/httpcache

Simple HTTP cache for Python Requests

Primary LanguagePythonOtherNOASSERTION

httpcache: HTTP Caching for Python

Warning

This library is no longer maintained: you should use the excellent CacheControl library, which directly ports httplib2's caching algorithms.

HTTP, like all well designed standards, has multiple confusing mechanisms for caching. httpcache is a HTTP cache that knows how to use HTTP headers and status codes to correctly cache your HTTP traffic. It's built for use with the excellent Requests library, because if you're not using Requests you're probably prepared to roll your own caching library too.

It's gloriously easy to use. If all you want is caching in Requests, all you need to do is plug a transport adapter into your Requests session:

>>> import requests
>>> from httpcache import CachingHTTPAdapter
>>> s = requests.Session()
>>> s.mount('http://', CachingHTTPAdapter())

Away you go!

If you want more control, you can use the cache data-store itself. Store your cache entries like this:

from httpcache import HTTPCache
cache = HTTPCache(capacity=50)
cache.store(response)

And retrieve them like this:

cached_response = cache.retrieve(request)

Simple.

Features

  • Tight integration with Requests data structures.
  • Understands Expires and Cache-Control headers.
  • Knows how to interpret 304 Not Modified responses.
  • Can send If-Modified-Since headers.
  • Aware of HTTP verbs, e.g. POST.
  • RFC 2616-compliant.

Installation

To install httpcache, you want to run:

$ pip install httpcache

If you can't do that, and you really must have httpcache, and you can't install pip, then you can try:

$ easy_install httpcache

I strongly recommend you don't do that though.

Versions

httpcache supports all the versions of Python that Requests does. This means 2.6, 2.7 and 3.3. It is possible that httpcache will work on other versions of Python but we do not test on those versions and will not support them.

Contribute

Contributions are always welcome! Please abide by the following rules when contributing:

  1. Check that no-one has opened an issue already covering your bug. If you open a duplicate issue, the maintainer will give you a stern look.
  2. Fork the Github repository and start writing your tests. If you're fixing a bug, I recommend writing a failing test first and working until it passes. If you're adding a feature, you're free to add tests after you write the functionality, but please test the functionality thoroughly.
  3. Send a Pull Request. If I don't respond within a couple of days, please shout at me on Twitter or via email until I do something about it.