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Persistent JSON caching for Python with async support - cache function results and object state effortlessly.

Project description

Cacherator

Persistent JSON caching for Python with async support - Cache function results and object state effortlessly.

Python 3.7+ License: MIT

Overview

Cacherator is a Python library that provides persistent JSON-based caching for class state and function results. It enables developers to cache expensive operations with minimal configuration, supporting both synchronous and asynchronous functions.

Key Features

  • Zero-configuration caching - Simple inheritance and decorator pattern
  • Async/await support - Native support for asynchronous functions
  • Persistent storage - Cache survives program restarts
  • TTL (Time-To-Live) - Automatic cache expiration
  • Selective caching - Fine-grained control over what gets cached
  • Cache management - Built-in methods for inspection and clearing
  • Flexible logging - Global and per-instance control
  • DynamoDB backend - Optional L2 cache for cross-machine sharing

Installation

pip install cacherator

Optional: DynamoDB Support

For cross-machine cache sharing via DynamoDB:

pip install boto3

Quick Start

Basic Function Caching

from cacherator import JSONCache, Cached
import time

class Calculator(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__(data_id="calc")
    
    @Cached()
    def expensive_calculation(self, x, y):
        time.sleep(2)  # Simulate expensive operation
        return x ** y

calc = Calculator()
result = calc.expensive_calculation(2, 10)  # Takes 2 seconds
result = calc.expensive_calculation(2, 10)  # Instant!

Async Function Caching

class APIClient(JSONCache):
    @Cached(ttl=1)  # Cache for 1 day
    async def fetch_user(self, user_id):
        # Expensive API call
        response = await api.get(f"/users/{user_id}")
        return response.json()

client = APIClient()
user = await client.fetch_user(123)  # API call
user = await client.fetch_user(123)  # Cached!

State Persistence

class GameState(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self, game_id):
        super().__init__(data_id=f"game_{game_id}")
        if not hasattr(self, "score"):
            self.score = 0
            self.level = 1
    
    def add_points(self, points):
        self.score += points
        self.json_cache_save()

# Session 1
game = GameState("player1")
game.add_points(100)

# Session 2 (after restart)
game = GameState("player1")
print(game.score)  # 100 - persisted!

Advanced Usage

DynamoDB Backend (Cross-Machine Cache Sharing)

Enable optional DynamoDB L2 cache for sharing cache across multiple machines:

from cacherator import JSONCache, Cached

class WebScraper(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__(dynamodb_table='my-cache-table')
    
    @Cached(ttl=7)
    def scrape_expensive_data(self, url):
        # Expensive operation
        return fetch_data(url)

# On machine 1 (laptop)
scraper = WebScraper()
data = scraper.scrape_expensive_data("https://example.com")  # Scrapes and caches

# On machine 2 (EC2 instance) - same code
scraper = WebScraper()
data = scraper.scrape_expensive_data("https://example.com")  # Uses cached data!

How it works:

  • L1 (local JSON): Checked first for instant access
  • L2 (DynamoDB): Checked on L1 miss, then written to L1
  • Writes: Saved to both L1 and L2 simultaneously
  • No table specified: Works as local-only cache

DynamoDB table:

  • Auto-created if missing (requires IAM permissions)
  • Partition key: cache_id (String)
  • TTL enabled for automatic expiry
  • Pay-per-request billing mode

AWS credentials via standard boto3 chain:

  • Environment variables: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY, AWS_REGION
  • IAM role (recommended for EC2/Lambda)
  • AWS credentials file (~/.aws/credentials)

Custom TTL Configuration

class WeatherService(JSONCache):
    @Cached(ttl=0.25)  # 6 hours (0.25 days)
    def get_forecast(self, city):
        return fetch_weather(city)
    
    @Cached(ttl=30)  # 30 days
    def get_historical(self, city, year):
        return fetch_historical(city, year)

Excluding Variables from Cache

class DataProcessor(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self):
        self._excluded_cache_vars = ["temp_data", "api_key"]
        super().__init__()
        self.results = {}
        self.temp_data = []  # Won't be cached
        self.api_key = "secret"  # Won't be cached

Cache Management

processor = DataProcessor()

# Get cache statistics
stats = processor.json_cache_stats()
print(stats)
# {'total_entries': 5, 'functions': {'process': 3, 'analyze': 2}}

# Clear specific function cache
processor.json_cache_clear("process")

# Clear all cache
processor.json_cache_clear()

Logging Control

from cacherator import JSONCache

# Disable logging globally
JSONCache.set_logging(False)

# Enable logging globally (default)
JSONCache.set_logging(True)

# Per-instance control
processor = DataProcessor(logging=False)  # Silent mode

When logging is enabled:

