flask-redis


A nice way to use Redis in your Flask app.
Configuration
Start by installing the extension with pip install flask-redis
.
Once that's done, configure it within your Flask config.
Set the URL of your Redis instance like this:
REDIS_URL = "redis://:password@localhost:6379/0"
If you wanna connect to a Unix socket,
you can specify it like "unix://:password@/path/to/socket.sock?db=0"
.
Usage
Setup
To add a Redis client to your application:
from flask import Flask
from flask_redis import FlaskRedis
app = Flask(__name__)
redis_client = FlaskRedis(app)
or if you prefer, you can do it the other way around:
redis_client = FlaskRedis(app)
def create_app():
app = Flask(__name__)
redis_client.init_app(app)
return app
Accessing Redis
The redis client you created above from FlaskRedis
acts just like a regular Redis
instance from the redis-py
library:
from my_app import redis_client
@app.route('/')
def index():
return redis_client.get('potato')
For detailed instructions on what methods you can use on the client,
as well as how you can use advanced features
such as Lua scripting, pipelines, and callbacks,
please check the
redis-py documentation.
Pro-tip: The redis-py
package uses the redis
namespace, so it's nicer to name your Redis object something like redis_client
instead of just redis
.
Custom providers
Instead of the default Redis
client from redis-py
,
you can provide your own.
This can be useful to replace it with mockredis for testing:
from flask import Flask
from flask_redis import FlaskRedis
from mockredis import MockRedis
def create_app():
app = Flask(__name__)
if app.testing:
redis_store = FlaskRedis.from_custom_provider(MockRedis)
else:
redis_store = FlaskRedis()
redis_store.init_app(app)
return app
Contributing
- Check for open issues or open a fresh issue to start a discussion
- Fork the repository on GitHub.
- Send a pull request with your code!
Merging will require a test which shows that the bug was fixed,
or that the feature works as expected.
Feel free to open a draft pull request though without such a test
and ask for help with writing it if you're not sure how to.
As Bence (the only maintainer) works full-time,
please allow some time before your issue or pull request is handled.
Changelog
All notable changes to this project will be documented in this file.
The format is based on Keep a Changelog
and this project adheres to Semantic Versioning.
0.4.0 (2019-05-29)
- Reorganized the module and rewrote everything other than the library code, mainly packaging and CI. There are no user-facing changes in behavior.
0.3.0 (2016-07-18)
- Backwards incompatible: The
FlaskRedis.init_app
method no
longer takes a strict
parameter. Pass this flag when creating your
FlaskRedis
instance, instead.
- Backwards incompatible: The extension will now be registered
under the (lowercased) config prefix of the instance. The default
config prefix is
'REDIS'
, so unless you change that, you can still
access the extension via app.extensions['redis']
as before.
- Backwards incompatible: The default class has been changed to
redis.StrictRedis
. You can switch back to the old redis.Redis
class by specifying strict=False
in the FlaskRedis
kwargs.
- You can now pass all supported
Redis
keyword arguments (such as
decode_responses
) to FlaskRedis
and they will be correctly
passed over to the redis-py
instance. Thanks, @giyyapan!
- Usage like
redis_store['key'] = value
, redis_store['key']
, and
del redis_store['key']
is now supported. Thanks, @ariscn!
0.2.0 (2015-04-15)
- Made 0.1.0's deprecation warned changes final
0.1.0 (2015-04-15)
- Deprecation: Renamed
flask_redis.Redis
to
flask_redis.FlaskRedis
. Using the old name still works, but emits
a deprecation warning, as it will be removed from the next version
- Deprecation: Setting a
REDIS_DATABASE
(or equivalent) now
emits a deprecation warning as it will be removed in the version in
favor of including the database number in REDIS_URL
(or
equivalent)
- Added a
FlaskRedis.from_custom_provider(provider)
class method for
using any redis provider class that supports instantiation with a
from_url
class method
- Added a
strict
parameter to FlaskRedis
which expects a boolean
value and allows choosing between using redis.StrictRedis
and
redis.Redis
as the defualt provider.
- Made
FlaskRedis
register as a Flask extension through Flask's
extension API
- Rewrote test suite in py.test
- Got rid of the hacky attribute copying mechanism in favor of using
the
__getattr__
magic method to pass calls to the underlying
client
0.0.6 (2014-04-09)
- Improved Python 3 Support (Thanks underyx!).
- Improved test cases.
- Improved configuration.
- Fixed up documentation.
- Removed un-used imports (Thanks underyx and lyschoening!).
0.0.5 (2014-02-17)
- Improved suppot for the config prefix.
0.0.4 (2014-02-17)
- Added support for config_prefix, allowing multiple DBs.
0.0.3 (2013-07-06)
- Added TravisCI Testing for Flask 0.9/0.10.
- Added Badges to README.
0.0.2 (2013-07-06)
- Implemented a very simple test.
- Fixed some documentation issues.
- Included requirements.txt for testing.
- Included task file including some basic methods for tests.
0.0.1 (2013-07-05)
- Conception
- Initial Commit of Package to GitHub.
Credits
The flask-redis
project is written and maintained
by Bence Nagy (underyx).
The project was originally created by Rhys Elsmore,
who maintained it until the 0.0.6 release in 2014.
His work was licensed under the Apache 2 license.
The project has gone through a full rewrite since,
but his work was essential as inspiration.
Thanks, Rhys!
A full list of contributors can be found on GitHub's Contributors page
or you can obtain it on your own by running git shortlog -sn
.