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.

266 lines
9.9 KiB

.. currentmodule:: flask
.. _request-context:
The Request Context
===================
The request context keeps track of the request-level data during a
request. Rather than passing the request object to each function that
runs during a request, the :data:`request` and :data:`session` proxies
are accessed instead.
This is similar to the :doc:`/appcontext`, which keeps track of the
application-level data independent of a request. A corresponding
application context is pushed when a request context is pushed.
Purpose of the Context
----------------------
When the :class:`Flask` application handles a request, it creates a
:class:`Request` object based on the environment it received from the
WSGI server. Because a *worker* (thread, process, or coroutine depending
on the server) handles only one request at a time, the request data can
be considered global to that worker during that request. Flask uses the
term *context local* for this.
Flask automatically *pushes* a request context when handling a request.
View functions, error handlers, and other functions that run during a
request will have access to the :data:`request` proxy, which points to
the request object for the current request.
Lifetime of the Context
-----------------------
When a Flask application begins handling a request, it pushes a request
context, which also pushes an :doc:`/appcontext`. When the request ends
it pops the request context then the application context.
The context is unique to each thread (or other worker type).
:data:`request` cannot be passed to another thread, the other thread
will have a different context stack and will not know about the request
the parent thread was pointing to.
Context locals are implemented in Werkzeug. See :doc:`werkzeug:local`
for more information on how this works internally.
Manually Push a Context
-----------------------
If you try to access :data:`request`, or anything that uses it, outside
a request context, you'll get this error message:
.. code-block:: pytb
RuntimeError: Working outside of request context.
This typically means that you attempted to use functionality that
needed an active HTTP request. Consult the documentation on testing
for information about how to avoid this problem.
This should typically only happen when testing code that expects an
active request. One option is to use the
:meth:`test client <Flask.test_client>` to simulate a full request. Or
you can use :meth:`~Flask.test_request_context` in a ``with`` block, and
everything that runs in the block will have access to :data:`request`,
populated with your test data. ::
def generate_report(year):
format = request.args.get('format')
...
with app.test_request_context(
'/make_report/2017', data={'format': 'short'}):
generate_report()
If you see that error somewhere else in your code not related to
testing, it most likely indicates that you should move that code into a
view function.
For information on how to use the request context from the interactive
Python shell, see :doc:`/shell`.
How the Context Works
---------------------
The :meth:`Flask.wsgi_app` method is called to handle each request. It
manages the contexts during the request. Internally, the request and
application contexts work as stacks, :data:`_request_ctx_stack` and
:data:`_app_ctx_stack`. When contexts are pushed onto the stack, the
proxies that depend on them are available and point at information from
the top context on the stack.
When the request starts, a :class:`~ctx.RequestContext` is created and
pushed, which creates and pushes an :class:`~ctx.AppContext` first if
a context for that application is not already the top context. While
these contexts are pushed, the :data:`current_app`, :data:`g`,
:data:`request`, and :data:`session` proxies are available to the
original thread handling the request.
Because the contexts are stacks, other contexts may be pushed to change
the proxies during a request. While this is not a common pattern, it
can be used in advanced applications to, for example, do internal
redirects or chain different applications together.
After the request is dispatched and a response is generated and sent,
the request context is popped, which then pops the application context.
Immediately before they are popped, the :meth:`~Flask.teardown_request`
and :meth:`~Flask.teardown_appcontext` functions are are executed. These
execute even if an unhandled exception occurred during dispatch.
.. _callbacks-and-errors:
Callbacks and Errors
--------------------
Flask dispatches a request in multiple stages which can affect the
request, response, and how errors are handled. The contexts are active
during all of these stages.
A :class:`Blueprint` can add handlers for these events that are specific
to the blueprint. The handlers for a blueprint will run if the blueprint
owns the route that matches the request.
#. Before each request, :meth:`~Flask.before_request` functions are
called. If one of these functions return a value, the other
functions are skipped. The return value is treated as the response
and the view function is not called.
#. If the :meth:`~Flask.before_request` functions did not return a
response, the view function for the matched route is called and
returns a response.
#. The return value of the view is converted into an actual response
object and passed to the :meth:`~Flask.after_request`
functions. Each function returns a modified or new response object.
#. After the response is returned, the contexts are popped, which calls
the :meth:`~Flask.teardown_request` and
:meth:`~Flask.teardown_appcontext` functions. These functions are
called even if an unhandled exception was raised at any point above.
If an exception is raised before the teardown functions, Flask tries to
match it with an :meth:`~Flask.errorhandler` function to handle the
exception and return a response. If no error handler is found, or the
handler itself raises an exception, Flask returns a generic
``500 Internal Server Error`` response. The teardown functions are still
called, and are passed the exception object.
If debug mode is enabled, unhandled exceptions are not converted to a
``500`` response and instead are propagated to the WSGI server. This
allows the development server to present the interactive debugger with
the traceback.
Teardown Callbacks
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The teardown callbacks are independent of the request dispatch, and are
instead called by the contexts when they are popped. The functions are
called even if there is an unhandled exception during dispatch, and for
manually pushed contexts. This means there is no guarantee that any
other parts of the request dispatch have run first. Be sure to write
these functions in a way that does not depend on other callbacks and
will not fail.
During testing, it can be useful to defer popping the contexts after the
request ends, so that their data can be accessed in the test function.
Using the :meth:`~Flask.test_client` as a ``with`` block to preserve the
contexts until the with block exits.
.. code-block:: python
from flask import Flask, request
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route('/')
def hello():
print('during view')
return 'Hello, World!'
@app.teardown_request
def show_teardown(exception):
print('after with block')
with app.test_request_context():
print('during with block')
# teardown functions are called after the context with block exits
with app.test_client() as client:
client.get('/')
# the contexts are not popped even though the request ended
print(request.path)
# the contexts are popped and teardown functions are called after
# the client with block exists
Signals
~~~~~~~
If :data:`~signals.signals_available` is true, the following signals are
sent:
#. :data:`request_started` is sent before the
:meth:`~Flask.before_request` functions are called.
#. :data:`request_finished` is sent after the
:meth:`~Flask.after_request` functions are called.
#. :data:`got_request_exception` is sent when an exception begins to
be handled, but before an :meth:`~Flask.errorhandler` is looked up or
called.
#. :data:`request_tearing_down` is sent after the
:meth:`~Flask.teardown_request` functions are called.
Context Preservation on Error
-----------------------------
At the end of a request, the request context is popped and all data
associated with it is destroyed. If an error occurs during development,
it is useful to delay destroying the data for debugging purposes.
When the development server is running in development mode (the
``FLASK_ENV`` environment variable is set to ``'development'``), the
error and data will be preserved and shown in the interactive debugger.
This behavior can be controlled with the
:data:`PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION` config. As described above, it
defaults to ``True`` in the development environment.
Do not enable :data:`PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION` in production, as it
will cause your application to leak memory on exceptions.
.. _notes-on-proxies:
Notes On Proxies
----------------
Some of the objects provided by Flask are proxies to other objects. The
proxies are accessed in the same way for each worker thread, but
point to the unique object bound to each worker behind the scenes as
described on this page.
Most of the time you don't have to care about that, but there are some
exceptions where it is good to know that this object is an actual proxy:
- The proxy objects cannot fake their type as the actual object types.
If you want to perform instance checks, you have to do that on the
object being proxied.
- If the specific object reference is important, for example for
sending :ref:`signals` or passing data to a background thread.
If you need to access the underlying object that is proxied, use the
:meth:`~werkzeug.local.LocalProxy._get_current_object` method::
app = current_app._get_current_object()
my_signal.send(app)