Caching¶
Any template or component can be cached using the cache
argument to the <%page>
, <%def>
or <%block>
directives:
<%page cached="True"/>
template text
The above template, after being executed the first time, will
store its content within a cache that by default is scoped
within memory. Subsequent calls to the template’s Template.render()
method will return content directly from the cache. When the
Template
object itself falls out of scope, its corresponding
cache is garbage collected along with the template.
The caching system requires that a cache backend be installed; this includes either the Beaker package or the dogpile.cache, as well as any other third-party caching libraries that feature Mako integration.
By default, caching will attempt to make use of Beaker.
To use dogpile.cache, the
cache_impl
argument must be set; see this argument in the
section Cache Arguments.
In addition to being available on the <%page>
tag, the caching flag and all
its options can be used with the <%def>
tag as well:
<%def name="mycomp" cached="True" cache_timeout="60">
other text
</%def>
… and equivalently with the <%block>
tag, anonymous or named:
<%block cached="True" cache_timeout="60">
other text
</%block>
Cache Arguments¶
Mako has two cache arguments available on tags that are available in all cases. The rest of the arguments available are specific to a backend.
The two generic tags arguments are:
cached="True"
- enable caching for this<%page>
,<%def>
, or<%block>
.cache_key
- the “key” used to uniquely identify this content in the cache. Usually, this key is chosen automatically based on the name of the rendering callable (i.e.body
when used in<%page>
, the name of the def when using<%def>
, the explicit or internally-generated name when using<%block>
). Using thecache_key
parameter, the key can be overridden using a fixed or programmatically generated value.For example, here’s a page that caches any page which inherits from it, based on the filename of the calling template:
<%page cached="True" cache_key="${self.filename}"/> ${next.body()} ## rest of template
On a Template
or TemplateLookup
, the
caching can be configured using these arguments:
cache_enabled
- Setting this toFalse
will disable all caching functionality when the template renders. Defaults toTrue
. e.g.:lookup = TemplateLookup( directories='/path/to/templates', cache_enabled = False )
cache_impl
- The string name of the cache backend to use. This defaults to'beaker'
, indicating that the ‘beaker’ backend will be used.cache_args
- A dictionary of cache parameters that will be consumed by the cache backend. See Using the Beaker Cache Backend and Using the dogpile.cache Backend for examples.
Backend-Specific Cache Arguments¶
The <%page>
, <%def>
, and <%block>
tags
accept any named argument that starts with the prefix "cache_"
.
Those arguments are then packaged up and passed along to the
underlying caching implementation, minus the "cache_"
prefix.
The actual arguments understood are determined by the backend.
Using the Beaker Cache Backend - Includes arguments understood by Beaker.
Using the dogpile.cache Backend - Includes arguments understood by dogpile.cache.
Using the Beaker Cache Backend¶
When using Beaker, new implementations will want to make usage of cache regions so that cache configurations can be maintained externally to templates. These configurations live under named “regions” that can be referred to within templates themselves.
New in version 0.6.0: Support for Beaker cache regions.
For example, suppose we would like two regions. One is a “short term”
region that will store content in a memory-based dictionary,
expiring after 60 seconds. The other is a Memcached region,
where values should expire in five minutes. To configure
our TemplateLookup
, first we get a handle to a
beaker.cache.CacheManager
:
from beaker.cache import CacheManager
manager = CacheManager(cache_regions={
'short_term':{
'type': 'memory',
'expire': 60
},
'long_term':{
'type': 'ext:memcached',
'url': '127.0.0.1:11211',
'expire': 300
}
})
lookup = TemplateLookup(
directories=['/path/to/templates'],
module_directory='/path/to/modules',
cache_impl='beaker',
cache_args={
'manager':manager
}
)
Our templates can then opt to cache data in one of either region,
using the cache_region
argument. Such as using short_term
at the <%page>
level:
<%page cached="True" cache_region="short_term">
## ...
Or, long_term
at the <%block>
level:
<%block name="header" cached="True" cache_region="long_term">
other text
</%block>
The Beaker backend also works without regions. There are a
variety of arguments that can be passed to the cache_args
dictionary, which are also allowable in templates via the
<%page>
, <%block>
,
and <%def>
tags specific to those sections. The values
given override those specified at the TemplateLookup
or Template
level.
