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90 lines
3.3 KiB
90 lines
3.3 KiB
.. _tutorial-setup: |
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Step 2: Application Setup Code |
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============================== |
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Now that we have the schema in place we can create the application module. |
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Let's call it `flaskr.py` inside the `flaskr` folder. For starters we |
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will add the imports we will need as well as the config section. For |
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small applications it's a possibility to drop the configuration directly |
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into the module which we will be doing here. However a cleaner solution |
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would be to create a separate `.ini` or `.py` file and load that or import |
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the values from there. |
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In `flaskr.py`:: |
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# all the imports |
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import sqlite3 |
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from flask import Flask, request, session, g, redirect, url_for, \ |
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abort, render_template, flash |
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# configuration |
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DATABASE = '/tmp/flaskr.db' |
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DEBUG = True |
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SECRET_KEY = 'development key' |
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USERNAME = 'admin' |
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PASSWORD = 'default' |
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Next we can create our actual application and initialize it with the |
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config from the same file, in `flaskr.py`:: |
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# create our little application :) |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.config.from_object(__name__) |
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:meth:`~flask.Config.from_object` will look at the given object (if it's a |
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string it will import it) and then look for all uppercase variables |
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defined there. In our case, the configuration we just wrote a few lines |
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of code above. You can also move that into a separate file. |
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Usually, it is a good idea to load a configuration from a configurable |
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file. This is what :meth:`~flask.Config.from_envvar` can do, replacing the |
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:meth:`~flask.Config.from_object` line above:: |
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app.config.from_envvar('FLASKR_SETTINGS', silent=True) |
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That way someone can set an environment variable called |
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:envvar:`FLASKR_SETTINGS` to specify a config file to be loaded which will then |
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override the default values. The silent switch just tells Flask to not complain |
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if no such environment key is set. |
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The `secret_key` is needed to keep the client-side sessions secure. |
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Choose that key wisely and as hard to guess and complex as possible. The |
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debug flag enables or disables the interactive debugger. *Never leave |
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debug mode activated in a production system*, because it will allow users to |
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execute code on the server! |
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We also add a method to easily connect to the database specified. That |
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can be used to open a connection on request and also from the interactive |
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Python shell or a script. This will come in handy later. |
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:: |
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def connect_db(): |
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return sqlite3.connect(app.config['DATABASE']) |
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Finally we just add a line to the bottom of the file that fires up the |
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server if we want to run that file as a standalone application:: |
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if __name__ == '__main__': |
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app.run() |
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With that out of the way you should be able to start up the application |
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without problems. Do this with the following command:: |
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python flaskr.py |
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You will see a message telling you that server has started along with |
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the address at which you can access it. |
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When you head over to the server in your browser you will get an 404 |
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page not found error because we don't have any views yet. But we will |
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focus on that a little later. First we should get the database working. |
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.. admonition:: Externally Visible Server |
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Want your server to be publicly available? Check out the |
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:ref:`externally visible server <public-server>` section for more |
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information. |
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Continue with :ref:`tutorial-dbinit`.
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