A Laravel package that adds a smart cache for full responses
MIT License
A Laravel package that adds a smart cache for full responses
Using this package, you can cache full response instances returned from your controllers, simply by adding a middleware. This can speed up your application immensely!
CacheResponse
to your route!Route::get('/example')->middleware([
'cacheResponse:3600,examples'
])
Coincidentally, I just learned spatie have built almost exactly the same library as we did: spatie/laravel-responsecache.
In contrast to external caches, having the response cache in your app gives you the power to evaluate route bindings, authentication state, and easy programmatic cache flushing. This also makes it possible to place the cache check anywhere in your middleware stack!
Install using composer:
composer require matchory/response-cache
Unless you have disabled package discovery, everything should be set up already. Otherwise, add the service provider and the facade to your configuration.
Optionally, you can publish the configuration file:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider "Matchory\ResponseCache\ResponseCacheProvider"
Check out the configuration section to learn about all available options.
Add the middleware to your app/Http/Kernel.php
:
protected $middlewareGroups = [
'web' => [
// ...
\Matchory\ResponseCache\Http\Middleware\CacheResponse::class,
// ...
],
];
protected $routeMiddleware = [
// ...
'bypass_cache' => \Matchory\ResponseCache\Http\Middleware\BypassCache::class,
// ...
];
The config file contains the following settings:
enabled
(Environment variable: RESPONSE_CACHE_ENABLED
)Using this setting, you can globally enable or disable the response cache for all requests. If you set it to false
, nothing will be cached.
Defaults to true
.
ttl
(Environment variable: RESPONSE_CACHE_TTL
)This setting specifies the amount of time responses will be cached before being marked as stale. The value must be specified in seconds.
Defaults to 60 * 60 * 24
, or exactly 24 hours.
store
(Environment variable: RESPONSE_CACHE_STORE
)Here you may pass any cache store defined in your config/cache.php
file. Please note that not all stores support tagging: For better control over and
increased performance of your cache, we strongly recommend using a store with tag support, like Redis or APC.
Defaults to file
.
tags
(Environment variable: RESPONSE_CACHE_TAGS
)If your store supports tags, all responses cached will also be tagged with these tags by default. Additional tags may be used depending on the middleware and strategy.
Defaults to []
.
server_timing
(Environment variable: RESPONSE_CACHE_SERVER_TIMING
)If the server timing option is enabled, a Server-Timing header containing the initial caching time will be added to all cached responses. This makes debugging easier. Leaving it enabled in production probably has no negative consequences aside from a small performance penalty due to the bigger response size.
Defaults to false
.
After following the installation instructions above, you should be ready to go: Responses with a status code in the 200
and 300
range will be cached and
returned on subsequent visits. To bypass the cache for specific routes, you can simply add the bypass_cache
middleware:
Route::get('/kitten')->middleware('bypass_cache');
To clear the cache manually, you can use the response-cache:flush
artisan command:
php artisan response-cache:flush
This will flush the entire response cache. To delete a given set of cache tags only, add them to the command:
php artisan response-cache:flush tag-1 tag-2 ... tag-n
In production use, it is often helpful to flush the cache automatically if something happens. For example, you can flush the cache whenever a model event is fired by setting up an observer:
use Matchory\ResponseCache\Facades\ResponseCache;
class ExampleObserver {
public function saved(): void {
ResponseCache::clear();
}
public function deleted(): void {
// By passing one or more tags, only those items tagged appropriately
// will be cleared
ResponseCache::clear(['example']);
}
}
By invoking the clear
method, the entire store (for the given tags) will be purged. To be more selective, use the delete
method:
use Matchory\ResponseCache\Facades\ResponseCache;
ResponseCache::delete('/example/url');
ResponseCache::delete(['/example/1', '/example/2']);
Note: This will not work for cache items that require context information, such as user authentication. If you hit this problem, you'll probably want to work with tags instead.
Cache tags are a simple, yet very powerful mechanism for efficient cache usage. By applying tags to a set of cached items, you can purge all of them, without ever knowing the individual cache keys of these items. Say, there are lots of cached data points all related to "flights": plane schedules, arrival dates, passenger records, etc. All is fine and well, until a flight is cancelled! Now, we will need to purge the cache for anything that includes the flight in question. This would be a logical nightmare, hadn't we set up cache tags: Instead of deleting lots of items manually, we instruct Laravel to purge all items tagged with the flight number, and we're good to go!
This library is built heavily around the concept of cache tags: By tagging properly, you can make granular cache flushing a breeze. Tags can be added to routes using several approaches:
Route::get('/foo')->middleware(['cache:tag-1,tag-2']);
config/response-cache.php
config file:
'tags' => env('RESPONSE_CACHE_TAGS', [ 'tag-1', 'tag-2' ]),
This library supports adding dynamic tags that are based on route bindings. This works pretty much the same as with ordinary route bindings, but with the added
benefit of also having access to all request values, not just those mentioned in the route itself.