  • DynamoDB operations are logged (table creation, reads, writes)
  • Local JSON operations are silent (fast, not interesting)

When logging is disabled:

  • All operations are silent

## Configuration

### JSONCache Constructor

```python
JSONCache(
    data_id="unique_id",      # Unique identifier (default: class name)
    directory="cache",         # Cache directory (default: "data/cache")
    clear_cache=False,         # Clear existing cache on init
    ttl=999,                   # Default TTL in days
    logging=True,              # Enable logging (True/False)
    dynamodb_table=None        # DynamoDB table name (optional)
)

@Cached Decorator

@Cached(
    ttl=7,                     # Time-to-live in days (default: class ttl)
    clear_cache=False          # Clear cache for this function
)

Use Cases

API Client with Caching

class GitHubClient(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__(data_id="github_client", ttl=1)
    
    @Cached(ttl=0.5)  # 12 hours
    async def get_user(self, username):
        async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session:
            async with session.get(f"https://api.github.com/users/{username}") as resp:
                return await resp.json()
    
    @Cached(ttl=7)  # 1 week
    async def get_repos(self, username):
        async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session:
            async with session.get(f"https://api.github.com/users/{username}/repos") as resp:
                return await resp.json()

Database Query Caching

class UserRepository(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__(data_id="user_repo", ttl=0.1)  # 2.4 hours
    
    @Cached()
    def get_user_by_id(self, user_id):
        return db.query("SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?", user_id)
    
    @Cached(ttl=1)
    def get_user_stats(self, user_id):
        return db.query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM posts WHERE user_id = ?", user_id)

Machine Learning Model Predictions

class ModelPredictor(JSONCache):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__(data_id="ml_predictor")
        self.model = load_model()
    
    @Cached(ttl=30)
    def predict(self, features_hash, features):
        # Cache predictions by feature hash
        return self.model.predict(features)

Best Practices

Recommended Use Cases

  • Expensive API calls and network requests
  • Database queries with relatively static data
  • Heavy computational operations
  • Machine learning model predictions
  • Data transformations and aggregations

When to Use TTL

  • Set short TTL (minutes to hours) for frequently changing data
  • Set long TTL (days to weeks) for stable reference data
  • Consider data freshness requirements for your application

What Not to Cache

  • Non-deterministic functions (random number generation, timestamps)
  • Very fast operations (overhead exceeds benefit)
  • Non-JSON-serializable objects without custom handling
  • Real-time data without appropriate TTL configuration

Performance

Cacherator introduces minimal overhead:

  • Cache hit: ~0.1ms
  • Cache miss: Function execution time + ~1ms
  • Disk I/O: Non-blocking, asynchronous operations

Performance Improvements

  • API calls (100ms - 5s) reduced to ~0.1ms
  • Database queries (10ms - 1s) reduced to ~0.1ms
  • Heavy computations (1s+) reduced to ~0.1ms

Compatibility

  • Python: 3.7 and above
  • Async: Full support for async/await syntax
  • Operating Systems: Windows, macOS, Linux
  • Data Types: All JSON-serializable types plus datetime objects
  • Optional Dependencies: boto3 (for DynamoDB backend), dynamorator

Changelog

Version 1.2.2

  • Fixed: json_cache_save() now automatically syncs to DynamoDB (L2) when enabled
  • Deprecated: json_cache_save_db() is now redundant (use json_cache_save() instead)

Version 1.2.0

  • Added: Optional DynamoDB backend for cross-machine cache sharing via dynamorator
  • Added: Two-layer cache architecture (L1: local JSON, L2: DynamoDB)
  • Added: Constructor parameter dynamodb_table for enabling DynamoDB
  • Added: Automatic DynamoDB table creation with TTL support
  • Changed: DynamoDB backend now uses dynamorator package
  • Changed: Simplified logging to boolean (True/False)
  • Removed: Environment variable configuration (use constructor parameter)
  • Removed: LogLevel enum (simplified to boolean)

Troubleshooting

Cache Not Persisting

# Explicitly save cache
obj.json_cache_save()

# Check for serialization errors
obj._excluded_cache_vars = ["problematic_attr"]

Cache Not Being Used

# Verify TTL hasn't expired
obj = MyClass(ttl=30)  # Increase TTL

# Ensure arguments are identical (type matters)
obj.func(1, 2)    # Different from
obj.func(1.0, 2)  # (int vs float)

Large Cache Files

# Exclude large attributes
self._excluded_cache_vars = ["large_data"]

# Use separate cache instances
processor1 = DataProcessor(data_id="dataset1")
processor2 = DataProcessor(data_id="dataset2")

Contributing

Contributions are welcome. Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for guidelines.

License

MIT License - see LICENSE file for details.

Resources


Developed by Arved Klöhn

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