With the possible exception
of cache_timeout
, these arguments are probably better off
staying at the template configuration level. Each argument
specified as cache_XYZ
in a template tag is specified
without the cache_
prefix in the cache_args
dictionary:
cache_timeout
- number of seconds in which to invalidate the cached data. After this timeout, the content is re-generated on the next call. Available astimeout
in thecache_args
dictionary.cache_type
- type of caching.'memory'
,'file'
,'dbm'
, or'ext:memcached'
(note that the stringmemcached
is also accepted by the dogpile.cache Mako plugin, though not by Beaker itself). Available astype
in thecache_args
dictionary.cache_url
- (only used formemcached
but required) a single IP address or a semi-colon separated list of IP address of memcache servers to use. Available asurl
in thecache_args
dictionary.cache_dir
- in the case of the'file'
and'dbm'
cache types, this is the filesystem directory with which to store data files. If this option is not present, the value ofmodule_directory
is used (i.e. the directory where compiled template modules are stored). If neither option is available an exception is thrown. Available asdir
in thecache_args
dictionary.
Using the dogpile.cache Backend¶
dogpile.cache is a new replacement for Beaker. It provides
a modernized, slimmed down interface and is generally easier to use
than Beaker. As of this writing it has not yet been released. dogpile.cache
includes its own Mako cache plugin – see dogpile.cache.plugins.mako_cache
in the
dogpile.cache documentation.
Programmatic Cache Access¶
The Template
, as well as any template-derived Namespace
, has
an accessor called cache
which returns the Cache
object
for that template. This object is a facade on top of the underlying
CacheImpl
object, and provides some very rudimental
capabilities, such as the ability to get and put arbitrary
values:
<%
local.cache.set("somekey", type="memory", "somevalue")
%>
Above, the cache associated with the local
namespace is
accessed and a key is placed within a memory cache.
More commonly, the cache
object is used to invalidate cached
sections programmatically:
template = lookup.get_template('/sometemplate.html')
# invalidate the "body" of the template
template.cache.invalidate_body()
# invalidate an individual def
template.cache.invalidate_def('somedef')
# invalidate an arbitrary key
template.cache.invalidate('somekey')
You can access any special method or attribute of the CacheImpl
itself using the Cache.impl
attribute:
template.cache.impl.do_something_special()
Note that using implementation-specific methods will mean you can’t
swap in a different kind of CacheImpl
implementation at a
later time.
Cache Plugins¶
The mechanism used by caching can be plugged in
using a CacheImpl
subclass. This class implements
the rudimental methods Mako needs to implement the caching
API. Mako includes the BeakerCacheImpl
class to
provide the default implementation. A CacheImpl
class
is acquired by Mako using a importlib.metatada
entrypoint, using
the name given as the cache_impl
argument to Template
or TemplateLookup
. This entry point can be
installed via the standard setuptools/setup()
procedure, underneath
the EntryPoint group named "mako.cache"
. It can also be
installed at runtime via a convenience installer register_plugin()
which accomplishes essentially the same task.
An example plugin that implements a local dictionary cache:
from mako.cache import Cacheimpl, register_plugin
class SimpleCacheImpl(CacheImpl):
def __init__(self, cache):
super(SimpleCacheImpl, self).__init__(cache)
self._cache = {}
def get_or_create(self, key, creation_function, **kw):
if key in self._cache:
return self._cache[key]
else:
self._cache[key] = value = creation_function()
return value
def set(self, key, value, **kwargs):
self._cache[key] = value
def get(self, key, **kwargs):
return self._cache.get(key)
def invalidate(self, key, **kwargs):
self._cache.pop(key, None)
# optional - register the class locally
register_plugin("simple", __name__, "SimpleCacheImpl")
Enabling the above plugin in a template would look like:
t = Template("mytemplate",
file="mytemplate.html",
cache_impl='simple')
Guidelines for Writing Cache Plugins¶
The
CacheImpl
is created on a per-Template
basis. The class should ensure that only data for the parentTemplate
is persisted or returned by the cache methods. The actualTemplate
is available via theself.cache.template
attribute. Theself.cache.id
attribute, which is essentially the unique modulename of the template, is a good value to use in order to represent a unique namespace of keys specific to the template.Templates only use the
CacheImpl.get_or_create()
method in an implicit fashion. TheCacheImpl.set()
,CacheImpl.get()
, andCacheImpl.invalidate()
methods are only used in response to direct programmatic access to the corresponding methods on theCache
object.CacheImpl
will be accessed in a multithreaded fashion if theTemplate
itself is used multithreaded. Care should be taken to ensure caching implementations are threadsafe.A library like Dogpile, which is a minimal locking system derived from Beaker, can be used to help implement the
CacheImpl.get_or_create()
method in a threadsafe way that can maximize effectiveness across multiple threads as well as processes.CacheImpl.get_or_create()
is the key method used by templates.All arguments passed to
**kw
come directly from the parameters inside the<%def>
,<%block>
, or<%page>
tags directly, minus the"cache_"
prefix, as strings, with the exception of the argumentcache_timeout
, which is passed to the plugin as the nametimeout
with the value converted to an integer. Arguments present incache_args
onTemplate
orTemplateLookup
are passed directly, but are superseded by those present in the most specific template tag.The directory where
Template
places module files can be acquired using the accessorself.cache.template.module_directory
. This directory can be a good place to throw cache-related work files, underneath a prefix like_my_cache_work
so that name conflicts with generated modules don’t occur.