To add a binding to your cache tag, simply include the name of a parameter in curly braces: flights.{flight}
. As soon as something is to be fetched from or
put into the cache, this binding will be resolved using the current request instance. If the parameter flight
was an instance of an Eloquent model, it would
be replaced with its route key name, so probably the flight ID!
Take a look at the following example:
Route::get('/api/v{version}/flights/{flight}', function(\App\Flight $flight) {
// ...
})->middleware('cache:api.v{version},flights,flights.v{version},flights.{flight},flights.v{version}.{flight}');
Imagine we perform the following request: /api/v3/flights/505
Now, the response generated by this route would be tagged with the following tags:
api.v3
flights
flights.v3
flights.505
flights.v3.505
Depending on your requirements, you can simply flush the cache for any of these and rest assured the response will be invalidated!
A strategy is what the response cache uses to determine just how a response should be cached. It generates cache keys, determines cache tags and controls cache bypassing. The default strategy should fit for most use cases, but if it doesn't, we got you covered, too!
To use a custom strategy, start by either extending the default implementation (recommended) or
implementing the CacheStrategy
interface.
To customize the way cache keys are generated, you have several options, as the default implementation splits this process in multiple methods:
use Illuminate\Http\Request;use Matchory\ResponseCache\Support\BaseStrategy;
class MyStrategy extends BaseStrategy
{
public function key(Request $request): string
{
$identifier = $this->extractRequestIdentifier($request);
$suffix = $this->buildSuffix($request);
return $this->hash($identifier . $suffix);
}
}
extractRequestIdentifier
method extracts the full request URL and method as the base of the cache key. This should be enough in most applications.buildSuffix
method checks for the current authentication status and appends the ID of the authenticated user. You may wish to modify this to use ahash
method builds a hash of the given cache key (by default it uses md5
), so the key length stays consistent.To customize whether a response is cached or not, you can implement one or more helpers:
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Matchory\ResponseCache\Support\BaseStrategy;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
class MyStrategy extends BaseStrategy
{
public function shouldCache(Request $request, Response $response): bool
{
if (! $this->isMethodCachable($request)) {
return false;
}
return $this->isSuccessful($response);
}
}
By default, this will cache any request with the GET
or HEAD
methods, and responses with a success or redirection status.
Tagging cached responses is an immensely powerful feature that allows you to flush a collection of cache entries if something happens. So if a single member of a collection is deleted, for example, you can remove all cached instances of the same collection, without having to know the exact cache keys used to retrieve them! To make this as easy as possible, strategies provide a method to pull tags from a request and response:
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Matchory\ResponseCache\Support\BaseStrategy;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
class MyStrategy extends BaseStrategy
{
public function tags(Request $request, Response|null $response = null): array
{
return [
$request->attributes->get('customer.id')
];
}
}
ResponseCache
middleware manuallyInstead of simply adding the caching middleware to all web routes as shown above, you can of course also add it to selected routes manually. In this case, you also have the possibility to configure the time to leave and add a set of tags per route:
// Default settings as set in the config file
Route::get('/foo')->middleware('response_cache')
// TTL of 60 seconds
Route::get('/bar')->middleware('response_cache:60');
// Tags "foo", "bar" and "baz" are added
Route::get('/baz')->middleware('response_cache:foo,bar,baz');
// TTL of 60 seconds and tags "foo", "bar" and "baz" are added
Route::get('/quz')->middleware('response_cache:60,foo,bar,baz');
If the first parameter to the middleware is a number, it will be interpreted as a TTL value, everything that follows as tags. The TTL will override the configuration value, tags will be merged.
This library exposes some events you can listen for and act accordingly. This is probably most helpful during debugging.
Hit
Emitted if a response was found in the cache. Includes the request instance.
Miss
Emitted if a response could not be found in the cache or was indicated as non-cachable by the caching strategy and thus had to be generated by the application. Includes the request instance.
Flush
Emitted if the cache was flushed. Includes the tags that were flushed, or null
if all tags were flushed.
By default, the response cache uses a cache repository implementation with a very simple serialization method: Doing nothing. Any
serialization is deferred to Laravel's cache implementation. In rare cases, you may need to change this behavior and modify a response before serializing or
after hydrating it.
To do so, start by extending the Repository
class:
use Matchory\ResponseCache\Repository;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
class CustomRepository extends Repository
{
protected function serialize(Response $response) : mixed
{
return serialize($response);
}
protected function hydrate(mixed $responseData): Response
{
return unserialize($responseData, [Response::class])
}
}
Override the container binding in your AppServiceProvider
, so your repository will be used instead of the default:
use Matchory\ResponseCache\Repository;
protected function register():void
{
$this->app->bind(Repository::class, CustomRepository::class);
}
Cache issues can be a little annoying to debug. This library has several facilities built in to make the process as simple as possible:
Server-Timing
header: By switching this feature on, all responses will include aServer-Timing
header that includes the time your response was cached. Thisresponse-cache.enabled
setting, you can quickly determine whether caching is the culprit.