Cache decorator for numpy arrays

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面向向阳花
面向向阳花 2021-02-14 23:12

I am trying to make a cache decorator for functions with numpy array input parameters

from functools import lru_cache
import numpy as np
from time import sleep

         


        
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  • 2021-02-14 23:45

    Your wrapper function creates a new inner() function each time you call it. And that new function object is decorated at that time, so the end result is that each time outter() is called, a new lru_cache() is created and that'll be empty. An empty cache will always have to re-calculate the value.

    You need to create a decorator that attaches the cache to a function created just once per decorated target. If you are going to convert to a tuple before calling the cache, then you'll have to create two functions:

    from functools import lru_cache, wraps
    
    def np_cache(function):
        @lru_cache()
        def cached_wrapper(hashable_array):
            array = np.array(hashable_array)
            return function(array)
    
        @wraps(function)
        def wrapper(array):
            return cached_wrapper(tuple(array))
    
        # copy lru_cache attributes over too
        wrapper.cache_info = cached_wrapper.cache_info
        wrapper.cache_clear = cached_wrapper.cache_clear
    
        return wrapper
    

    The cached_wrapper() function is created just once per call to np_cache() and is available to the wrapper() function as a closure. So wrapper() calls cached_wrapper(), which has a @lru_cache() attached to it, caching your tuples.

    I also copied across the two function references that lru_cache puts on a decorated function, so they are accessible via the returned wrapper as well.

    In addition, I also used the @functools.wraps() decorator to copy across metadata from the original function object to the wrapper, such as the name, annotations and documentation string. This is always a good idea, because that means your decorated function will be clearly identified in tracebacks, when debugging and when you need to access documentation or annotations. The decorator also adds a __wrapped__ attribute pointing back to the original function, which would let you unwrap the decorator again if need be.

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