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.
188 lines
6.8 KiB
188 lines
6.8 KiB
.. _app-dispatch: |
|
|
|
Application Dispatching |
|
======================= |
|
|
|
Application dispatching is the process of combining multiple Flask |
|
applications on the WSGI level. You can not only combine Flask |
|
applications into something larger but any WSGI application. This would |
|
even allow you to run a Django and a Flask application in the same |
|
interpreter side by side if you want. The usefulness of this depends on |
|
how the applications work internally. |
|
|
|
The fundamental difference from the :ref:`module approach |
|
<larger-applications>` is that in this case you are running the same or |
|
different Flask applications that are entirely isolated from each other. |
|
They run different configurations and are dispatched on the WSGI level. |
|
|
|
|
|
Working with this Document |
|
-------------------------- |
|
|
|
Each of the techniques and examples below results in an ``application`` object |
|
that can be run with any WSGI server. For production, see :ref:`deployment`. |
|
For development, Werkzeug provides a builtin server for development available |
|
at :func:`werkzeug.serving.run_simple`:: |
|
|
|
from werkzeug.serving import run_simple |
|
run_simple('localhost', 5000, application, use_reloader=True) |
|
|
|
Note that :func:`run_simple <werkzeug.serving.run_simple>` is not intended for |
|
use in production. Use a :ref:`full-blown WSGI server <deployment>`. |
|
|
|
In order to use the interactive debuggger, debugging must be enabled both on |
|
the application and the simple server, here is the "hello world" example with |
|
debugging and :func:`run_simple <werkzeug.serving.run_simple>`:: |
|
|
|
from flask import Flask |
|
from werkzeug.serving import run_simple |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.debug = True |
|
|
|
@app.route('/') |
|
def hello_world(): |
|
return 'Hello World!' |
|
|
|
if __name__ == '__main__': |
|
run_simple('localhost', 5000, app, |
|
use_reloader=True, use_debugger=True, use_evalex=True) |
|
|
|
|
|
Combining Applications |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
If you have entirely separated applications and you want them to work next |
|
to each other in the same Python interpreter process you can take |
|
advantage of the :class:`werkzeug.wsgi.DispatcherMiddleware`. The idea |
|
here is that each Flask application is a valid WSGI application and they |
|
are combined by the dispatcher middleware into a larger one that |
|
dispatched based on prefix. |
|
|
|
For example you could have your main application run on ``/`` and your |
|
backend interface on ``/backend``:: |
|
|
|
from werkzeug.wsgi import DispatcherMiddleware |
|
from frontend_app import application as frontend |
|
from backend_app import application as backend |
|
|
|
application = DispatcherMiddleware(frontend, { |
|
'/backend': backend |
|
}) |
|
|
|
|
|
Dispatch by Subdomain |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
Sometimes you might want to use multiple instances of the same application |
|
with different configurations. Assuming the application is created inside |
|
a function and you can call that function to instantiate it, that is |
|
really easy to implement. In order to develop your application to support |
|
creating new instances in functions have a look at the |
|
:ref:`app-factories` pattern. |
|
|
|
A very common example would be creating applications per subdomain. For |
|
instance you configure your webserver to dispatch all requests for all |
|
subdomains to your application and you then use the subdomain information |
|
to create user-specific instances. Once you have your server set up to |
|
listen on all subdomains you can use a very simple WSGI application to do |
|
the dynamic application creation. |
|
|
|
The perfect level for abstraction in that regard is the WSGI layer. You |
|
write your own WSGI application that looks at the request that comes and |
|
delegates it to your Flask application. If that application does not |
|
exist yet, it is dynamically created and remembered:: |
|
|
|
from threading import Lock |
|
|
|
class SubdomainDispatcher(object): |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, domain, create_app): |
|
self.domain = domain |
|
self.create_app = create_app |
|
self.lock = Lock() |
|
self.instances = {} |
|
|
|
def get_application(self, host): |
|
host = host.split(':')[0] |
|
assert host.endswith(self.domain), 'Configuration error' |
|
subdomain = host[:-len(self.domain)].rstrip('.') |
|
with self.lock: |
|
app = self.instances.get(subdomain) |
|
if app is None: |
|
app = self.create_app(subdomain) |
|
self.instances[subdomain] = app |
|
return app |
|
|
|
def __call__(self, environ, start_response): |
|
app = self.get_application(environ['HTTP_HOST']) |
|
return app(environ, start_response) |
|
|
|
|
|
This dispatcher can then be used like this:: |
|
|
|
from myapplication import create_app, get_user_for_subdomain |
|
from werkzeug.exceptions import NotFound |
|
|
|
def make_app(subdomain): |
|
user = get_user_for_subdomain(subdomain) |
|
if user is None: |
|
# if there is no user for that subdomain we still have |
|
# to return a WSGI application that handles that request. |
|
# We can then just return the NotFound() exception as |
|
# application which will render a default 404 page. |
|
# You might also redirect the user to the main page then |
|
return NotFound() |
|
|
|
# otherwise create the application for the specific user |
|
return create_app(user) |
|
|
|
application = SubdomainDispatcher('example.com', make_app) |
|
|
|
|
|
Dispatch by Path |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
Dispatching by a path on the URL is very similar. Instead of looking at |
|
the ``Host`` header to figure out the subdomain one simply looks at the |
|
request path up to the first slash:: |
|
|
|
from threading import Lock |
|
from werkzeug.wsgi import pop_path_info, peek_path_info |
|
|
|
class PathDispatcher(object): |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, default_app, create_app): |
|
self.default_app = default_app |
|
self.create_app = create_app |
|
self.lock = Lock() |
|
self.instances = {} |
|
|
|
def get_application(self, prefix): |
|
with self.lock: |
|
app = self.instances.get(prefix) |
|
if app is None: |
|
app = self.create_app(prefix) |
|
if app is not None: |
|
self.instances[prefix] = app |
|
return app |
|
|
|
def __call__(self, environ, start_response): |
|
app = self.get_application(peek_path_info(environ)) |
|
if app is not None: |
|
pop_path_info(environ) |
|
else: |
|
app = self.default_app |
|
return app(environ, start_response) |
|
|
|
The big difference between this and the subdomain one is that this one |
|
falls back to another application if the creator function returns ``None``:: |
|
|
|
from myapplication import create_app, default_app, get_user_for_prefix |
|
|
|
def make_app(prefix): |
|
user = get_user_for_prefix(prefix) |
|
if user is not None: |
|
return create_app(user) |
|
|
|
application = PathDispatcher(default_app, make_app)
|
|
|