mirror of https://github.com/mitsuhiko/flask.git
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.
203 lines
8.0 KiB
203 lines
8.0 KiB
.. _blueprints: |
|
|
|
Modular Applications with Blueprints |
|
==================================== |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.7 |
|
|
|
Flask uses a concept of *blueprints* for making application components and |
|
supporting common patterns within an application or across applications. |
|
Blueprints can greatly simplify how large applications work and provide a |
|
central means for Flask extensions to register operations on applications. |
|
A :class:`Blueprint` object works similarly to a :class:`Flask` |
|
application object, but it is not actually an application. Rather it is a |
|
*blueprint* of how to construct or extend an application. |
|
|
|
Why Blueprints? |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
Blueprints in Flask are intended for these cases: |
|
|
|
* Factor an application into a set of blueprints. This is ideal for |
|
larger applications; a project could instantiate an application object, |
|
initialize several extensions, and register a collection of blueprints. |
|
* Register a blueprint on an application at a URL prefix and/or subdomain. |
|
Parameters in the URL prefix/subdomain become common view arguments |
|
(with defaults) across all view functions in the blueprint. |
|
* Register a blueprint multiple times on an application with different URL |
|
rules. |
|
* Provide template filters, static files, templates, and other utilities |
|
through blueprints. A blueprint does not have to implement applications |
|
or view functions. |
|
* Register a blueprint on an application for any of these cases when |
|
initializing a Flask extension. |
|
|
|
A blueprint in Flask is not a pluggable app because it is not actually an |
|
application -- it's a set of operations which can be registered on an |
|
application, even multiple times. Why not have multiple application |
|
objects? You can do that (see :ref:`app-dispatch`), but your applications |
|
will have separate configs and will be managed at the WSGI layer. |
|
|
|
Blueprints instead provide separation at the Flask level, share |
|
application config, and can change an application object as necessary with |
|
being registered. The downside is that you cannot unregister a blueprint |
|
once an application was created without having to destroy the whole |
|
application object. |
|
|
|
The Concept of Blueprints |
|
------------------------- |
|
|
|
The basic concept of blueprints is that they record operations to execute |
|
when registered on an application. Flask associates view functions with |
|
blueprints when dispatching requests and generating URLs from one endpoint |
|
to another. |
|
|
|
My First Blueprint |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This is what a very basic blueprint looks like. In this case we want to |
|
implement a blueprint that does simple rendering of static templates:: |
|
|
|
from flask import Blueprint, render_template, abort |
|
from jinja2 import TemplateNotFound |
|
|
|
simple_page = Blueprint('simple_page', __name__) |
|
|
|
@simple_page.route('/', defaults={'page': 'index'}) |
|
@simple_page.route('/<page>') |
|
def show(page): |
|
try: |
|
return render_template('pages/%s.html' % page) |
|
except TemplateNotFound: |
|
abort(404) |
|
|
|
When you bind a function with the help of the ``@simple_page.route`` |
|
decorator the blueprint will record the intention of registering the |
|
function `show` on the application when it's later registered. |
|
Additionally it will prefix the endpoint of the function with the |
|
name of the blueprint which was given to the :class:`Blueprint` |
|
constructor (in this case also ``simple_page``). |
|
|
|
Registering Blueprints |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
So how do you register that blueprint? Like this:: |
|
|
|
from flask import Flask |
|
from yourapplication.simple_page import simple_page |
|
|
|
app = Flask(__name__) |
|
app.register_blueprint(simple_page) |
|
|
|
If you check the rules registered on the application, you will find |
|
these:: |
|
|
|
[<Rule '/static/<filename>' (HEAD, OPTIONS, GET) -> static>, |
|
<Rule '/<page>' (HEAD, OPTIONS, GET) -> simple_page.show>, |
|
<Rule '/' (HEAD, OPTIONS, GET) -> simple_page.show>] |
|
|
|
The first one is obviously from the application ifself for the static |
|
files. The other two are for the `show` function of the ``simple_page`` |
