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258 lines
9.2 KiB
258 lines
9.2 KiB
.. _signals: |
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Signals |
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======= |
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.. versionadded:: 0.6 |
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Starting with Flask 0.6, there is integrated support for signalling in |
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Flask. This support is provided by the excellent `blinker`_ library and |
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will gracefully fall back if it is not available. |
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What are signals? Signals help you decouple applications by sending |
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notifications when actions occur elsewhere in the core framework or |
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another Flask extensions. In short, signals allow certain senders to |
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notify subscribers that something happened. |
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Flask comes with a couple of signals and other extensions might provide |
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more. Also keep in mind that signals are intended to notify subscribers |
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and should not encourage subscribers to modify data. You will notice that |
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there are signals that appear to do the same thing like some of the |
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builtin decorators do (eg: :data:`~flask.request_started` is very similar |
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to :meth:`~flask.Flask.before_request`). There are however difference in |
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how they work. The core :meth:`~flask.Flask.before_request` handler for |
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example is executed in a specific order and is able to abort the request |
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early by returning a response. In contrast all signal handlers are |
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executed in undefined order and do not modify any data. |
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The big advantage of signals over handlers is that you can safely |
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subscribe to them for the split of a second. These temporary |
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subscriptions are helpful for unittesting for example. Say you want to |
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know what templates were rendered as part of a request: signals allow you |
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to do exactly that. |
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Subscribing to Signals |
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---------------------- |
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To subscribe to a signal, you can use the |
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:meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.connect` method of a signal. The first |
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argument is the function that should be called when the signal is emitted, |
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the optional second argument specifies a sender. To unsubscribe from a |
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signal, you can use the :meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.disconnect` method. |
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For all core Flask signals, the sender is the application that issued the |
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signal. When you subscribe to a signal, be sure to also provide a sender |
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unless you really want to listen for signals of all applications. This is |
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especially true if you are developing an extension. |
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Here for example a helper context manager that can be used to figure out |
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in a unittest which templates were rendered and what variables were passed |
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to the template:: |
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from flask import template_rendered |
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from contextlib import contextmanager |
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@contextmanager |
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def captured_templates(app): |
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recorded = [] |
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def record(sender, template, context, **extra): |
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recorded.append((template, context)) |
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template_rendered.connect(record, app) |
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try: |
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yield recorded |
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finally: |
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template_rendered.disconnect(record, app) |
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This can now easily be paired with a test client:: |
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with captured_templates(app) as templates: |
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rv = app.test_client().get('/') |
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assert rv.status_code == 200 |
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assert len(templates) == 1 |
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template, context = templates[0] |
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assert template.name == 'index.html' |
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assert len(context['items']) == 10 |
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Make sure to subscribe with an extra ``**extra`` argument so that your |
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calls don't fail if Flask introduces new arguments to the signals. |
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All the template rendering in the code issued by the application `app` |
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in the body of the `with` block will now be recorded in the `templates` |
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variable. Whenever a template is rendered, the template object as well as |
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context are appended to it. |
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Additionally there is a convenient helper method |
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(:meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.connected_to`). that allows you to |
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temporarily subscribe a function to a signal with a context manager on |
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its own. Because the return value of the context manager cannot be |
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specified that way one has to pass the list in as argument:: |
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from flask import template_rendered |
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def captured_templates(app, recorded, **extra): |
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def record(sender, template, context): |
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recorded.append((template, context)) |
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return template_rendered.connected_to(record, app) |
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The example above would then look like this:: |
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templates = [] |
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with captured_templates(app, templates, **extra): |
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... |
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template, context = templates[0] |
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.. admonition:: Blinker API Changes |
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The :meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.connected_to` method arrived in Blinker |
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with version 1.1. |
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Creating Signals |
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---------------- |
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If you want to use signals in your own application, you can use the |
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blinker library directly. The most common use case are named signals in a |
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custom :class:`~blinker.base.Namespace`.. This is what is recommended |
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most of the time:: |
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from blinker import Namespace |
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my_signals = Namespace() |
