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cache tools with async power

Project description

🥔 CASHEWS 🥔

Async cache framework with simple API to build fast and reliable applications

pip install cashews
pip install cashews[redis]
pip install cashews[diskcache]
pip install cashews[dill] # can cache in redis more types of objects
pip install cashews[speedup] # for bloom filters

Why

Cache plays a significant role in modern applications and everybody wants to use all the power of async programming and cache. There are a few advanced techniques with cache and async programming that can help you build simple, fast, scalable and reliable applications. This library intends to make it easy to implement such techniques.

Features

  • Easy to configure and use
  • Decorator-based API, decorate and play
  • Different cache strategies out-of-the-box
  • Support for multiple storage backends (In-memory, Redis, DiskCache)
  • Set TTL as a string ("2h5m"), as timedelta or use a function in case TTL depends on key parameters
  • Transactionality
  • Middlewares
  • Client-side cache (10x faster than simple cache with redis)
  • Bloom filters
  • Different cache invalidation techniques (time-based or tags)
  • Cache any objects securely with pickle (use secret)
  • 2x faster than aiocache (with client side caching)

Usage Example

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")  # configure as in-memory cache, but redis/diskcache is also supported

# use a decorator-based API
@cache(ttl="3h", key="user:{request.user.uid}")
async def long_running_function(request):
    ...

# or for fine-grained control, use it directly in a function
async def cache_using_function(request):
    await cache.set(key=request.user.uid, value=request.user, expire="20h")
    ...

More examples here

Table of Contents

Configuration

cashews provides a default cache, that you can setup in two different ways:

from cashews import cache

# via url
cache.setup("redis://0.0.0.0/?db=1&socket_connect_timeout=0.5&suppress=0&secret=my_secret&enable=1")
# or via kwargs
cache.setup("redis://0.0.0.0/", db=1, wait_for_connection_timeout=0.5, suppress=False, secret=b"my_key", enable=True)

Alternatively, you can create a cache instance yourself:

from cashews import Cache

cache = Cache()
cache.setup(...)

Optionally, you can disable cache with disable/enable parameter (see Disable Cache):

cache.setup("redis://redis/0?enable=1")
cache.setup("mem://?size=500", disable=True)
cache.setup("mem://?size=500", enable=False)

You can setup different Backends based on a prefix:

cache.setup("redis://redis/0")
cache.setup("mem://?size=500", prefix="user")

await cache.get("accounts")  # will use the redis backend
await cache.get("user:1")  # will use the memory backend

Available Backends

In-memory

The in-memory cache uses fixed-sized LRU dict to store values. It checks expiration on get and periodically purge expired keys.

cache.setup("mem://")
cache.setup("mem://?check_interval=10&size=10000")

Redis

Requires redis package.\

This will use Redis as a storage.

This backend uses pickle module to serialize values, but the cashes can store values with sha1-keyed hash.

Use secret and digestmod parameters to protect your application from security vulnerabilities.

The digestmod is a hashing algorithm that can be used: sum, md5 (default), sha1 and sha256

The secret is a salt for a hash.

Pickle can't serialize any type of object. In case you need to store more complex types

you can use dill - set pickle_type="dill". Dill is great, but less performance. If you need complex serializer for sqlalchemy objects you can set pickle_type="sqlalchemy" Use json also an option to serialize/deserialize an object, but it very limited (pickle_type="json")

Any connection errors are suppressed, to disable it use suppress=False - a CacheBackendInteractionError will be raised

If you would like to use client-side cache set client_side=True

Client side cache will add cashews: prefix for each key, to customize it use client_side_prefix option.

cache.setup("redis://0.0.0.0/?db=1&minsize=10&suppress=false&secret=my_secret", prefix="func")
cache.setup("redis://0.0.0.0/2", password="my_pass", socket_connect_timeout=0.1, retry_on_timeout=True, secret="my_secret")
cache.setup("redis://0.0.0.0", client_side=True, client_side_prefix="my_prefix:", pickle_type="dill")

For using secure connections to redis (over ssl) uri should have rediss as schema

cache.setup("rediss://0.0.0.0/", ssl_ca_certs="path/to/ca.crt", ssl_keyfile="path/to/client.key",ssl_certfile="path/to/client.crt",)

DiskCache

Requires diskcache package.

This will use local sqlite databases (with shards) as storage.

