Reputation: 56720
I want to cache some results in my OpenERP module, so I dug around a bit and found the cache decorator. Unfortunately, the most documentation I've been able to find is in the class declaration:
Use it as a decorator of the function you plan to cache Timeout: 0 = no timeout, otherwise in seconds
Can anybody recommend a good example of how to use this? Are there known problems to avoid?
Upvotes: 3
Views: 3070
Reputation: 1856
The cache is currently more usable since it is LRU and not an infinite cache anymore.
http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~openerp/openobject-server/5.0/revision/2151
It looks like by default, the first two parameters of the method are ignored when caching (cursor and user id in most cases).
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 56720
After digging around some more, the simplest example I've found is the ir_model_data._get_id() method:
@tools.cache()
def _get_id(self, cr, uid, module, xml_id):
ids = self.search(cr, uid, [('module','=',module),('name','=', xml_id)])
if not ids:
raise ValueError('No references to %s.%s' % (module, xml_id))
# the sql constraints ensure us we have only one result
return ids[0]
It seems like you just choose a model method you want to cache and then add the cache as a decorator. If some events should clear the cache like this update() method, you use the cached method as a cache object:
if not result3:
self._get_id.clear_cache(cr.dbname, uid, module, xml_id)
It looks like by default, the first two parameters of the method are ignored when caching (cursor and user id in most cases).
This is all just based on skimming the code. I'd love to hear some feedback from anyone who's actually used it.
Upvotes: 5