Caching placeholders and #cache
===============================

(cache)

Dynamic placeholder - no cache
------------------------------

(cache.dynamic)

The template:

::

    Dynamic variable:  $voom

The command line and the output:

::

    % voom='Voom!' python x.py --env
    Dynamic variable:  Voom!

The generated code:

::

    write('Dynamic variable:  ')
    write(filter(VFS(SL,"voom",1))) # generated from '$voom' at line 1, col 20.
    write('\n')

Just what we expected, like any other dynamic placeholder.

Static placeholder
------------------

(cache.static)

The template:

::

    Cached variable:  $*voom

The command line and output:

::

    % voom='Voom!' python x.py --env
    Cached variable:  Voom!

The generated code, with line numbers:

::

     1  write('Cached variable:  ')
     2  ## START CACHE REGION: at line, col (1, 19) in the source.
     3  RECACHE = True
     4  if '19760169' not in self._cacheData:
     5      pass
     6  else:
     7      RECACHE = False
     8  if RECACHE:
     9      orig_trans = trans
    10      trans = cacheCollector = DummyTransaction()
    11      write = cacheCollector.response().write
    12      write(filter(VFS(SL,"voom",1))) # generated from '$*voom' at line 1,
                # col 19.
    13      trans = orig_trans
    14      write = trans.response().write
    15      self._cacheData['19760169'] = cacheCollector.response().getvalue()
    16      del cacheCollector
    17  write(self._cacheData['19760169'])
    18  ## END CACHE REGION

    19  write('\n')

That one little star generated a whole lotta code. First, instead
of an ordinary {VFS} lookup (searchList) lookup, it converted the
placeholder to a lookup in the {.\_cacheData} dictionary. Cheetah
also generated a unique key ({'19760169'}) for our cached item -
this is its cache ID.

Second, Cheetah put a pair of if-blocks before the {write}. The
first (lines 3-7) determine whether the cache value is missing or
out of date, and sets local variable {RECACHE} true or false. This
stanza may look unnecessarily verbose - lines 3-7 could be
eliminated if line 8 was changed to

::

    if '19760169' not in self._cacheData:

- but this model is expandable for some of the cache features we'll
see below.

The second if-block, lines 8-16, do the cache updating if
necessary. Clearly, the programmer is trying to stick as close to
normal (dynamic) workflow as possible. Remember that {write}, even
though it looks like a local function, is actually a method of a
file-like object. So we create a temporary file-like object to
divert the {write} object into, then read the result and stuff it
into the cache.

Timed-refresh placeholder
-------------------------

(cache.timed)

The template:

::

    Timed cache:  $*.5m*voom

The command line and the output:

::

    % voom='Voom!' python x.py --env
    Timed cache:  Voom!

The generated method's docstring:

::

    """
    This is the main method generated by Cheetah
    This cache will be refreshed every 30.0 seconds.
    """

The generated code:

::

     1  write('Timed cache:  ')
     2  ## START CACHE REGION: at line, col (1, 15) in the source.
     3  RECACHE = True
     4  if '55048032' not in self._cacheData:
     5      self.__cache55048032__refreshTime = currentTime() + 30.0
     6  elif currentTime() > self.__cache55048032__refreshTime:
     7      self.__cache55048032__refreshTime = currentTime() + 30.0
     8  else:
     9      RECACHE = False
    10  if RECACHE:
    11      orig_trans = trans
    12      trans = cacheCollector = DummyTransaction()
    13      write = cacheCollector.response().write
    14      write(filter(VFS(SL,"voom",1))) # generated from '$*.5m*voom' at
                # line 1, col 15.
    15      trans = orig_trans
    16      write = trans.response().write
    17      self._cacheData['55048032'] = cacheCollector.response().getvalue()
    18      del cacheCollector
    19  write(self._cacheData['55048032'])
    20  ## END CACHE REGION

    21  write('\n')

This code is identical to the static cache example except for the
docstring and the first if-block. (OK, so the cache ID is different
and the comment on line 14 is different too. Big deal.)

Each timed-refresh cache item has a corrsponding private attribute
{.\_\_cache########\_\_refreshTime} giving the refresh time in
ticks (=seconds since January 1, 1970). The first if-block (lines
3-9) checks whether the cache value is missing or its update time
has passed, and if so, sets {RECACHE} to true and also schedules
another refresh at the next interval.

The method docstring reminds the user how often the cache will be
refreshed. This information is unfortunately not as robust as it
could be. Each timed-cache placeholder blindly generates a line in
the docstring. If all refreshes are at the same interval, there
will be multiple identical lines in the docstring. If the refreshes
are at different intervals, you get a situation like this:

::

    """
    This is the main method generated by Cheetah
    This cache will be refreshed every 30.0 seconds.
    This cache will be refreshed every 60.0 seconds.
    This cache will be refreshed every 120.0 seconds.
    """

The docstring tells only that "something" will be refreshed every
60.0 seconds, but doesn't reveal { which} placeholder that is. Only
if you know the relative order of the placeholders in the template
can you figure that out.