It is a good choice if you don't want to use redis, but you need a shared storage, or your cache takes a lot of local memory. Also, it is a good choice for client side local storage.

You can setup disk cache with FanoutCache parameters

** Warning ** cache.scan and cache.get_match does not work with this storage (works only if shards are disabled)

cache.setup("disk://")
cache.setup("disk://?directory=/tmp/cache&timeout=1&shards=0")  # disable shards
Gb = 1073741824
cache.setup("disk://", size_limit=3 * Gb, shards=12)

Basic API

There are a few basic methods to work with cache:

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")  # configure as in-memory cache

await cache.set(key="key", value=90, expire="2h", exist=None)  # -> bool
await cache.set_raw(key="key", value="str")  # -> bool
await cache.set_many({"key1": value, "key2": value})  # -> None

await cache.get("key", default=None)  # -> Any
await cache.get_or_set("key", default=awaitable_or_callable, expire="1h")  # -> Any
await cache.get_raw("key") # -> Any
await cache.get_many("key1", "key2", default=None)  # -> tuple[Any]
async for key, value in cache.get_match("pattern:*", batch_size=100):
    ...

await cache.incr("key") # -> int
await cache.exists("key") # -> bool

await cache.delete("key")
await cache.delete_many("key1", "key2")
await cache.delete_match("pattern:*")

async for key in cache.scan("pattern:*"):
    ...

await cache.expire("key", timeout=10)
await cache.get_expire("key")  # -> int seconds to expire

await cache.ping(message=None)  # -> bytes
await cache.clear()

await cache.is_locked("key", wait=60)  # -> bool
async with cache.lock("key", expire=10):
    ...
await cache.set_lock("key", value="value", expire=60)  # -> bool
await cache.unlock("key", "value")  # -> bool

await cache.get_keys_count()  # -> int - total number of keys in cache
await cache.close()

Disable Cache

Cache can be disabled not only at setup, but also in runtime. Cashews allow you to disable/enable any call of cache or specific commands:

from cashews import cache, Command

cache.setup("mem://")  # configure as in-memory cache

cache.disable(Command.DELETE)
cache.disable()
cache.enable(Command.GET, Command.SET)
cache.enable()

with cache.disabling():
  ...

Strategies

Simple cache

This is a typical cache strategy: execute, store and return from cache until it expires.

from datetime import timedelta
from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl=timedelta(hours=3), key="user:{request.user.uid}")
async def long_running_function(request):
    ...

Fail cache (Failover cache)

Return cache result, if one of the given exceptions is raised (at least one function call should succeed prior to that).

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

# note: the key will be "__module__.get_status:name:{name}"
@cache.failover(ttl="2h", exceptions=(ValueError, MyException))
async def get_status(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}

If exceptions didn't get will catch all exceptions or use default if it is set by:

cache.set_default_fail_exceptions(ValueError, MyException)

Hit cache

Expire cache after given numbers of call cache_hits.

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache.hit(ttl="2h", cache_hits=100, update_after=2)
async def get(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}

Early

Cache strategy that tries to solve Cache stampede problem with a hot cache recalculating result in a background.

from cashews import cache  # or: from cashews import early

# if you call this function after 7 min, cache will be updated in a background
@cache.early(ttl="10m", early_ttl="7m")
async def get(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}

Soft

Like a simple cache, but with a fail protection base on soft ttl.

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

# if you call this function after 7 min, cache will be updated and return a new result.
# If it fail on recalculation will return current cached value (if it is not more than 10 min old)
@cache.soft(ttl="10m", soft_ttl="7m")
async def get(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}

Iterators

All upper decorators can be used only with coroutines. Cashing async iterators works differently. To cache async iterators use iterator decorator

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")


@cache.iterator(ttl="10m", key="get:{name}")
async def get(name):
    async for item in get_pages(name):
        yield ...

Locked

Decorator that can help you to solve Cache stampede problem. Lock the following function calls until the first one is finished. This guarantees exactly one function call for given ttl.

:warning: **Warning: this decorator will not cache the result To do it you can combine this decorator with any cache decorator or use parameter lock=True with @cache()

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache.locked(ttl="10s")
async def get(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}

Rate limit

Rate limit for a function call: if rate limit is reached raise an RateLimitError exception.

