mirror of https://github.com/mitsuhiko/flask.git
You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
289 lines
9.3 KiB
289 lines
9.3 KiB
.. _larger-applications: |
|
|
|
Larger Applications |
|
=================== |
|
|
|
For larger applications it's a good idea to use a package instead of a |
|
module. That is quite simple. Imagine a small application looks like |
|
this:: |
|
|
|
/yourapplication |
|
/yourapplication.py |
|
/static |
|
/style.css |
|
/templates |
|
layout.html |
|
index.html |
|
login.html |
|
... |
|
|
|
Simple Packages |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
To convert that into a larger one, just create a new folder |
|
`yourapplication` inside the existing one and move everything below it. |
|
Then rename `yourapplication.py` to `__init__.py`. (Make sure to delete |
|
all `.pyc` files first, otherwise things would most likely break) |
|
|
|
You should then end up with something like that:: |
|
|
|
/yourapplication |
|
/yourapplication |
|
/__init__.py |
|
/static |
|
/style.css |
|
/templates |
|
layout.html |
|
index.html |
|
login.html |
|
... |
|
|
|
But how do you run your application now? The naive ``python |
|
yourapplication/__init__.py`` will not work. Let's just say that Python |
|
does not want modules in packages to be the startup file. But that is not |
|
a big problem, just add a new file called `runserver.py` next to the inner |
|
`yourapplication` folder with the following contents:: |
|
|
|
from yourapplication import app |
|
app.run(debug=True) |
|
|
|
What did we gain from this? Now we can restructure the application a bit |
|
into multiple modules. The only thing you have to remember is the |
|
following quick checklist: |
|
|
|
1. the `Flask` application object creation has to be in the |
|
`__init__.py` file. That way each module can import it safely and the |
|
`__name__` variable will resolve to the correct package. |
|
2. all the view functions (the ones with a :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` |
|
decorator on top) have to be imported when in the `__init__.py` file. |
|
Not the object itself, but the module it is in. Do the importing at |
|
the *bottom* of the file. |
|
|
|
Here's an example `__init__.py`:: |
|
|
|
from flask import Flask |
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
|
|
import yourapplication.views |
|
|
|
And this is what `views.py` would look like:: |
|
|
|
from yourapplication import app |
|
|
|
@app.route('/') |
|
def index(): |
|
return 'Hello World!' |
|
|
|
You should then end up with something like that:: |
|
|
|
/yourapplication |
|
/yourapplication |
|
/__init__.py |
|
/views.py |
|
/static |
|
/style.css |
|
/templates |
|
layout.html |
|
index.html |
|
login.html |
|
... |
|
|
|
.. admonition:: Circular Imports |
|
|
|
Every Python programmer hates them, and yet we just added some: |
|
circular imports (That's when two modules depend on each other. In this |
|
case `views.py` depends on `__init__.py`). Be advised that this is a |
|
bad idea in general but here it is actually fine. The reason for this is |
|
that we are not actually using the views in `__init__.py` and just |
|
ensuring the module is imported and we are doing that at the bottom of |
|
the file. |
|
|
|
There are still some problems with that approach but if you want to use |
|
decorators there is no way around that. Check out the |
|
:ref:`becomingbig` section for some inspiration how to deal with that. |
|
|
|
|
|
.. _working-with-modules: |
|
|
|
Working with Modules |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
For larger applications with more than a dozen views it makes sense to |
|
split the views into modules. First let's look at the typical structure of |
|
such an application:: |
|
|
|
/yourapplication |
|
/yourapplication |
|
/__init__.py |
|
/views |
|
__init__.py |
|
admin.py |
|
frontend.py |
|
/static |
|
/style.css |
|
/templates |
|
layout.html |
|
index.html |
|
login.html |
|
... |
|
|
|
The views are stored in the `yourapplication.views` package. Just make |
|
sure to place an empty `__init__.py` file in there. Let's start with the |
|
`admin.py` file in the view package. |
|
|
|
First we have to create a :class:`~flask.Module` object with the name of |
|
the package. This works very similar to the :class:`~flask.Flask` object |
|
you have already worked with, it just does not support all of the methods, |
|
but most of them are the same. |
|
|
|
Long story short, here's a nice and concise example:: |
|
|
|
from flask import Module |
|
|
|
admin = Module(__name__) |
|
|
|
@admin.route('/') |
|
def index(): |
|
pass |
|
|
|
@admin.route('/login') |
|
def login(): |
|
pass |
|
|
|
@admin.route('/logout') |
|
def logout(): |
|
pass |
|
|
|
Do the same with the `frontend.py` and then make sure to register the |
|
