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I'm trying to expire a view-level cache on a model's post_save (that was set via https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.3/topics/cache/?from=olddocs#the-per-view-cache). I did some googling and found this answer here on SO: Expire a view-cache in Django? but it's not working for me.

I asked around in the #django room on freenode and the consensus was that this was probably due to the recent caching changes made in 1.3

Does anyone have any idea on how I can wipe out the cache entry for a model keyed off it's get_absolute_url()?

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respondcreate
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  • If [ilvar's answer](http://stackoverflow.com/a/10458883/296974) is close enough to your solution, accept it. Otherwise, post an own answer and accept that as soon as you can and at least upvote ilvar's answer if it was helpful. – glglgl May 07 '12 at 14:04
  • OK, thanks @glglgl...still learning how things work here. :) I just moved my solution out of the body of the question and into it's own answer. – respondcreate May 07 '12 at 15:00

2 Answers2

4

I figured it out!

Cheers to ilvar for pointing me in the right direction. My implementation is below. I created a property named cache_key and added a post_save receiver onto the sub class of the models whose view-level caches I needed to clear after they had been updated. Suggestions for improvement are always welcome!

from django.conf import settings
from django.core.cache import cache
from django.db.models.signals import post_save
from django.http import HttpRequest
from django.utils.cache import _generate_cache_header_key

from someapp.models import BaseModelofThisClass

class SomeModel(BaseModelofThisClass):
    ...
    @property
    def cache_key(self):
        # Create a fake request object
        request = HttpRequest()
        # Set the request method
        request.method = "GET"
        # Set the request path to be this object's permalink.
        request.path = self.get_absolute_url()
        # Grab the key prefix (if it exists) from settings
        key_prefix = settings.CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_KEY_PREFIX
        # Generate this object's cache key using django's key generator
        key = _generate_cache_header_key(key_prefix, request)
        # This is a bit hacky but necessary as I don't know how to do it
        # properly otherwise. While generating a cache header key, django
        # uses the language of the HttpRequest() object as part of the
        # string. The fake request object, by default, uses
        # settings.LANGUAGE_CODE as it's language (in my case, 'en-us')
        # while the true request objects that are used in building views
        # use settings.LANGUAGES ('en'). Instead of replacing the segment
        # of the string after the fact it would be far better create a more
        # closely mirrored HttpRequest() object prior to passing it to
        # _generate_cache_header_key().
        key = key.replace(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE, settings.LANGUAGES[settings.DEFAULT_LANGUAGE][0])

        return key

    @receiver(post_save)
    def clear_cache_for_this_item(sender, instance, **kwargs):
        # If this is a sub-class of another model
        if sender not in BaseModelofThisClass.__subclasses__():
            return
        else:
            cache.delete(instance.cache_key)
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respondcreate
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Django's caching middleware is using this to generate a cache key for the request. So, you can make a fake request with desired path and get a cache key. Then simply delete it from the cache.

P.S. cache_page decorator also uses that middlewares so it should work the same way.

ilvar
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