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.
237 lines
9.2 KiB
237 lines
9.2 KiB
.. _config: |
|
|
|
Configuration Handling |
|
====================== |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.3 |
|
|
|
Applications need some kind of configuration. There are different things |
|
you might want to change like toggling debug mode, the secret key, and a |
|
lot of very similar things. |
|
|
|
The way Flask is designed usually requires the configuration to be |
|
available when the application starts up. You can hardcode the |
|
configuration in the code, which for many small applications is not |
|
actually that bad, but there are better ways. |
|
|
|
Independent of how you load your config, there is a config object |
|
available which holds the loaded configuration values: |
|
The :attr:`~flask.Flask.config` attribute of the :class:`~flask.Flask` |
|
object. This is the place where Flask itself puts certain configuration |
|
values and also where extensions can put their configuration values. But |
|
this is also where you can have your own configuration. |
|
|
|
Configuration Basics |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
The :attr:`~flask.Flask.config` is actually a subclass of a dictionary and |
|
can be modified just like any dictionary:: |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.config['DEBUG'] = True |
|
|
|
Certain configuration values are also forwarded to the |
|
:attr:`~flask.Flask` object so that you can read and write them from |
|
there:: |
|
|
|
app.debug = True |
|
|
|
To update multiple keys at once you can use the :meth:`dict.update` |
|
method:: |
|
|
|
app.config.update( |
|
DEBUG=True, |
|
SECRET_KEY='...' |
|
) |
|
|
|
Builtin Configuration Values |
|
---------------------------- |
|
|
|
The following configuration values are used internally by Flask: |
|
|
|
.. tabularcolumns:: |p{6.5cm}|p{8.5cm}| |
|
|
|
=============================== ========================================= |
|
``DEBUG`` enable/disable debug mode |
|
``TESTING`` enable/disable testing mode |
|
``PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS`` explicitly enable or disable the |
|
propagation of exceptions. If not set or |
|
explicitly set to `None` this is |
|
implicitly true if either `TESTING` or |
|
`DEBUG` is true. |
|
``SECRET_KEY`` the secret key |
|
``SESSION_COOKIE_NAME`` the name of the session cookie |
|
``PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME`` the lifetime of a permanent session as |
|
:class:`datetime.timedelta` object. |
|
``USE_X_SENDFILE`` enable/disable x-sendfile |
|
``LOGGER_NAME`` the name of the logger |
|
``SERVER_NAME`` the name and port number of the server. |
|
Required for subdomain support (e.g.: |
|
``'localhost:5000'``) |
|
``MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH`` If set to a value in bytes, Flask will |
|
reject incoming requests with a |
|
content length greater than this by |
|
returning a 413 status code. |
|
=============================== ========================================= |
|
|
|
.. admonition:: More on ``SERVER_NAME`` |
|
|
|
The ``SERVER_NAME`` key is used for the subdomain support. Because |
|
Flask cannot guess the subdomain part without the knowledge of the |
|
actual server name, this is required if you want to work with |
|
subdomains. This is also used for the session cookie. |
|
|
|
Please keep in mind that not only Flask has the problem of not knowing |
|
what subdomains are, your web browser does as well. Most modern web |
|
browsers will not allow cross-subdomain cookies to be set on a |
|
server name without dots in it. So if your server name is |
|
``'localhost'`` you will not be able to set a cookie for |
|
``'localhost'`` and every subdomain of it. Please chose a different |
|
server name in that case, like ``'myapplication.local'`` and add |
|
this name + the subdomains you want to use into your host config |
|
or setup a local `bind`_. |
|
|
|
.. _bind: https://www.isc.org/software/bind |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.4 |
|
``LOGGER_NAME`` |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.5 |
|
``SERVER_NAME`` |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.6 |
|
``MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH`` |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.7 |
|
``PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS`` |
|
|
|
Configuring from Files |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
Configuration becomes more useful if you can configure from a file, and |
|
ideally that file would be outside of the actual application package so that |
|
you can install the package with distribute (:ref:`distribute-deployment`) |
|
and still modify that file afterwards. |
|
|
|
So a common pattern is this:: |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_settings') |
|
app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS') |
|
|
|
This first loads the configuration from the |
|
`yourapplication.default_settings` module and then overrides the values |