modules in the application (`__init__.py`) like this:: |
|
|
|
from flask import Flask |
|
from yourapplication.views.admin import admin |
|
from yourapplication.views.frontend import frontend |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.register_module(admin, url_prefix='/admin') |
|
app.register_module(frontend) |
|
|
|
We register the modules with the app so that it can add them to the |
|
URL map for our application. Note the prefix argument to the admin |
|
module: by default when we register a module, that module's end-points |
|
will be registered on `/` unless we specify this argument. |
|
|
|
So what is different when working with modules? It mainly affects URL |
|
generation. Remember the :func:`~flask.url_for` function? When not |
|
working with modules it accepts the name of the function as first |
|
argument. This first argument is called the "endpoint". When you are |
|
working with modules you can use the name of the function like you did |
|
without, when generating modules from a function or template in the same |
|
module. If you want to generate the URL to another module, prefix it with |
|
the name of the module and a dot. |
|
|
|
Confused? Let's clear that up with some examples. Imagine you have a |
|
method in one module (say `admin`) and you want to redirect to a |
|
different module (say `frontend`). This would look like this:: |
|
|
|
@admin.route('/to_frontend') |
|
def to_frontend(): |
|
return redirect(url_for('frontend.index')) |
|
|
|
@frontend.route('/') |
|
def index(): |
|
return "I'm the frontend index" |
|
|
|
Now let's say we only want to redirect to a different function in the same |
|
module. Then we can either use the full qualified endpoint name like we |
|
did in the example above, or we just use the function name:: |
|
|
|
@frontend.route('/to_index') |
|
def to_index(): |
|
return redirect(url_for('index')) |
|
|
|
@frontend.route('/') |
|
def index(): |
|
return "I'm the index" |
|
|
|
.. _modules-and-resources: |
|
|
|
Modules and Resources |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.5 |
|
|
|
If a module is located inside an actual Python package it may contain |
|
static files and templates. Imagine you have an application like this:: |
|
|
|
|
|
/yourapplication |
|
__init__.py |
|
/apps |
|
__init__.py |
|
/frontend |
|
__init__.py |
|
views.py |
|
/static |
|
style.css |
|
/templates |
|
index.html |
|
about.html |
|
... |
|
/admin |
|
__init__.py |
|
views.py |
|
/static |
|
style.css |
|
/templates |
|
list_items.html |
|
show_item.html |
|
... |
|
|
|
The static folders automatically become exposed as URLs. For example if |
|
the `admin` module is exported with an URL prefix of ``/admin`` you can |
|
access the style css from its static folder by going to |
|
``/admin/static/style.css``. The URL endpoint for the static files of the |
|
admin would be ``'admin.static'``, similar to how you refer to the regular |
|
static folder of the whole application as ``'static'``. |
|
|
|
If you want to refer to the templates you just have to prefix it with the |
|
name of the module. So for the admin it would be |
|
``render_template('admin/list_items.html')`` and so on. It is not |
|
possible to refer to templates without the prefixed module name. This is |
|
explicit unlike URL rules. Also with the move of the views into from |
|
`yourapplication.views.admin` too `yourapplication.apps.admin.views` you |
|
will have to give the module an explit shortname. Why? Because otherwise |
|
all your modules will be internally known as `views` which is obviously |
|
not what you want:: |
|
|
|
# in yourapplication/apps/admin/views.py |
|
admin = Module(__name__, 'admin') |
|
|
|
The setup code changes slightly because of the imports:: |
|
|
|
# in yourapplication/__init__.py |
|
from flask import Flask |
|
from yourapplication.apps.admin.views import admin |
|
from yourapplication.apps.frontend.views import frontend |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.register_module(admin, url_prefix='/admin') |
|
app.register_module(frontend) |
|
|
|
.. admonition:: References to Static Folders |
|
|
|
Please keep in mind that if you are using unqualified endpoints by |
|
default Flask will always assume the module's static folder, even if |
|
there is no such folder. |
|
|
|
If you want to refer to the application's static folder, use a leading |
|
dot:: |
|
|
|
# this refers to the application's static folder |
|
url_for('.static', filename='static.css') |
|
|
|
# this refers to the current module's static folder |
|
url_for('static', filename='static.css') |
|
|
|
This is the case for all endpoints, not just static folders, but for |
|
static folders it's more common that you will stumble upon this because |
|
most applications will have a static folder in the application and not |
|
a specific module.
|
|
|