Execute code in Django after response has been sent to the client

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独厮守ぢ
独厮守ぢ 2020-11-27 18:58

In my Django application I want to keep track of whether a response has been sent to the client successfully. I am well aware that there is no \"watertight\" way in a connec

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  • 2020-11-27 19:30

    I suppose when talking about middleware you are thinking about the middleware's process_request method, but there's also a process_response method that is called when the HttpResponse object is returned. I guess that will be the latest moment where you can find a hook that you can use.

    Furthermore there's also a request_finished signal being fired.

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  • 2020-11-27 19:39

    The method I am going for at the moment uses a subclass of HttpResponse:

    from django.template import loader
    from django.http import HttpResponse
    
    # use custom response class to override HttpResponse.close()
    class LogSuccessResponse(HttpResponse):
    
        def close(self):
            super(LogSuccessResponse, self).close()
            # do whatever you want, this is the last codepoint in request handling
            if self.status_code == 200:
                print('HttpResponse successful: %s' % self.status_code)
    
    # this would be the view definition
    def logging_view(request):
        response = LogSuccessResponse('Hello World', mimetype='text/plain')
        return response
    

    By reading the Django code I am very much convinced that HttpResponse.close() is the latest point to inject code into the request handling. I am not sure if there really are error cases that are handled better by this method compared to the ones mentioned above, so I am leaving the question open for now.

    The reasons I prefer this approach to the others mentioned in lazerscience's answer are that it can be set up in the view alone and does not require middleware to be installed. Using the request_finished signal, on the other hand, wouldn't allow me to access the response object.

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  • 2020-11-27 19:44

    If you need to do this a lot, a useful trick is to have a special response class like:

    class ResponseThen(Response):
        def __init__(self, data, then_callback, **kwargs):
            super().__init__(data, **kwargs)
            self.then_callback = then_callback
    
        def close(self):
            super().close()
            self.then_callback()
    
    def some_view(request):
        # ...code to run before response is returned to client
    
        def do_after():
            # ...code to run *after* response is returned to client
    
        return ResponseThen(some_data, do_after, status=status.HTTP_200_OK)
    

    ...helps if you want a quick/hacky "fire and forget" solution without bothering to integrate a proper task queue or split off a separate microservice from your app.

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