Timed-refresh placeholder with braces
-------------------------------------

(cache.timed.braces)

This example is the same but with the long placeholder syntax. It's
here because it's a Cheetah FAQ whether to put the cache interval
inside or outside the braces. (It's also here so I can look it up
because I frequently forget.) The answer is: outside. The braces go
around only the placeholder name (and perhaps some output-filter
arguments.)

The template:

::

    Timed with {}:  $*.5m*{voom}

The output:

::

    Timed with {}:  Voom!

The generated code differs only in the comment. Inside the
cache-refresh if-block:

::

    write(filter(VFS(SL,"voom",1))) # generated from '$*.5m*{voom}' at line 1,
        #col 17.

If you try to do it this way:

::

    Timed with {}:  ${*.5m*voom}      ## Wrong!

you get:

::

    Timed with {}:  ${*.5m*voom}

``${`` is not a valid placeholder, so it gets treated as ordinary
text.

#cache
------

(cache.directive)

The template:

::

    #cache
    This is a cached region.  $voom
    #end cache

The output:

::

    This is a cached region.  Voom!

The generated code:

::

     1  ## START CACHE REGION: at line, col (1, 1) in the source.
     2  RECACHE = True
     3  if '23711421' not in self._cacheData:
     4      pass
     5  else:
     6      RECACHE = False
     7  if RECACHE:
     8      orig_trans = trans
     9      trans = cacheCollector = DummyTransaction()
    10      write = cacheCollector.response().write
    11      write('This is a cached region.  ')
    12      write(filter(VFS(SL,"voom",1))) # generated from '$voom' at line 2,
                # col 27.
    13      write('\n')
    14      trans = orig_trans
    15      write = trans.response().write
    16      self._cacheData['23711421'] = cacheCollector.response().getvalue()
    17      del cacheCollector
    18  write(self._cacheData['23711421'])
    19  ## END CACHE REGION

This is the same as the {$\*voom} example, except that the plain
text around the placeholder is inside the second if-block.

#cache with timer and id
------------------------

(cache.directive.timer)

The template:

::

    #cache timer='.5m', id='cache1'
    This is a cached region.  $voom
    #end cache

The output:

::

    This is a cached region.  Voom!

The generated code is the same as the previous example except the
first if-block:

::

    RECACHE = True
    if '13925129' not in self._cacheData:
        self._cacheIndex['cache1'] = '13925129'
        self.__cache13925129__refreshTime = currentTime() + 30.0
    elif currentTime() > self.__cache13925129__refreshTime:
        self.__cache13925129__refreshTime = currentTime() + 30.0
    else:
        RECACHE = False

#cache with test: expression and method conditions
--------------------------------------------------

(cache.directive.test)

The template:

::

    #cache test=$isDBUpdated
    This is a cached region.  $voom
    #end cache

(Analysis postponed: bug in Cheetah produces invalid Python.)

The template:

::

    #cache id='cache1', test=($isDBUpdated or $someOtherCondition)
    This is a cached region.  $voom
    #end cache

The output:

::

    This is a cached region.  Voom!

The first if-block in the generated code:

::

    RECACHE = True
    if '36798144' not in self._cacheData:
        self._cacheIndex['cache1'] = '36798144'
    elif (VFS(SL,"isDBUpdated",1) or VFS(SL,"someOtherCondition",1)):
        RECACHE = True
    else:
        RECACHE = False

The second if-block is the same as in the previous example. If you
leave out the {()} around the test expression, the result is the
same, although it may be harder for the template maintainer to
read.

You can even combine arguments, although this is of questionable
value.

The template:

::

    #cache id='cache1', timer='30m', test=$isDBUpdated or $someOtherCondition
    This is a cached region.  $voom
    #end cache

The output:

::

    This is a cached region.  Voom!

The first if-block:

::

    RECACHE = True
    if '88939345' not in self._cacheData:
        self._cacheIndex['cache1'] = '88939345'
        self.__cache88939345__refreshTime = currentTime() + 1800.0
    elif currentTime() > self.__cache88939345__refreshTime:
        self.__cache88939345__refreshTime = currentTime() + 1800.0
    elif VFS(SL,"isDBUpdated",1) or VFS(SL,"someOtherCondition",1):
        RECACHE = True
    else:
        RECACHE = False

We are planning to add a {'varyBy'} keyword argument in the future
that will allow separate cache instances to be created for a
variety of conditions, such as different query string parameters or
browser types. This is inspired by ASP.net's varyByParam and
varyByBrowser output caching keywords. Since this is not
implemented yet, I cannot provide examples here.