:warning: **Warning: this decorator will not cache the result To do it you can combine this decorator with any cache failover decorator`

from cashews import cache, RateLimitError

cache.setup("mem://")

# no more than 10 calls per minute or ban for 10 minutes - raise RateLimitError
@cache.rate_limit(limit=10, period="1m", ttl="10m")
async def get(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}



# no more than 100 calls in 10 minute window. if rate limit will rich -> return from cache
@cache.failover(ttl="10m", exceptions=(RateLimitError, ))
@cache.slice_rate_limit(limit=100, period="10m")
async def get_next(name):
    value = await api_call()
    return {"status": value}

Circuit breaker

Circuit breaker pattern. Count the number of failed calls and if the error rate reaches the specified value, it will raise CircuitBreakerOpen exception

:warning: **Warning: this decorator will not cache the result To do it you can combine this decorator with any cache failover decorator`

from cashews import cache, CircuitBreakerOpen

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache.circuit_breaker(errors_rate=10, period="1m", ttl="5m")
async def get(name):
    ...


@cache.failover(ttl="10m", exceptions=(CircuitBreakerOpen, ))
@cache.circuit_breaker(errors_rate=10, period="10m", ttl="5m", half_open_ttl="1m")
async def get_next(name):
    ...

Bloom filter (experimental)

Simple Bloom filter:

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache.bloom(capacity=10_000, false_positives=1)
async def email_exists(email: str) -> bool:
    ...

for email in all_users_emails:
    await email_exists.set(email)

await email_exists("example@example.com")

Cache condition

By default, any successful result of the function call is stored, even if it is a None. Caching decorators have the parameter - condition, which can be:

  • a callable object that receives the result of a function call or an exception, args, kwargs and a cache key
  • a string: "not_none" or "skip_none" to do not cache None values in
from cashews import cache, NOT_NONE

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl="1h", condition=NOT_NONE)
async def get():
    ...


def skit_test_result(result, args, kwargs, key=None) -> bool:
    return result and result != "test"

@cache(ttl="1h", condition=skit_test_result)
async def get():
    ...

It is also possible to cache an exception that the function can raise, to do so use special conditions (only for simple, hit and early)

from cashews import cache, with_exceptions, only_exceptions

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl="1h", condition=with_exceptions(MyException, TimeoutError))
async def get():
    ...


@cache(ttl="1h", condition=only_exceptions(MyException, TimeoutError))
async def get():
    ...

Also caching decorators have the parameter time_condition - min latency in seconds (can be set like ttl) of getting the result of a function call to be cached.

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl="1h", time_condition="3s")  # to cache for 1 hour if execution takes more than 3 seconds
async def get():
    ...

Template Keys

Often, to compose a cache key, you need all the parameters of the function call. By default, Cashews will generate a key using the function name, module names and parameters

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl=timedelta(hours=3))
async def get_name(user, *args, version="v1", **kwargs):
    ...

# a key template will be "__module__.get_name:user:{user}:{__args__}:version:{version}:{__kwargs__}"

await get_name("me", version="v2")
# a key will be "__module__.get_name:user:me::version:v2"
await get_name("me", version="v1", foo="bar")
# a key will be "__module__.get_name:user:me::version:v1:foo:bar"
await get_name("me", "opt", "attr", opt="opt", attr="attr")
# a key will be "__module__.get_name:user:me:opt:attr:version:v1:attr:attr:opt:opt"

For more advanced usage it better to define a cache key manually:

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl="2h", key="user_info:{user_id}")
async def get_info(user_id: str):
    ...

You may use objects in a key and access to an attribute through a template:

@cache(ttl="2h", key="user_info:{user.uuid}")
async def get_info(user: User):
    ...

You may use built-in functions to format template values (lower, upper, len, jwt, hash)

@cache(ttl="2h", key="user_info:{user.name:lower}:{password:hash(sha1)}")
async def get_info(user: User, password: str):
    ...


@cache(ttl="2h", key="user:{token:jwt(client_id)}")
async def get_user_by_token(token: str) -> User:
    ...

Or define your own transformation functions:

from cashews import default_formatter, cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@default_formatter.register("prefix")
def _prefix(value, chars=3):
    return value[:chars].upper()


@cache(ttl="2h", key="servers-user:{user.index:prefix(4)}")  # a key will be "servers-user:DWQS"
async def get_user_servers(user):
    ...

or register type formatters:

from decimal import Decimal
from cashews import default_formatter, cache

@default_formatter.type_format(Decimal)
def _decimal(value: Decimal) -> str:
    return str(value.quantize(Decimal("0.00")))


@cache(ttl="2h", key="price-{item.price}:{item.currency:upper}")  # a key will be "price-10.00:USD"
async def convert_price(item):
    ...

Not only function arguments can participate in a key formation. Cashews have a template_context. You may use any variable registered in it:

from cashews import cache, key_context, register_key_context

cache.setup("mem://")
register_key_context("client_id")


@cache(ttl="2h", key="user:{client_id}")
async def get_current_user():
  pass

...
with key_context(client_id=135356):
    await get_current_user()

Template for a class method

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

class MyClass:

    @cache(ttl="2h")
    async def get_name(self, user, version="v1"):
         ...

# a key template will be "__module__:MyClass.get_name:self:{self}:user:{user}:version:{version}

await MyClass().get_name("me", version="v2")
# a key will be "__module__:MyClass.get_name:self:<__module__.MyClass object at 0x105edd6a0>:user:me:version:v1"

As you can see, there is an ugly reference to the instance in the key. That is not what we expect to see. That cache will not work properly. There are 3 solutions to avoid it:

  1. define __str__ magic method in our class
class MyClass:

    @cache(ttl="2h")
    async def get_name(self, user, version="v1"):
         ...

    def __str__(self) -> str:
        return self._host

await MyClass(host="http://example.com").get_name("me", version="v2")
# a key will be "__module__:MyClass.get_name:self:http://example.com:user:me:version:v1"
  1. Set a key template
class MyClass:

    @cache(ttl="2h", key="{self._host}:name:{user}:{version}")
    async def get_name(self, user, version="v1"):
         ...

await MyClass(host="http://example.com").get_name("me", version="v2")
# a key will be "http://example.com:name:me:v1"
  1. Use noself or noself_cache if you want to exclude self from a key
from cashews import cache, noself, noself_cache

cache.setup("mem://")

class MyClass:

    @noself(cache)(ttl="2h")
    async def get_name(self, user, version="v1"):
         ...

    @noself_cache(ttl="2h")  # for python <= 3.8
    async def get_name(self, user, version="v1"):
         ...
# a key template will be "__module__:MyClass.get_name:user:{user}:version:{version}

await MyClass().get_name("me", version="v2")
# a key will be "__module__:MyClass.get_name:user:me:version:v1"

TTL

Cache time to live (ttl) is a required parameter for all cache decorators. TTL can be:

  • an integer as the number of seconds
  • a timedelta
  • a string like in golang e.g 1d2h3m50s
  • a callable object like a function that receives args and kwargs of the decorated function and returns one of the previous format for TTL

Examples:

from cashews import cache
from datetime import timedelta

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl=60 * 10)
async def get(item_id: int) -> Item:
    pass

@cache(ttl=timedelta(minutes=10))
async def get(item_id: int) -> Item:
    pass

@cache(ttl="10m")
async def get(item_id: int) -> Item:
    pass

def _ttl(item_id: int) -> str:
    return "2h" if item_id > 10 else "1h"

@cache(ttl=_ttl)
async def get(item_id: int) -> Item:
    pass

What can be cached

Cashews mostly use built-in pickle to store data but also support other pickle-like serialization like dill. Some types of objects are not picklable, in this case, cashews has API to define custom encoding/decoding:

from cashews.serialize import register_type


async def my_encoder(value: CustomType, *args, **kwargs) -> bytes:
    ...


async def my_decoder(value: bytes, *args, **kwargs) -> CustomType:
    ...


register_type(CustomType, my_encoder, my_decoder)

Cache invalidation

Cache invalidation - one of the main Computer Science well-known problems.

Sometimes, you want to invalidate the cache after some action is triggered. Consider this example:

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@cache(ttl="1h", key="items:page:{page}")
async def items(page=1):
    ...

@cache.invalidate("items:page:*")
async def create_item(item):
   ...

Here, the cache for items will be invalidated every time create_item is called There are two problems:

  1. with redis backend you cashews will scan a full database to get a key that match a pattern (items:page:*) - not good for performance reasons
  2. what if we do not specify a key for cache:
@cache(ttl="1h")
async def items(page=1):
    ...

Cashews provide the tag system: you can tag cache keys, so they will be stored in a separate SET to avoid high load on redis storage. To use the tags in a more efficient way please use it with the client side feature.

