ok-redis

Object-Key Mapper for Redis


License
MIT
Install
pip install ok-redis==0.1.2

Documentation

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Build status Python versions Monthly downloads Software license

Object-Key Mapper for Redis

If you’ve used redis on python, you’ve had to deal with redis keys. Sometimes, lots of redis keys. With so many keys, it’s easy to make mistakes, especially since keys are just strings. I built ok so that I didn’t have to work with strings for redis keys.

Here’s how you use it:

import ok
import redis


class User(ok.Key):
    fields = ['timeline', 'followers', 'following']


# Get user mixxorz' timeline
r = redis.StrictRedis()
r.zrevrange(User('mixxorz').timeline, 0, 50)
# ZREVRANGE User:mixxorz:timeline 0 50

Managing your keys just became a lot less fragile.

Installation

Install it from pypi

$ pip install ok-redis

Usage

Access fields.

class User(ok.Key):
    fields = ['timeline', 'followers', 'following']


print(User('mixxorz').timeline)
# User:mixxorz:timeline

Chain keys.

class City(ok.Key):
    fields = ['tweets_hll']


class Country(ok.Key):
    subkeys = [City]


print(Country('PH').City('Manila').tweets_hll)
# Country:PH:City:Manila:tweets

Subkeys can be an absolute or relative path to a key.

# mod_one.py
class Refer(Key):
    fields = ['elements']


# mod_two.py
class Parent(Key):
    subkeys = ['..mod_one.Refer']


print(Parent('foo').Refer('bar').elements)
# Parent:foo:Refer:bar:elements

The string representation of a Key instance is the key, so you can use it like this:

class User(ok.Key):
    pass


r.get(User('mixxorz'))

But you can also access the key explicitly.

User('mixxorz').key
# >>> User:mixxorz

IDs are optional.

class User(ok.Key):
    fields = ['rankings']


print(User().rankings)
# User:rankings

IDs don't have to be strings

class User(ok.Key)
    pass

print(User(123))
# User:123

You can change the string used for the key.

class Facebook(ok.Key):
    fields = ['all_posts']
    class_key = 'fb'


print(Facebook().all_posts)
# fb:all_posts

License

MIT