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237 lines
8.1 KiB
237 lines
8.1 KiB
.. _views: |
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Pluggable Views |
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=============== |
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.. versionadded:: 0.7 |
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Flask 0.7 introduces pluggable views inspired by the generic views from |
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Django which are based on classes instead of functions. The main |
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intention is that you can replace parts of the implementations and this |
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way have customizable pluggable views. |
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Basic Principle |
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--------------- |
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Consider you have a function that loads a list of objects from the |
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database and renders into a template:: |
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@app.route('/users/') |
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def show_users(page): |
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users = User.query.all() |
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return render_template('users.html', users=users) |
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This is simple and flexible, but if you want to provide this view in a |
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generic fashion that can be adapted to other models and templates as well |
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you might want more flexibility. This is where pluggable class-based |
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views come into place. As the first step to convert this into a class |
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based view you would do this:: |
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from flask.views import View |
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class ShowUsers(View): |
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def dispatch_request(self): |
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users = User.query.all() |
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return render_template('users.html', objects=users) |
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app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=ShowUsers.as_view('show_users')) |
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As you can see what you have to do is to create a subclass of |
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:class:`flask.views.View` and implement |
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:meth:`~flask.views.View.dispatch_request`. Then we have to convert that |
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class into an actual view function by using the |
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:meth:`~flask.views.View.as_view` class method. The string you pass to |
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that function is the name of the endpoint that view will then have. But |
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this by itself is not helpful, so let's refactor the code a bit:: |
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from flask.views import View |
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class ListView(View): |
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def get_template_name(self): |
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raise NotImplementedError() |
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def render_template(self, context): |
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return render_template(self.get_template_name(), **context) |
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def dispatch_request(self): |
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context = {'objects': self.get_objects()} |
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return self.render_template(context) |
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class UserView(ListView): |
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def get_template_name(self): |
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return 'users.html' |
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def get_objects(self): |
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return User.query.all() |
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This of course is not that helpful for such a small example, but it's good |
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enough to explain the basic principle. When you have a class-based view |
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the question comes up what `self` points to. The way this works is that |
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whenever the request is dispatched a new instance of the class is created |
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and the :meth:`~flask.views.View.dispatch_request` method is called with |
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the parameters from the URL rule. The class itself is instantiated with |
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the parameters passed to the :meth:`~flask.views.View.as_view` function. |
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For instance you can write a class like this:: |
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class RenderTemplateView(View): |
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def __init__(self, template_name): |
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self.template_name = template_name |
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def dispatch_request(self): |
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return render_template(self.template_name) |
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And then you can register it like this:: |
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app.add_url_rule('/about', view_func=RenderTemplateView.as_view( |
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'about_page', template_name='about.html')) |
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Method Hints |
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------------ |
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Pluggable views are attached to the application like a regular function by |
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either using :func:`~flask.Flask.route` or better |
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:meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule`. That however also means that you would |
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have to provide the names of the HTTP methods the view supports when you |
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attach this. In order to move that information to the class you can |
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provide a :attr:`~flask.views.View.methods` attribute that has this |
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information:: |
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class MyView(View): |
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methods = ['GET', 'POST'] |
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def dispatch_request(self): |
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if request.method == 'POST': |
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... |
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... |
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app.add_url_rule('/myview', view_func=MyView.as_view('myview')) |
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Method Based Dispatching |
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------------------------ |
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For RESTful APIs it's especially helpful to execute a different function |
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for each HTTP method. With the :class:`flask.views.MethodView` you can |
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easily do that. Each HTTP method maps to a function with the same name |
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(just in lowercase):: |
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from flask.views import MethodView |
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class UserAPI(MethodView): |
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def get(self): |
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users = User.query.all() |
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... |
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def post(self): |
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user = User.from_form_data(request.form) |
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... |
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app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=UserAPI.as_view('users')) |
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That way you also don't have to provide the |
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:attr:`~flask.views.View.methods` attribute. It's automatically set based |
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on the methods defined in the class. |
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Decorating Views |
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---------------- |
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Since the view class itself is not the view function that is added to the |
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routing system it does not make much sense to decorate the class itself. |
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Instead you either have to decorate the return value of |
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:meth:`~flask.views.View.as_view` by hand:: |
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def user_required(f): |
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"""Checks whether user is logged in or raises error 401.""" |
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def decorator(*args, **kwargs): |
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if not g.user: |
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abort(401) |
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return f(*args, **kwargs) |
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return decorator |
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view = user_required(UserAPI.as_view('users')) |
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app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=view) |
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Starting with Flask 0.8 there is also an alternative way where you can |
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specify a list of decorators to apply in the class declaration:: |
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class UserAPI(MethodView): |
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decorators = [user_required] |
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Due to the implicit self from the caller's perspective you cannot use |
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regular view decorators on the individual methods of the view however, |
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keep this in mind. |
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Method Views for APIs |
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--------------------- |
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Web APIs are often working very closely with HTTP verbs so it makes a lot |
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of sense to implement such an API based on the |
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:class:`~flask.views.MethodView`. That said, you will notice that the API |
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will require different URL rules that go to the same method view most of |
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the time. For instance consider that you are exposing a user object on |
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the web: |
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=============== =============== ====================================== |
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URL Method Description |
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--------------- --------------- -------------------------------------- |
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``/users/`` ``GET`` Gives a list of all users |
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``/users/`` ``POST`` Creates a new user |
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``/users/<id>`` ``GET`` Shows a single user |
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``/users/<id>`` ``PUT`` Updates a single user |
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``/users/<id>`` ``DELETE`` Deletes a single user |
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=============== =============== ====================================== |
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So how would you go about doing that with the |
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:class:`~flask.views.MethodView`? The trick is to take advantage of the |
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fact that you can provide multiple rules to the same view. |
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Let's assume for the moment the view would look like this:: |
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class UserAPI(MethodView): |
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def get(self, user_id): |
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if user_id is None: |
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# return a list of users |
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pass |
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else: |
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# expose a single user |
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pass |
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def post(self): |
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# create a new user |
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pass |
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def delete(self, user_id): |
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# delete a single user |
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pass |
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def put(self, user_id): |
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# update a single user |
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pass |
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So how do we hook this up with the routing system? By adding two rules |
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and explicitly mentioning the methods for each:: |
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user_view = UserAPI.as_view('user_api') |
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app.add_url_rule('/users/', defaults={'user_id': None}, |
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view_func=user_view, methods=['GET',]) |
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app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=user_view, methods=['POST',]) |
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app.add_url_rule('/users/<int:user_id>', view_func=user_view, |
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methods=['GET', 'PUT', 'DELETE']) |
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If you have a lot of APIs that look similar you can refactor that |
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registration code:: |
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def register_api(view, endpoint, url, pk='id', pk_type='int'): |
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view_func = view.as_view(endpoint) |
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app.add_url_rule(url, defaults={pk: None}, |
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view_func=view_func, methods=['GET',]) |
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app.add_url_rule(url, view_func=view_func, methods=['POST',]) |
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app.add_url_rule('%s<%s:%s>' % (url, pk_type, pk), view_func=view_func, |
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methods=['GET', 'PUT', 'DELETE']) |
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register_api(UserAPI, 'user_api', '/users/', pk='user_id')
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