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Now you can create new signals like this:: |
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model_saved = my_signals.signal('model-saved') |
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The name for the signal here makes it unique and also simplifies |
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debugging. You can access the name of the signal with the |
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:attr:`~blinker.base.NamedSignal.name` attribute. |
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.. admonition:: For Extension Developers |
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If you are writing a Flask extension and you want to gracefully degrade for |
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missing blinker installations, you can do so by using the |
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:class:`flask.signals.Namespace` class. |
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Sending Signals |
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--------------- |
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If you want to emit a signal, you can do so by calling the |
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:meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.send` method. It accepts a sender as first |
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argument and optionally some keyword arguments that are forwarded to the |
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signal subscribers:: |
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class Model(object): |
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... |
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def save(self): |
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model_saved.send(self) |
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Try to always pick a good sender. If you have a class that is emitting a |
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signal, pass `self` as sender. If you emitting a signal from a random |
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function, you can pass ``current_app._get_current_object()`` as sender. |
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.. admonition:: Passing Proxies as Senders |
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Never pass :data:`~flask.current_app` as sender to a signal. Use |
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``current_app._get_current_object()`` instead. The reason for this is |
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that :data:`~flask.current_app` is a proxy and not the real application |
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object. |
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Decorator Based Signal Subscriptions |
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------------------------------------ |
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With Blinker 1.1 you can also easily subscribe to signals by using the new |
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:meth:`~blinker.base.NamedSignal.connect_via` decorator:: |
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from flask import template_rendered |
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@template_rendered.connect_via(app) |
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def when_template_rendered(sender, template, context, **extra): |
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print 'Template %s is rendered with %s' % (template.name, context) |
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Core Signals |
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------------ |
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.. when modifying this list, also update the one in api.rst |
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The following signals exist in Flask: |
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.. data:: flask.template_rendered |
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:noindex: |
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This signal is sent when a template was successfully rendered. The |
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signal is invoked with the instance of the template as `template` |
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and the context as dictionary (named `context`). |
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Example subscriber:: |
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def log_template_renders(sender, template, context, **extra): |
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sender.logger.debug('Rendering template "%s" with context %s', |
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template.name or 'string template', |
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context) |
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from flask import template_rendered |
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template_rendered.connect(log_template_renders, app) |
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.. data:: flask.request_started |
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:noindex: |
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This signal is sent before any request processing started but when the |
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request context was set up. Because the request context is already |
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bound, the subscriber can access the request with the standard global |
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proxies such as :class:`~flask.request`. |
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Example subscriber:: |
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def log_request(sender, **extra): |
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sender.logger.debug('Request context is set up') |
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from flask import request_started |
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request_started.connect(log_request, app) |
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.. data:: flask.request_finished |
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:noindex: |
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This signal is sent right before the response is sent to the client. |
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It is passed the response to be sent named `response`. |
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Example subscriber:: |
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def log_response(sender, response, **extra): |
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sender.logger.debug('Request context is about to close down. ' |
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'Response: %s', response) |
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from flask import request_finished |
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request_finished.connect(log_response, app) |
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.. data:: flask.got_request_exception |
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:noindex: |
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This signal is sent when an exception happens during request processing. |
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It is sent *before* the standard exception handling kicks in and even |
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in debug mode, where no exception handling happens. The exception |
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itself is passed to the subscriber as `exception`. |
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Example subscriber:: |
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def log_exception(sender, exception, **extra): |
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sender.logger.debug('Got exception during processing: %s', exception) |
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from flask import got_request_exception |
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got_request_exception.connect(log_exception, app) |
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.. data:: flask.request_tearing_down |
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:noindex: |
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This signal is sent when the request is tearing down. This is always |
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called, even if an exception is caused. Currently functions listening |
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to this signal are called after the regular teardown handlers, but this |
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is not something you can rely on. |
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Example subscriber:: |
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def close_db_connection(sender, **extra): |
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session.close() |
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from flask import request_tearing_down |
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request_tearing_down.connect(close_db_connection, app) |
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.. _blinker: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/blinker
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