:warning: **Warning: Tags require setting up default cache or cache for tags prefix

from cashews import cache
cache.setup(...)
# or
cache.setup_tags_backend(...)
from cashews import cache

cache.setup("redis://", client_side=True)

@cache(ttl="1h", tags=["items", "page:{page}"])
async def items(page=1):
    ...


await cache.delete_tags("page:1")
await cache.delete_tags("items")

# low level api
cache.register_tag("my_tag", key_template="key{i}")

await cache.set("key1", "value", expire="1d", tags=["my_tag"])

You can invalidate future call of cache request by context manager:

from cashews import cache, invalidate_further

@cache(ttl="3h")
async def items():
    ...

async def add_item(item: Item) -> List[Item]:
    ...
    with invalidate_further():
        await items

Cache invalidation on code change

Often, you may face a problem with an invalid cache after the code is changed. For example:

@cache(ttl=timedelta(days=1), key="user:{user_id}")
async def get_user(user_id):
    return {"name": "Dmitry", "surname": "Krykov"}

Then, the returned value was changed to:

-    return {"name": "Dmitry", "surname": "Krykov"}
+    return {"full_name": "Dmitry Krykov"}

Since the function returns a dict, there is no simple way to automatically detect that kind of cache invalidity

One way to solve the problem is to add a prefix for this cache:

@cache(ttl=timedelta(days=1), prefix="v2")
async def get_user(user_id):
    return {"full_name": "Dmitry Krykov"}

but it is so easy to forget to do it...

The best defense against this problem is to use your own datacontainers, like dataclasses, with defined __repr__ method. This will add distinctness and cashews can detect changes in such structures automatically by checking object representation.

from dataclasses import dataclass

from cashews import cache

cache.setup("mem://")

@dataclass
class User:
    name: str
    surname: str

# or define your own class with __repr__ method

class User:

    def __init__(self, name, surname):
        self.name, self.surname = name, surname

    def __repr__(self):
        return f"{self.name} {self.surname}"

# Will detect changes of a structure
@cache(ttl="1d", prefix="v2")
async def get_user(user_id):
    return User("Dima", "Krykov")

Detect the source of a result

Decorators give us a very simple API but also make it difficult to understand where the result is coming from - cache or direct call.

To solve this problem cashews has detect context manager:

from cashews import cache

with cache.detect as detector:
    response = await something_that_use_cache()
    calls = detector.calls

print(calls)
# >>> {"my:key": [{"ttl": 10, "name": "simple", "backend": "redis"}, ], "fail:key": [{"ttl": 10, "exc": RateLimit}, "name": "fail", "backend": "mem"],}

E.g. A simple middleware to use it in a web app:

@app.middleware("http")
async def add_from_cache_headers(request: Request, call_next):
    with cache.detect as detector:
        response = await call_next(request)
        if detector.calls:
            key = list(detector.calls.keys())[0]
            response.headers["X-From-Cache"] = key
            expire = await cache.get_expire(key)
            response.headers["X-From-Cache-Expire-In-Seconds"] = str(expire)
    return response

Middleware

Cashews provide the interface for a "middleware" pattern:

import logging
from cashews import cache

logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)


async def logging_middleware(call, cmd: Command, backend: Backend, *args, **kwargs):
    key = args[0] if args else kwargs.get("key", kwargs.get("pattern", ""))
    logger.info("=> Cache request: %s ", cmd.value, extra={"args": args, "cache_key": key})
    return await call(*args, **kwargs)


cache.setup("mem://", middlewares=(logging_middleware, ))

Callbacks

One of the middleware that is preinstalled in cache instance is CallbackMiddleware. This middleware also add to a cache a new interface that allow to add a function that will be called before given command will be triggered

from cashews import cache, Command


def callback(key, result):
  print(f"GET key={key}")

with cache.callback(callback, cmd=Command.GET):
    await cache.get("test")  # also will print "GET key=test"

Transactional

Applications are more often based on a database with transaction (OLTP) usage. Usually cache supports transactions poorly. Here is just a simple example of how we can make our cache inconsistent:

async def my_handler():
    async with db.transaction():
        await db.insert(user)
        await cache.set(f"key:{user.id}", user)
        await api.service.register(user)

Here the API call may fail, the database transaction will rollback, but the cache will not. Of course, in this code, we can solve it by moving the cache call outside transaction, but in real code it may not so easy. Another case: we want to make bulk operations with a group of keys to keep it consistent:

async def login(user, token, session):
    ...
    old_session = await cache.get(f"current_session:{user.id}")
    await cache.incr(f"sessions_count:{user.id}")
    await cache.set(f"current_session:{user.id}", session)
    await cache.set(f"token:{token.id}", user)
    return old_session

Here we want to have some way to protect our code from race conditions and do operations with cache simultaneously.

