Quick answer
Yes for django: django-elasticache
Long Answer
ElastiCache provides memcached interface so there are three solution of using it:
1. Memcached configured with location = Configuration Endpoint.
In this case your application
will randomly connect to nodes in cluster and cache will be used with not optimal
way. At some moment you will be connected to first node and set item. Minute later
you will be connected to another node and will not able to get this item.
CACHES = {
'default': {
'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.PyLibMCCache',
'LOCATION': 'cache.gasdbp.cfg.use1.cache.amazonaws.com:11211',
}
}
2. Memcached configured with all nodes.
It will work fine, memcache client will
separate items between all nodes and will balance loading on client side. You will
have problems only after adding new nodes or delete old nodes. In this case you should
add new nodes manually and don't forget update your app after all changes on AWS.
CACHES = {
'default': {
'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.PyLibMCCache',
'LOCATION': [
'cache.gqasdbp.0001.use1.cache.amazonaws.com:11211',
'cache.gqasdbp.0002.use1.cache.amazonaws.com:11211',
]
}
}
3. Use django-elasticache.
It will connect to cluster and retrieve ip addresses
of all nodes and configure memcached to use all nodes.
CACHES = {
'default': {
'BACKEND': 'django_elasticache.memcached.ElastiCache',
'LOCATION': 'cache-c.draaaf.cfg.use1.cache.amazonaws.com:11211',
}
}
Difference between setup with nodes list (django-elasticache) and
connection to only one configuration Endpoint (using dns routing) you can see on
this graph:
