Overview
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Lock context manager implemented via redis SETNX/BLPOP.
- Free software: BSD 2-Clause License
Interface targeted to be exactly like threading.Lock.
Usage
Because we don't want to require users to share the lock instance across processes you will have to give them names. Eg:
conn = StrictRedis() with redis_lock.Lock(conn, "name-of-the-lock"): print("Got the lock. Doing some work ...") time.sleep(5)
Eg:
lock = redis_lock.Lock(conn, "name-of-the-lock") if lock.acquire(blocking=False): print("Got the lock.") else: print("Someone else has the lock.")
You can also associate an identifier along with the lock so that it can be retrieved later by the same process, or by a different one. This is useful in cases where the application needs to identify the lock owner (find out who currently owns the lock). Eg:
import socket host_id = "owned-by-%s" % socket.gethostname() lock = redis_lock.Lock(conn, "name-of-the-lock", id=host_id) if lock.acquire(blocking=False): print("Got the lock.") else: if lock.get_owner_id() == host_id: print("I already acquired this in another process.") else: print("The lock is held on another machine.")
Avoid dogpile effect in django
The dogpile is also known as the thundering herd effect or cache stampede. Here's a pattern to avoid the problem without serving stale data. The work will be performed a single time and every client will wait for the fresh data.
To use this you will need django-redis, however, python-redis-lock
provides you a cache backend that has a cache method for your convenience. Just install python-redis-lock
like
this:
pip install "python-redis-lock[django]"
Now put something like this in your settings:
CACHES = { 'default': { 'BACKEND': 'redis_lock.django_cache.RedisCache', 'LOCATION': 'redis://127.0.0.1:6379/1', 'OPTIONS': { 'CLIENT_CLASS': 'django_redis.client.DefaultClient' } } }
Note
If using a django-redis < 3.8.x, you'll probably need redis_cache which has been deprecated in favor to django_redis. The redis_cache module is removed in django-redis versions > 3.9.x. See django-redis notes.
This backend just adds a convenient .lock(name, expire=None)
function to django-redis's cache backend.
You would write your functions like this:
from django.core.cache import cache def function(): val = cache.get(key) if val: return val else: with cache.lock(key): val = cache.get(key) if val: return val else: # DO EXPENSIVE WORK val = ... cache.set(key, value) return val
Troubleshooting
In some cases, the lock remains in redis forever (like a server blackout / redis or application crash / an unhandled exception). In such cases, the lock is not removed by restarting the application. One solution is to turn on the auto_renewal parameter in combination with expire to set a time-out on the lock, but let Lock() automatically keep resetting the expire time while your application code is executing:
# Get a lock with a 60-second lifetime but keep renewing it automatically # to ensure the lock is held for as long as the Python process is running. with redis_lock.Lock(conn, name='my-lock', expire=60, auto_renewal=True): # Do work....
Another solution is to use the reset_all()
function when the application starts:
# On application start/restart import redis_lock redis_lock.reset_all()
Alternativelly, you can reset individual locks via the reset
method.
Use these carefully, if you understand what you do.
Features
- based on the standard SETNX recipe
- optional expiry
- optional timeout
- optional lock renewal (use a low expire but keep the lock active)
- no spinloops at acquire
Implementation
redis_lock
will use 2 keys for each lock named <name>
:
lock:<name>
- a string value for the actual locklock-signal:<name>
- a list value for signaling the waiters when the lock is released
This is how it works:
Documentation
https://python-redis-lock.readthedocs.org/
Development
To run the all tests run:
tox
Requirements
OS: | Any |
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Runtime: | Python 2.7, 3.3 or later, or PyPy |
Services: | Redis 2.6.12 or later. |
Similar projects
- bbangert/retools - acquire does spinloop
- distributing-locking-python-and-redis - acquire does polling
- cezarsa/redis_lock - acquire does not block
- andymccurdy/redis-py - acquire does spinloop
- mpessas/python-redis-lock - blocks fine but no expiration