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306 lines
9.7 KiB
306 lines
9.7 KiB
Deployment Options |
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================== |
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Depending on what you have available there are multiple ways to run Flask |
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applications. A very common method is to use the builtin server during |
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development and maybe behind a proxy for simple applications, but there |
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are more options available. |
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If you have a different WSGI server look up the server documentation about |
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how to use a WSGI app with it. Just remember that your application object |
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is the actual WSGI application. |
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FastCGI |
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------- |
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A very popular deployment setup on servers like `lighttpd`_ and `nginx`_ |
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is FastCGI. To use your WSGI application with any of them you will need |
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a FastCGI server first. |
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The most popular one is `flup`_ which we will use for this guide. Make |
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sure to have it installed. |
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Creating a `.fcgi` file |
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``````````````````````` |
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First you need to create the FastCGI server file. Let's call it |
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`yourapplication.fcgi`:: |
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#!/usr/bin/python |
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from flup.server.fcgi import WSGIServer |
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from yourapplication import app |
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WSGIServer(app).run() |
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This is enough for Apache to work, however lighttpd and nginx need a |
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socket to communicate with the FastCGI server. For that to work you |
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need to pass the path to the socket to the |
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:class:`~flup.server.fcgi.WSGIServer`:: |
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WSGIServer(application, bindAddress='/path/to/fcgi.sock').run() |
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The path has to be the exact same path you define in the server |
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config. |
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Save the `yourapplication.fcgi` file somewhere you will find it again. |
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It makes sense to have that in `/var/www/yourapplication` or something |
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similar. |
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Make sure to set the executable bit on that file so that the servers |
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can execute it:: |
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# chmod +x /var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.fcgi |
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Configuring lighttpd |
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```````````````````` |
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A basic FastCGI configuration for lighttpd looks like that:: |
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fastcgi.server = ("/yourapplication" => |
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"yourapplication" => ( |
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"socket" => "/tmp/yourapplication-fcgi.sock", |
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"bin-path" => "/var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.fcgi", |
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"check-local" => "disable" |
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) |
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) |
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This configuration binds the application to `/yourapplication`. If you |
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want the application to work in the URL root you have to work around a |
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lighttpd bug with the :class:`~werkzeug.contrib.fixers.LighttpdCGIRootFix` |
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middleware. |
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Make sure to apply it only if you are mounting the application the URL |
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root. |
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Configuring nginx |
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````````````````` |
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Installing FastCGI applications on nginx is a bit tricky because by default |
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some FastCGI parameters are not properly forwarded. |
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A basic FastCGI configuration for nginx looks like this:: |
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location /yourapplication/ { |
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include fastcgi_params; |
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if ($uri ~ ^/yourapplication/(.*)?) { |
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set $path_url $1; |
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} |
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fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $path_url; |
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fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME /yourapplication; |
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fastcgi_pass unix:/tmp/yourapplication-fcgi.sock; |
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} |
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This configuration binds the application to `/yourapplication`. If you want |
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to have it in the URL root it's a bit easier because you don't have to figure |
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out how to calculate `PATH_INFO` and `SCRIPT_NAME`:: |
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location /yourapplication/ { |
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include fastcgi_params; |
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fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_script_name; |
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fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME ""; |
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fastcgi_pass unix:/tmp/yourapplication-fcgi.sock; |
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} |
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Since Nginx doesn't load FastCGI apps, you have to do it by yourself. You |
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can either write an `init.d` script for that or execute it inside a screen |
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session:: |
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$ screen |
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$ /var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.fcgi |
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Debugging |
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````````` |
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FastCGI deployments tend to be hard to debug on most webservers. Very often the |
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only thing the server log tells you is something along the lines of "premature |
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end of headers". In order to debug the application the only thing that can |
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really give you ideas why it breaks is switching to the correct user and |
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executing the application by hand. |
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This example assumes your application is called `application.fcgi` and that your |
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webserver user is `www-data`:: |
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$ su www-data |
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$ cd /var/www/yourapplication |
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$ python application.fcgi |
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Traceback (most recent call last): |
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File "yourapplication.fcg", line 4, in <module> |
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ImportError: No module named yourapplication |
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In this case the error seems to be "yourapplication" not being on the python |
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path. Common problems are: |
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- relative paths being used. Don't rely on the current working directory |
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- the code depending on environment variables that are not set by the |
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web server. |
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- different python interpreters being used. |
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.. _lighttpd: http://www.lighttpd.net/ |
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.. _nginx: http://nginx.net/ |
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.. _flup: http://trac.saddi.com/flup |
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mod_wsgi (Apache) |
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----------------- |
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If you are using the `Apache`_ webserver you should consider using `mod_wsgi`_. |
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.. _Apache: http://httpd.apache.org/ |
