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69 lines
3.4 KiB
69 lines
3.4 KiB
.. _advanced_foreword: |
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Foreword for Experienced Programmers |
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==================================== |
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Thread-Locals in Flask |
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---------------------- |
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One of the design decisions in Flask was that simple tasks should be simple; |
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they should not take a lot of code and yet they should not limit you. Because |
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of that, Flask has a few design choices that some people might find surprising or |
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unorthodox. For example, Flask uses thread-local objects internally so that you |
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don’t have to pass objects around from function to function within a request in |
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order to stay threadsafe. This approach is convenient, but requires a valid |
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request context for dependency injection or when attempting to reuse code which |
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uses a value pegged to the request. The Flask project is honest about |
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thread-locals, does not hide them, and calls out in the code and documentation |
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where they are used. |
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Develop for the Web with Caution |
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-------------------------------- |
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Always keep security in mind when building web applications. |
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If you write a web application, you are probably allowing users to register |
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and leave their data on your server. The users are entrusting you with data. |
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And even if you are the only user that might leave data in your application, |
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you still want that data to be stored securely. |
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Unfortunately, there are many ways the security of a web application can be |
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compromised. Flask protects you against one of the most common security |
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problems of modern web applications: cross-site scripting (XSS). Unless you |
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deliberately mark insecure HTML as secure, Flask and the underlying Jinja2 |
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template engine have you covered. But there are many more ways to cause |
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security problems. |
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The documentation will warn you about aspects of web development that require |
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attention to security. Some of these security concerns are far more complex |
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than one might think, and we all sometimes underestimate the likelihood that a |
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vulnerability will be exploited - until a clever attacker figures out a way to |
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exploit our applications. And don't think that your application is not |
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important enough to attract an attacker. Depending on the kind of attack, |
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chances are that automated bots are probing for ways to fill your database with |
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spam, links to malicious software, and the like. |
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Flask is no different from any other framework in that you the developer must |
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build with caution, watching for exploits when building to your requirements. |
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The Status of Python 3 |
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---------------------- |
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Currently the Python community is in the process of improving libraries to |
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support the new iteration of the Python programming language. While the |
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situation is greatly improving there are still some issues that make it |
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hard for users to switch over to Python 3 just now. These problems are |
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partially caused by changes in the language that went unreviewed for too |
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long, partially also because we have not quite worked out how the lower- |
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level API should change to account for the Unicode differences in Python 3. |
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We strongly recommend using Python 2.6 and 2.7 with activated Python 3 |
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warnings during development. If you plan on upgrading to Python 3 in the |
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near future we strongly recommend that you read `How to write forwards |
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compatible Python code |
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<http://lucumr.pocoo.org/2011/1/22/forwards-compatible-python/>`_. |
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If you do want to dive into Python 3 already have a look at the |
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:ref:`python3-support` page. |
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Continue to :ref:`installation` or the :ref:`quickstart`.
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