API Reference¶
Object Name | Description |
---|---|
Bases: |
|
Bases: |
|
Bases: |
|
- class mako.cache.Cache(template, *args)¶
Bases:
object
Represents a data content cache made available to the module space of a specific
Template
object.New in version 0.6:
Cache
by itself is mostly a container for aCacheImpl
object, which implements a fixed API to provide caching services; specific subclasses exist to implement different caching strategies. Mako includes a backend that works with the Beaker caching system. Beaker itself then supports a number of backends (i.e. file, memory, memcached, etc.)The construction of a
Cache
is part of the mechanics of aTemplate
, and programmatic access to this cache is typically via theTemplate.cache
attribute.-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
get(key, **kw)¶ Retrieve a value from the cache.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
get_or_create(key, creation_function, **kw)¶ Retrieve a value from the cache, using the given creation function to generate a new value.
-
attribute
mako.cache.Cache.
id = None¶ Return the ‘id’ that identifies this cache.
This is a value that should be globally unique to the
Template
associated with this cache, and can be used by a caching system to name a local container for data specific to this template.
-
attribute
mako.cache.Cache.
impl = None¶ Provide the
CacheImpl
in use by thisCache
.This accessor allows a
CacheImpl
with additional methods beyond that ofCache
to be used programmatically.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
invalidate(key, **kw)¶ Invalidate a value in the cache.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
invalidate_body()¶ Invalidate the cached content of the “body” method for this template.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
invalidate_closure(name)¶ Invalidate a nested
<%def>
within this template.Caching of nested defs is a blunt tool as there is no management of scope – nested defs that use cache tags need to have names unique of all other nested defs in the template, else their content will be overwritten by each other.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
invalidate_def(name)¶ Invalidate the cached content of a particular
<%def>
within this template.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
put(key, value, **kw)¶ A synonym for
Cache.set()
.This is here for backwards compatibility.
-
method
mako.cache.Cache.
set(key, value, **kw)¶ Place a value in the cache.
-
attribute
mako.cache.Cache.
starttime = None¶ Epochal time value for when the owning
Template
was first compiled.A cache implementation may wish to invalidate data earlier than this timestamp; this has the effect of the cache for a specific
Template
starting clean any time theTemplate
is recompiled, such as when the original template file changed on the filesystem.
-
method
- class mako.cache.CacheImpl(cache)¶
Bases:
object
Provide a cache implementation for use by
Cache
.-
method
mako.cache.CacheImpl.
get(key, **kw)¶ Retrieve a value from the cache.
-
method
mako.cache.CacheImpl.
get_or_create(key, creation_function, **kw)¶ Retrieve a value from the cache, using the given creation function to generate a new value.
This function must return a value, either from the cache, or via the given creation function. If the creation function is called, the newly created value should be populated into the cache under the given key before being returned.
-
method
mako.cache.CacheImpl.
invalidate(key, **kw)¶ Invalidate a value in the cache.
-
attribute
mako.cache.CacheImpl.
pass_context = False¶ If
True
, theContext
will be passed toCacheImpl.get_or_create()
as the name'context'
.
-
method
mako.cache.CacheImpl.
set(key, value, **kw)¶ Place a value in the cache.
-
method
- function mako.cache.register_plugin(name, modulepath, objname)¶
- class mako.ext.beaker_cache.BeakerCacheImpl(cache)¶
Bases:
mako.cache.CacheImpl
A
CacheImpl
provided for the Beaker caching system.This plugin is used by default, based on the default value of
'beaker'
for thecache_impl
parameter of theTemplate
orTemplateLookup
classes.Class signature
class
mako.ext.beaker_cache.BeakerCacheImpl
(mako.cache.CacheImpl
)-
method
mako.ext.beaker_cache.BeakerCacheImpl.
get(key, **kw)¶ Retrieve a value from the cache.
-
method
mako.ext.beaker_cache.BeakerCacheImpl.
get_or_create(key, creation_function, **kw)¶ Retrieve a value from the cache, using the given creation function to generate a new value.
This function must return a value, either from the cache, or via the given creation function. If the creation function is called, the newly created value should be populated into the cache under the given key before being returned.
-
method
mako.ext.beaker_cache.BeakerCacheImpl.
invalidate(key, **kw)¶ Invalidate a value in the cache.
-
method