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Installing `mod_wsgi` |
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````````````````````` |
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If you don't have `mod_wsgi` installed yet you have to either install it using |
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a package manager or compile it yourself. |
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The mod_wsgi `installation instructions`_ cover installation instructions for |
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source installations on UNIX systems. |
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If you are using ubuntu / debian you can apt-get it and activate it as follows:: |
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# apt-get install libapache2-mod-wsgi |
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On FreeBSD install `mod_wsgi` by compiling the `www/mod_wsgi` port or by using |
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pkg_add:: |
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# pkg_add -r mod_wsgi |
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If you are using pkgsrc you can install `mod_wsgi` by compiling the |
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`www/ap2-wsgi` package. |
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If you encounter segfaulting child processes after the first apache reload you |
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can safely ignore them. Just restart the server. |
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Creating a `.wsgi` file |
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``````````````````````` |
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To run your application you need a `yourapplication.wsgi` file. This file |
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contains the code `mod_wsgi` is executing on startup to get the application |
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object. The object called `application` in that file is then used as |
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application. |
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For most applications the following file should be sufficient:: |
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from yourapplication import app as application |
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If you don't have a factory function for application creation but a singleton |
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instance you can directly import that one as `application`. |
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Store that file somewhere where you will find it again (eg: |
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`/var/www/yourapplication`) and make sure that `yourapplication` and all |
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the libraries that are in use are on the python load path. If you don't |
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want to install it system wide consider using a `virtual python`_ instance. |
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Configuring Apache |
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`````````````````` |
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The last thing you have to do is to create an Apache configuration file for |
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your application. In this example we are telling `mod_wsgi` to execute the |
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application under a different user for security reasons: |
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.. sourcecode:: apache |
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<VirtualHost *> |
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ServerName example.com |
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WSGIDaemonProcess yourapplication user=user1 group=group1 threads=5 |
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WSGIScriptAlias / /var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.wsgi |
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<Directory /var/www/yourapplication> |
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WSGIProcessGroup yourapplication |
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WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL} |
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Order deny,allow |
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Allow from all |
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</Directory> |
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</VirtualHost> |
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For more information consult the `mod_wsgi wiki`_. |
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.. _mod_wsgi: http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/ |
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.. _installation instructions: http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/QuickInstallationGuide |
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.. _virtual python: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenv |
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.. _mod_wsgi wiki: http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/ |
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Tornado |
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-------- |
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`Tornado`_ is an open source version of the scalable, non-blocking web server and tools that power `FriendFeed`_. |
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Because it is non-blocking and uses epoll, it can handle thousands of simultaneous standing connections, which means it is ideal for real-time web services. |
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Integrating this service with Flask is a trivial task:: |
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from tornado.wsgi import WSGIContainer |
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from tornado.httpserver import HTTPServer |
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from tornado.ioloop import IOLoop |
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from yourapplication import app |
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http_server = HTTPServer(WSGIContainer(app)) |
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http_server.listen(5000) |
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IOLoop.instance().start() |
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.. _Tornado: http://www.tornadoweb.org/ |
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.. _FriendFeed: http://friendfeed.com/ |
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Gevent |
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------- |
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`Gevent`_ is a coroutine-based Python networking library that uses `greenlet`_ to provide a high-level synchronous API on top of `libevent`_ event loop:: |
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from gevent.wsgi import WSGIServer |
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from yourapplication import app |
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http_server = WSGIServer(('', 5000), app) |
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http_server.serve_forever() |
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.. _Gevent: http://www.gevent.org/ |
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.. _greenlet: http://codespeak.net/py/0.9.2/greenlet.html |
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.. _libevent: http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/ |
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CGI |
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--- |
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If all other deployment methods do not work, CGI will work for sure. CGI |
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is supported by all major browsers but usually has a less-than-optimal |
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performance. |
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This is also the way you can use a Flask application on Google's |
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`AppEngine`_, there however the execution does happen in a CGI-like |
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environment. The application's performance is unaffected because of that. |
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.. _AppEngine: http://code.google.com/appengine/ |
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Creating a `.cgi` file |
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`````````````````````` |
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First you need to create the CGI application file. Let's call it |
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`yourapplication.cgi`:: |
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#!/usr/bin/python |
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from wsgiref.handlers import CGIHandler |
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from yourapplication import app |
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CGIHandler().run(app) |
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If you're running Python 2.4 you will need the :mod:`wsgiref` package. Python |
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2.5 and higher ship this as part of the standard library. |
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Server Setup |
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```````````` |
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Usually there are two ways to configure the server. Either just copy the |
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`.cgi` into a `cgi-bin` (and use `mod_rerwite` or something similar to |
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rewrite the URL) or let the server point to the file directly. |
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In Apache for example you can put a like like this into the config: |
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.. sourcecode:: apache |
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ScriptName /app /path/to/the/application.cgi |
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For more information consult the documentation of your webserver. |
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