Conditional View Processing
For each page (response) that Django sends back from a view, it might providetwo HTTP headers: the ETag
header and the Last-Modified
header. Theseheaders are optional on HTTP responses. They can be set by your view function,or you can rely on the ConditionalGetMiddleware
middleware to set the ETag
header.
When the client next requests the same resource, it might send along a headersuch as either or If-unmodified-since, containing thedate of the last modification time it was sent, or either orIf-none-match, containing the last ETag
it was sent.If the current version of the page matches the ETag
sent by the client, orif the resource has not been modified, a 304 status code can be sent back,instead of a full response, telling the client that nothing has changed.Depending on the header, if the page has been modified or does not match theETag
sent by the client, a 412 status code (Precondition Failed) may bereturned.
When you need more fine-grained control you may use per-view conditionalprocessing functions.
Sometimes (in fact, quite often) you can create functions to rapidly compute the value or the last-modified time for a resource, without needing to do allthe computations needed to construct the full view. Django can then use thesefunctions to provide an “early bailout” option for the view processing.Telling the client that the content has not been modified since the lastrequest, perhaps.
These two functions are passed as parameters to thedjango.views.decorators.http.condition
decorator. This decorator usesthe two functions (you only need to supply one, if you can’t compute bothquantities easily and quickly) to work out if the headers in the HTTP requestmatch those on the resource. If they don’t match, a new copy of the resourcemust be computed and your normal view is called.
The condition
decorator’s signature looks like this:
The two functions, to compute the ETag and the last modified time, will bepassed the incoming request
object and the same parameters, in the sameorder, as the view function they are helping to wrap. The function passedlast_modified_func
should return a standard datetime value specifying thelast time the resource was modified, or None
if the resource doesn’texist. The function passed to the etag
decorator should return a stringrepresenting the ETag for the resource, or None
if it doesn’t exist.
The decorator sets the ETag
and Last-Modified
headers on the responseif they are not already set by the view and if the request’s method is safe( or HEAD
).
- import datetime
- from django.db import models
- class Blog(models.Model):
- ...
- blog = models.ForeignKey(Blog, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
- published = models.DateTimeField(default=datetime.datetime.now)
- ...
If the front page, displaying the latest blog entries, only changes when youadd a new blog entry, you can compute the last modified time very quickly. Youneed the latest published
date for every entry associated with that blog.One way to do this would be:
You can then use this function to provide early detection of an unchanged pagefor your front page view:
- from django.views.decorators.http import condition
- @condition(last_modified_func=latest_entry)
- def front_page(request, blog_id):
- ...
Be careful with the order of decorators
When condition()
returns a conditional response, any decorators belowit will be skipped and won’t apply to the response. Therefore, anydecorators that need to apply to both the regular view response and aconditional response must be above condition()
. In particular,,vary_on_headers()
, and should come firstbecause RFC 7232 requires that the headers theyset be present on 304 responses.
As a general rule, if you can provide functions to compute both the ETag andthe last modified time, you should do so. You don’t know which headers anygiven HTTP client will send you, so be prepared to handle both. However,sometimes only one value is easy to compute and Django provides decoratorsthat handle only ETag or only last-modified computations.
The django.views.decorators.http.etag
anddjango.views.decorators.http.last_modified
decorators are passed the sametype of functions as the condition
decorator. Their signatures are:
We could write the earlier example, which only uses a last-modified function,using one of these decorators:
- @last_modified(latest_entry)def front_page(request, blog_id): …
…or:
It might look nicer to some people to try and chain the etag
andlast_modified
decorators if you want to test both preconditions. However,this would lead to incorrect behavior.
- # Bad code. Don't do this!
- @etag(etag_func)
- def my_view(request):
- # ...
- # End of bad code.
The first decorator doesn’t know anything about the second and mightanswer that the response is not modified even if the second decorators woulddetermine otherwise. The condition
decorator uses both callback functionssimultaneously to work out the right action to take.
The condition
decorator is useful for more than only GET
andHEAD
requests (HEAD
requests are the same as GET
in thissituation). It can also be used to provide checking for POST
, and DELETE
requests. In these situations, the idea isn’t to returna “not modified” response, but to tell the client that the resource they aretrying to change has been altered in the meantime.
For example, consider the following exchange between the client and server:
- Client requests
/foo/
. - Server responds with some content with an ETag of
"abcd1234"
. - Client sends an HTTP
PUT
request to/foo/
to update theresource. It also sends anIf-Match: "abcd1234"
header to specifythe version it is trying to update. - Server checks to see if the resource has changed, by computing the ETagthe same way it does for a
GET
request (using the same function).If the resource has changed, it will return a 412 status code,meaning “precondition failed”. - Client sends a
GET
request to/foo/
, after receiving a 412response, to retrieve an updated version of the content before updatingit.The important thing this example shows is that the same functions can be usedto compute the ETag and last modification values in all situations. In fact,you should use the same functions, so that the same values are returnedevery time.
Validator headers with non-safe request methods
The condition
decorator only sets validator headers (ETag
andLast-Modified
) for safe HTTP methods, i.e. GET
and HEAD
. If youwish to return them in other cases, set them in your view. See to learn about the distinction between setting avalidator header in response to requests made with PUT
versus POST
.
Django provides conditional GET
handling viadjango.middleware.http.ConditionalGetMiddleware
. While being suitablefor many situations, the middleware has limitations for advanced usage:
- It’s applied globally to all views in your project.
- It doesn’t save you from generating the response, which may be expensive.