|
with the contents of the file the :envvar:`YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS` |
|
environment variable points to. This environment variable can be set on |
|
Linux or OS X with the export command in the shell before starting the |
|
server:: |
|
|
|
$ export YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS=/path/to/settings.cfg |
|
$ python run-app.py |
|
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
* Restarting with reloader... |
|
|
|
On Windows systems use the `set` builtin instead:: |
|
|
|
>set YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS=\path\to\settings.cfg |
|
|
|
The configuration files themselves are actual Python files. Only values |
|
in uppercase are actually stored in the config object later on. So make |
|
sure to use uppercase letters for your config keys. |
|
|
|
Here is an example configuration file:: |
|
|
|
DEBUG = False |
|
SECRET_KEY = '?\xbf,\xb4\x8d\xa3"<\x9c\xb0@\x0f5\xab,w\xee\x8d$0\x13\x8b83' |
|
|
|
Make sure to load the configuration very early on so that extensions have |
|
the ability to access the configuration when starting up. There are other |
|
methods on the config object as well to load from individual files. For a |
|
complete reference, read the :class:`~flask.Config` object's |
|
documentation. |
|
|
|
|
|
Configuration Best Practices |
|
---------------------------- |
|
|
|
The downside with the approach mentioned earlier is that it makes testing |
|
a little harder. There is no one 100% solution for this problem in |
|
general, but there are a couple of things you can do to improve that |
|
experience: |
|
|
|
1. create your application in a function and register modules on it. |
|
That way you can create multiple instances of your application with |
|
different configurations attached which makes unittesting a lot |
|
easier. You can use this to pass in configuration as needed. |
|
|
|
2. Do not write code that needs the configuration at import time. If you |
|
limit yourself to request-only accesses to the configuration you can |
|
reconfigure the object later on as needed. |
|
|
|
|
|
Development / Production |
|
------------------------ |
|
|
|
Most applications need more than one configuration. There will at least |
|
be a separate configuration for a production server and one used during |
|
development. The easiest way to handle this is to use a default |
|
configuration that is always loaded and part of version control, and a |
|
separate configuration that overrides the values as necessary as mentioned |
|
in the example above:: |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_settings') |
|
app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS') |
|
|
|
Then you just have to add a separate `config.py` file and export |
|
``YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS=/path/to/config.py`` and you are done. However |
|
there are alternative ways as well. For example you could use imports or |
|
subclassing. |
|
|
|
What is very popular in the Django world is to make the import explicit in |
|
the config file by adding an ``from yourapplication.default_settings |
|
import *`` to the top of the file and then overriding the changes by hand. |
|
You could also inspect an environment variable like |
|
``YOURAPPLICATION_MODE`` and set that to `production`, `development` etc |
|
and import different hardcoded files based on that. |
|
|
|
An interesting pattern is also to use classes and inheritance for |
|
configuration:: |
|
|
|
class Config(object): |
|
DEBUG = False |
|
TESTING = False |
|
DATABASE_URI = 'sqlite://:memory:' |
|
|
|
class ProductionConfig(Config): |
|
DATABASE_URI = 'mysql://user@localhost/foo' |
|
|
|
class DevelopmentConfig(Config): |
|
DEBUG = True |
|
|
|
class TestingConfig(Config): |
|
TESTING = True |
|
|
|
To enable such a config you just have to call into |
|
:meth:`~flask.Config.from_object`:: |
|
|
|
app.config.from_object('configmodule.ProductionConfig') |
|
|
|
There are many different ways and it's up to you how you want to manage |
|
your configuration files. However here a list of good recommendations: |
|
|
|
- keep a default configuration in version control. Either populate the |
|
config with this default configuration or import it in your own |
|
configuration files before overriding values. |
|
- use an environment variable to switch between the configurations. |
|
This can be done from outside the Python interpreter and makes |
|
development and deployment much easier because you can quickly and |
|
easily switch between different configs without having to touch the |
|
code at all. If you are working often on different projects you can |
|
even create your own script for sourcing that activates a virtualenv |
|
and exports the development configuration for you. |
|
- Use a tool like `fabric`_ in production to push code and |
|
configurations separately to the production server(s). For some |
|
details about how to do that, head over to the :ref:`deploy` pattern. |
|
|
|
.. _fabric: http://fabfile.org/
|
|
|