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104 lines
3.6 KiB
104 lines
3.6 KiB
Lazily Loading Views |
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==================== |
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Flask is usually used with the decorators. Decorators are simple and you |
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have the URL right next to the function that is called for that specific |
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URL. However there is a downside to this approach: it means all your code |
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that uses decorators has to be imported upfront or Flask will never |
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actually find your function. |
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This can be a problem if your application has to import quick. It might |
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have to do that on systems like Google's App Engine or other systems. So |
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if you suddenly notice that your application outgrows this approach you |
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can fall back to a centralized URL mapping. |
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The system that enables having a central URL map is the |
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:meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule` function. Instead of using decorators, |
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you have a file that sets up the application with all URLs. |
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Converting to Centralized URL Map |
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--------------------------------- |
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Imagine the current application looks somewhat like this:: |
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from flask import Flask |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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@app.route('/') |
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def index(): |
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pass |
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@app.route('/user/<username>') |
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def user(username): |
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pass |
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Then, with the centralized approach you would have one file with the views |
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(:file:`views.py`) but without any decorator:: |
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def index(): |
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pass |
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def user(username): |
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pass |
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And then a file that sets up an application which maps the functions to |
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URLs:: |
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from flask import Flask |
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from yourapplication import views |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.add_url_rule('/', view_func=views.index) |
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app.add_url_rule('/user/<username>', view_func=views.user) |
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Loading Late |
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------------ |
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So far we only split up the views and the routing, but the module is still |
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loaded upfront. The trick is to actually load the view function as needed. |
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This can be accomplished with a helper class that behaves just like a |
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function but internally imports the real function on first use:: |
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from werkzeug import import_string, cached_property |
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class LazyView(object): |
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def __init__(self, import_name): |
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self.__module__, self.__name__ = import_name.rsplit('.', 1) |
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self.import_name = import_name |
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@cached_property |
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def view(self): |
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return import_string(self.import_name) |
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def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs): |
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return self.view(*args, **kwargs) |
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What's important here is is that `__module__` and `__name__` are properly |
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set. This is used by Flask internally to figure out how to name the |
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URL rules in case you don't provide a name for the rule yourself. |
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Then you can define your central place to combine the views like this:: |
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from flask import Flask |
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from yourapplication.helpers import LazyView |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.add_url_rule('/', |
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view_func=LazyView('yourapplication.views.index')) |
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app.add_url_rule('/user/<username>', |
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view_func=LazyView('yourapplication.views.user')) |
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You can further optimize this in terms of amount of keystrokes needed to |
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write this by having a function that calls into |
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:meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule` by prefixing a string with the project |
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name and a dot, and by wrapping `view_func` in a `LazyView` as needed:: |
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def url(url_rule, import_name, **options): |
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view = LazyView('yourapplication.' + import_name) |
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app.add_url_rule(url_rule, view_func=view, **options) |
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url('/', 'views.index') |
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url('/user/<username>', 'views.user') |
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One thing to keep in mind is that before and after request handlers have |
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to be in a file that is imported upfront to work properly on the first |
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request. The same goes for any kind of remaining decorator.
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