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1.4 KiB
1.4 KiB
layout | status | published | title | author | author_login | author_email | wordpress_id | wordpress_url | date | date_gmt | categories | tags |
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post | publish | true | Django and Memcached | [{display_name sipp11} {login sipp11} {email sipp11@gmail.com} {url }] | sipp11 | sipp11@gmail.com | 889 | http://blog.10ninox.com/?p=889 | 2014-01-23 02:20:24 +0700 | 2014-01-22 19:20:24 +0700 | [coding] | [python django memcached] |
Apparently it seems that both Django and Memcached work together flawlessly, but it fails silently most of the time which is hard to debug. One thing I've learned is never cache any queryset with Memcached since it wouldn't complain anything but doesn't do anything either. If you like to cache queryset, then using LoMemCache
, FileBasedCache
, DummyCache
or whatever which is not Memcached. Everything will be all good.
Otherwise, you can separate cache into couple things then push queryset to one which is not Memcached.
CACHES = { 'default': { 'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.MemcachedCache', 'LOCATION': '127.0.0.1:11211' }, 'queryset': { 'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.locmem.LocMemCache' }, }
Then you can using get_cache
to pick whatever you want
from django.core.cache import get_cache, cache mycache = get_cache('queryset')
While cache will still point to 'default' or Memcached one.