Cashews support transaction operations:

:warning: **Warning: transaction operations are set, set_many, delete, delete_many, delete_match and incr

from cashews import cache
...

@cache.transaction()
async def my_handler():
    async with db.transaction():
        await db.insert(user)
        await cache.set(f"key:{user.id}", user)
        await api.service.register(user)

# or
async def login(user, token, session):
    async with cache.transaction() as tx:
        old_session = await cache.get(f"current_session:{user.id}")
        await cache.incr(f"sessions_count:{user.id}")
        await cache.set(f"current_session:{user.id}", session)
        await cache.set(f"token:{token.id}", user)
        if ...:
            tx.rollback()
    return old_session

Transactions in cashews support different modes of "isolation"

  • fast (0-7% overhead) - memory based, can't protect of race conditions, but may use for atomicity
  • locked (default - 4-9% overhead) - use kind of shared lock per cache key (in case of redis or disk backend), protect of race conditions
  • serializable (7-50% overhead) - use global shared lock - one transaction per time (almost useless)
from cashews import cache, TransactionMode
...

@cache.transaction(TransactionMode.SERIALIZABLE, timeout=1)
async def my_handler():
   ...

Contrib

This library is framework agnostic, but includes several "batteries" for most popular tools.

Fastapi

You may find a few middlewares useful that can help you to control a cache in you web application based on fastapi.

  1. CacheEtagMiddleware - middleware add Etag and check 'If-None-Match' header based on Etag
  2. CacheRequestControlMiddleware - middleware check and add Cache-Control header
  3. CacheDeleteMiddleware - clear cache for an endpoint based on Clear-Site-Data header

:warning: **Warning: CacheEtagMiddleware requires setting up default cache or cache with prefix "fastapi:"

from cashews import cache
cache.setup(...)
# or
cache.setup(..., prefix="fastapi:")

Example:

from fastapi import FastAPI, Header, Query
from fastapi.responses import StreamingResponse

from cashews import cache
from cashews.contrib.fastapi import (
    CacheDeleteMiddleware,
    CacheEtagMiddleware,
    CacheRequestControlMiddleware,
    cache_control_ttl,
)

app = FastAPI()
app.add_middleware(CacheDeleteMiddleware)
app.add_middleware(CacheEtagMiddleware)
app.add_middleware(CacheRequestControlMiddleware)
metrics_middleware = create_metrics_middleware()
cache.setup(os.environ.get("CACHE_URI", "redis://"))



@app.get("/")
@cache.failover(ttl="1h")
@cache(ttl=cache_control_ttl(default="4m"), key="simple:{user_agent:hash}", time_condition="1s")
async def simple(user_agent: str = Header("No")):
    ...


@app.get("/stream")
@cache(ttl="1m", key="stream:{file_path}")
async def stream(file_path: str = Query(__file__)):
    return StreamingResponse(_read_file(file_path=file_path))


async def _read_file(_read_file):
    ...

Also cashews can cache stream responses

Prometheus

You can easily provide metrics using the Prometheus middleware.

from cashews import cache
from cashews.contrib.prometheus import create_metrics_middleware

metrics_middleware = create_metrics_middleware(with_tag=False)
cache.setup("redis://", middlewares=(metrics_middleware,))

Development

Setup

  • Clone the project.
  • After creating a virtual environment, install pre-commit:
    pip install pre-commit && pre-commit install --install-hooks
    

Tests

To run tests you can use tox:

pip install tox
tox -e py  // tests for inmemory backend
tox -e py-diskcache  // tests for diskcache backend
tox -e py-redis  // tests for redis backend  - you need to run redis
tox -e py-integration  // tests for integrations with aiohttp and fastapi

tox // to run all tests for all python that is installed on your machine

Or use pytest, but 2 tests always fail, it is OK:

pip install .[tests,redis,diskcache,speedup] fastapi aiohttp requests httpx SQLAlchemy prometheus-client

pytest // run all tests with all backends
pytest -m "not redis" // all tests without tests for redis backend

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