Fixed #11012: don't needless convert cache values to unicode.

This means you can now successfully store binary blogs, such as compressed data,
in the cache.

Thanks to Matt Croydon for the final patch.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@12637 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Jacob Kaplan-Moss 2010-03-01 20:11:24 +00:00
parent 6e748b5db4
commit b3a56755d7
2 changed files with 11 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -43,15 +43,9 @@ class CacheClass(BaseCache):
val = self._cache.get(smart_str(key))
if val is None:
return default
else:
if isinstance(val, basestring):
return smart_unicode(val)
else:
return val
return val
def set(self, key, value, timeout=0):
if isinstance(value, unicode):
value = value.encode('utf-8')
self._cache.set(smart_str(key), value, self._get_memcache_timeout(timeout))
def delete(self, key):

View File

@ -295,6 +295,16 @@ class BaseCacheTests(object):
self.cache.set(key, value)
self.assertEqual(self.cache.get(key), value)
def test_binary_string(self):
# Binary strings should be cachable
from zlib import compress, decompress
value = 'value_to_be_compressed'
compressed_value = compress(value)
self.cache.set('binary1', compressed_value)
compressed_result = self.cache.get('binary1')
self.assertEqual(compressed_value, compressed_result)
self.assertEqual(value, decompress(compressed_result))
def test_set_many(self):
# Multiple keys can be set using set_many
self.cache.set_many({"key1": "spam", "key2": "eggs"})