I've got a query set up that puts 28 random records from a database into a JSON response. This page is hit often, every few seconds, but is currently too slow for my liking.

In the JSON response I have:

  • ID's
  • Usernames
  • a Base64 thumbnail

These all come from three linked tables.
I'd be keen to hear of some other solutions, instead of users simply hitting a page, looking up 28 random records and spitting back the response. One idea I had:

  • Have a process running that creates a cached page every 30 seconds or so with the JSON response.

Is this a good option? If so, I'd be keen to hear how this would be done.

Thanks again,
Hope everyone is well

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Instead of mucking around at the controller layer, first check that the sql query is optimal. It surely doesn't seem like it, if fetching 28 records is to slow. For example, mysql's "order by rand()" construct is exceptionally slow and should be avoided. – Björn Lindqvist Aug 23 '11 at 13:44
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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Django supports a variety of caching methods, both built-in and memcached. I would select one of the methods in the documentation, and create a specific view for your json response. You could then use the @cache_page decorator and specify a particular time.

from django.views.decorators.cache import cache_page

@cache_page(60 * 15)
def my_view(request):
    ...

https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.3/topics/cache/

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If the tables are linked via foreign key, maybe using select_related? From the link, the example they give (you'll need to scroll down a bit):

>>> e = Entry.objects.select_related().get(id=2)
>>> print e.blog  # Doesn't hit the database; uses cached version.
>>> print e.blog  # Doesn't hit the database; uses cached version.

I'm not sure about three tables, but it works well for two.

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I could probably cut down the tables to one if needed, but the main point is people are hitting a database of a million records for only 28 random records. Is it ok to simply hit the database each time, or create a static JSON response every 30 seconds. – Danny Aug 23 '11 at 11:28
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