |
| * ``django.middleware.gzip.GZipMiddleware`` compresses responses for all |
| moderns browsers, saving bandwidth and transfer time. |
| |
| Order of MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES |
| =========================== |
| |
| If you use caching middleware, it's important to put each half in the right |
| place within the ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` setting. That's because the cache |
| middleware needs to know which headers by which to vary the cache storage. |
| Middleware always adds something to the ``Vary`` response header when it can. |
| |
| ``UpdateCacheMiddleware`` runs during the response phase, where middleware is |
| run in reverse order, so an item at the top of the list runs *last* during the |
| response phase. Thus, you need to make sure that ``UpdateCacheMiddleware`` |
| appears *before* any other middleware that might add something to the ``Vary`` |
| header. The following middleware modules do so: |
| |
| * ``SessionMiddleware`` adds ``Cookie`` |
| * ``GZipMiddleware`` adds ``Accept-Encoding`` |
| * ``LocaleMiddleware`` adds ``Accept-Language`` |
| |
| ``FetchFromCacheMiddleware``, on the other hand, runs during the request phase, |
| where middleware is applied first-to-last, so an item at the top of the list |
| runs *first* during the request phase. The ``FetchFromCacheMiddleware`` also |
| needs to run after other middleware updates the ``Vary`` header, so |
| ``FetchFromCacheMiddleware`` must be *after* any item that does so. |
| |