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This provides support for views that can have their ETag and/or Last-modified values computed much more quickly than the view itself. Supports all HTTP verbs (not just GET). Documentation and tests need a little more fleshing out (I'm not happy with the documentation at the moment, since it's a bit backwards), but the functionality is correct. git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@10114 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
135 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
135 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
.. _topics-conditional-processing:
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===========================
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Conditional View Processing
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===========================
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.. versionadded:: 1.1
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HTTP clients can send a number of headers to tell the server about copies of a
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resource that they have already seen. This is commonly used when retrieving a
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web page (using an HTTP ``GET`` request) to avoid sending all the data for
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something the client has already retrieved. However, the same headers can be
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used for all HTTP methods (``POST``, ``PUT``, ``DELETE``, etc).
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For each page (response) that Django sends back from a view, it might provide
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two HTTP headers: the ``ETag`` header and the ``Last-Modified`` header. These
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headers are optional on HTTP responses. They can be set by your view function,
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or you can rely on the :class:`~django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware`
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middleware to set the ``ETag`` header.
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When the client next requests the same resource, it might send along a header
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such as `If-modified-since`_, containing the date of the last modification
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time it was sent, or `If-none-match`_, containing the ``ETag`` it was sent.
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If there is no match with the ETag, or if the resource has not been modified,
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a 304 status code can be sent back, instead of a full response, telling the
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client that nothing has changed.
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.. _If-none-match: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.26
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.. _If-modified-since: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.25
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Django allows simple usage of this feature with
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:class:`django.middleware.http.ConditionalGetMiddleware` and
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:class:`~django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware`. However, whilst being
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easy to use and suitable for many situations, they both have limitations for
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advanced usage:
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* They are applied globally to all views in your project
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* They don't save you from generating the response itself, which may be
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expensive
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* They are only appropriate for HTTP ``GET`` requests.
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.. conditional-decorators:
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Decorators
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==========
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When you need more fine-grained control you may use per-view conditional
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processing functions.
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The decorators ``django.views.decorators.http.etag`` and
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``django.views.decorators.http.last_modified`` each accept a user-defined
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function that takes the same parameters as the view itself. The function
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passed ``last_modified`` should return a standard datetime value specifying
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the last time the resource was modified, or ``None`` if the resource doesn't
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exist. The function passed to the ``etag`` decorator should return a string
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representing the `Etag`_ for the resource, or ``None`` if it doesn't exist.
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.. _ETag: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec3.html#sec3.11
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For example::
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# Compute the last-modified time from when the object was last saved.
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@last_modified(lambda r, obj_id: MyObject.objects.get(pk=obj_id).update_time)
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def my_object_view(request, obj_id):
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# Expensive generation of response with MyObject instance
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...
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Of course, you can always use the non-decorator form if you're using Python
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2.3 or don't like the decorator syntax::
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def my_object_view(request, obj_id):
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...
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my_object_view = last_modified(my_func)(my_object_view)
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Using the ``etag`` decorator is similar.
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In practice, though, you won't know if the client is going to send the
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``Last-modified`` or the ``If-none-match`` header. If you can quickly compute
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both values and want to short-circuit as often as possible, you'll need to use
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the ``conditional`` decorator described below.
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HTTP allows to use both "ETag" and "Last-Modified" headers in your response.
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Then a response is considered not modified only if the client sends both
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headers back and they're both equal to the response headers. This means that
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you can't just chain decorators on your view::
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# Bad code. Don't do this!
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@etag(etag_func)
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@last_modified(last_modified_func)
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def my_view(request):
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# ...
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# End of bad code.
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The first decorator doesn't know anything about the second and might
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answer that the response is not modified even if the second decorators would
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determine otherwise. In this case you should use a more general decorator -
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``django.views.decorator.http.condition`` that accepts two functions at once::
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# The correct way to implement the above example
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@condition(etag_func, last_modified_func)
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def my_view(request):
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# ...
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Using the decorators with other HTTP methods
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============================================
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The ``conditional`` decorator is useful for more than only ``GET`` and
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``HEAD`` requests (``HEAD`` requests are the same as ``GET`` in this
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situation). It can be used also to be used to provide checking for ``POST``,
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``PUT`` and ``DELETE`` requests. In these situations, the idea isn't to return
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a "not modified" response, but to tell the client that the resource they are
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trying to change has been altered in the meantime.
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For example, consider the following exchange between the client and server:
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1. Client requests ``/foo/``.
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2. Server responds with some content with an ETag of ``"abcd1234"``.
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3. Client sends and HTTP ``PUT`` request to ``/foo/`` to update the
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resource. It sends an ``If-Match: "abcd1234"`` header to specify the
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version it is trying to update.
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4. Server checks to see if the resource has changed, by computing the ETag
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the same way it does for a ``GET`` request (using the same function).
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If the resource *has* changed, it will return a 412 status code code,
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meaning "precondition failed".
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5. Client sends a ``GET`` request to ``/foo/``, after receiving a 412
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response, to retrieve an updated version of the content before updating
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it.
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The important thing this example shows is that the same functions can be used
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to compute the ETag and last modification values in all situations. In fact,
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you *should* use the same functions, so that the same values are returned
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every time.
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