Cache-based rate-limiting for Django.
Project description
Django Ratelimit provides a decorator to rate-limit views. Limiting can be based on IP address or a field in the request–either a GET or POST variable.
If the rate limit is exceded, either a 403 Forbidden can be sent, or the request can be annotated with a limited attribute, allowing you to take another action like adding a captcha to a form.
Using Django Ratelimit
from ratelimit.decorators import ratelimit is the biggest thing you need to do. The @ratelimit decorator provides several optional arguments with sensible defaults (in italics).
- ip:
Whether to rate-limit based on the IP. True
- block:
Whether to block the request instead of annotating. False
- method:
Which HTTP method(s) to rate-limit. May be a string or a list. all
- field:
Which HTTP field(s) to use to rate-limit. May be a string or a list. none
- rate:
The number of requests per unit time allowed. 5/m
Examples
@ratelimit() def myview(request): # Will be true if the same IP makes more than 5 requests/minute. was_limited = getattr(request, 'limited', False) return HttpResponse() @ratelimit(block=True) def myview(request): # If the same IP makes >5 reqs/min, will return HttpResponseForbidden return HttpResponse() @ratelimit(field='username') def login(request): # If the same username OR IP is used >5 times/min, this will be True. # The `username` value will come from GET or POST, determined by the # request method. was_limited = getattr(request, 'limited', False) return HttpResponse() @ratelimit(method='POST') def login(request): # Only apply rate-limiting to POSTs. return HttpResponseRedirect() @ratelimit(field=['username', 'other_field']) def login(request): # Use multiple field values. return HttpResponse() @ratelimit(rate='4/h') def slow(request): # Allow 4 reqs/hour. return HttpResponse()
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