a Faraday middleware that respects HTTP cache, by checking expiration and validation of the stored responses.
Add it to your Gemfile:
gem 'faraday-http-cache'You have to use the middleware in the Faraday instance that you want to,
along with a suitable store to cache the responses. You can use the new
shortcut using a symbol or passing the middleware class
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, store: Rails.cache
# or
builder.use Faraday::HttpCache, store: Rails.cache
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
endThe middleware accepts a store option for the cache backend responsible for recording
the API responses that should be stored. Stores should respond to write, read and delete,
just like an object from the ActiveSupport::Cache API.
# Connect the middleware to a Memcache instance.
store = ActiveSupport::Cache.lookup_store(:mem_cache_store, ['localhost:11211'])
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, store: store
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
end
# Or use the Rails.cache instance inside your Rails app.
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, store: Rails.cache
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
endThe default store provided is a simple in memory cache that lives on the client instance. This type of store might not be persisted across multiple processes or connection instances so it is probably not suitable for most production environments. Make sure that you configure a store that is suitable for you.
The stdlib JSON module is used for serialization by default, which can struggle with unicode
characters in responses. For example, if your JSON returns "name": "Raül" then you might see
errors like:
Response could not be serialized: "\xC3" from ASCII-8BIT to UTF-8. Try using Marshal to serialize.
For full unicode support, or if you expect to be dealing with images, you can use
Marshal instead. Alternatively you could use another json library like oj or yajl-ruby.
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, store: Rails.cache, serializer: Marshal
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
endYou can provide a :logger option that will be receive debug informations based on the middleware
operations:
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, store: Rails.cache, logger: Rails.logger
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
end
client.get('http://site/api/users')
# logs "HTTP Cache: [GET users] miss, store"In addition to logging you can instrument the middleware by passing in an :instrumenter option
such as ActiveSupport::Notifications (compatible objects are also allowed).
The event http_cache.faraday will be published every time the middleware
processes a request. In the event payload, :env contains the response Faraday env and
:cache_status contains a Symbol indicating the status of the cache processing for that request:
:unacceptablemeans that the request did not go through the cache at all.:missmeans that no cached response could be found.:invalidmeans that the cached response could not be validated against the server.:validmeans that the cached response could be validated against the server.:freshmeans that the cached response was still fresh and could be returned without even calling the server.
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, store: Rails.cache, instrumenter: ActiveSupport::Notifications
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
end
# Subscribes to all events from Faraday::HttpCache.
ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "http_cache.faraday" do |*args|
event = ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event.new(*args)
cache_status = event.payload[:cache_status]
statsd = Statsd.new
case cache_status
when :fresh, :valid
statsd.increment('api-calls.cache_hits')
when :invalid, :miss
statsd.increment('api-calls.cache_misses')
when :unacceptable
statsd.increment('api-calls.cache_bypass')
end
endYou can clone this repository, install its dependencies with Bundler (run bundle install) and
execute the files under the examples directory to see a sample of the middleware usage.
The middleware will use the following headers to make caching decisions:
- Cache-Control
- Age
- Last-Modified
- ETag
- Expires
The max-age, must-revalidate, proxy-revalidate and s-maxage directives are checked.
By default, the middleware acts as a "shared cache" per RFC 2616. This means it does not cache
responses with Cache-Control: private. This behavior can be changed by passing in the
:shared_cache configuration option:
client = Faraday.new do |builder|
builder.use :http_cache, shared_cache: false
builder.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
end
client.get('http://site/api/some-private-resource') # => will be cachedCopyright (c) 2012-2018 Plataformatec. Copyright (c) 2019 SourceLevel and contributors.