|
blueprint. As you can see, they are also prefixed with the name of the |
|
blueprint and separated by a dot (``.``). |
|
|
|
Blueprints however can also be mounted at different locations:: |
|
|
|
app.register_blueprint(simple_page, url_prefix='/pages') |
|
|
|
And sure enough, these are the generated rules:: |
|
|
|
[<Rule '/static/<filename>' (HEAD, OPTIONS, GET) -> static>, |
|
<Rule '/pages/<page>' (HEAD, OPTIONS, GET) -> simple_page.show>, |
|
<Rule '/pages/' (HEAD, OPTIONS, GET) -> simple_page.show>] |
|
|
|
On top of that you can register blueprints multiple times though not every |
|
blueprint might respond properly to that. In fact it depends on how the |
|
blueprint is implemented if it can be mounted more than once. |
|
|
|
Blueprint Resources |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
Blueprints can provide resources as well. Sometimes you might want to |
|
introduce a blueprint only for the resources it provides. |
|
|
|
Blueprint Resource Folder |
|
````````````````````````` |
|
|
|
Like for regular applications, blueprints are considered to be contained |
|
in a folder. While multiple blueprints can origin from the same folder, |
|
it does not have to be the case and it's usually not recommended. |
|
|
|
The folder is infered from the second argument to :class:`Blueprint` which |
|
is ususally `__name__`. This argument specifies what logical Python |
|
module or package corresponds to the blueprint. If it points to an actual |
|
Python package that package (which is a folder on the filesystem) is the |
|
resource folder. If it's a module, the package the module is contained in |
|
will be the resource folder. You can access the |
|
:attr:`Blueprint.root_path` property to see what's the resource folder:: |
|
|
|
>>> simple_page.root_path |
|
'/Users/username/TestProject/yourapplication' |
|
|
|
To quickly open sources from this folder you can use the |
|
:meth:`~Blueprint.open_resource` function:: |
|
|
|
with simple_page.open_resource('static/style.css') as f: |
|
code = f.read() |
|
|
|
Static Files |
|
```````````` |
|
|
|
A blueprint can expose a folder with static files by providing a path to a |
|
folder on the filesystem via the `static_folder` keyword argument. It can |
|
either be an absolute path or one relative to the folder of the |
|
blueprint:: |
|
|
|
admin = Blueprint('admin', __name__, static_folder='static') |
|
|
|
By default the rightmost part of the path is where it is exposed on the |
|
web. Because the folder is called ``static`` here it will be available at |
|
the location of the blueprint + ``/static``. Say the blueprint is |
|
registered for ``/admin`` the static folder will be at ``/admin/static``. |
|
|
|
The endpoint is named `blueprint_name.static` so you can generate URLs to |
|
it like you would do to the static folder of the application:: |
|
|
|
url_for('admin.static', filename='style.css') |
|
|
|
Templates |
|
````````` |
|
|
|
If you want the blueprint to expose templates you can do that by providing |
|
the `template_folder` parameter to the :class:`Blueprint` constructor:: |
|
|
|
admin = Blueprint('admin', __name__, template_folder='templates') |
|
|
|
As for static files, the path can be absolute or relative to the blueprint |
|
resource folder. The template folder is added to the searchpath of |
|
templates but with a lower priority than the actual application's template |
|
folder. That way you can easily override templates that a blueprint |
|
provides in the actual application. |
|
|
|
So if you have a blueprint in the folder ``yourapplication/admin`` and you |
|
want to render the template ``'admin/index.html'`` and you have provided |
|
``templates`` as a `template_folder` you will have to create a file like |
|
this: ``yourapplication/admin/templates/admin/index.html``. |
|
|
|
Building URLs |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
If you want to link from one page to another you can use the |
|
:func:`url_for` function just like you normally would do just that you |
|
prefix the URL endpoint with the name of the blueprint and a dot (``.``):: |
|
|
|
url_for('admin.index') |
|
|
|
Additionally if you are in a view function of a blueprint or a rendered |
|
template and you want to link to another endpoint of the same blueprint, |
|
you can use relative redirects by prefixing the endpoint with a dot only:: |
|
|
|
url_for('.index') |
|
|
|
This will link to ``admin.index`` for instance in case the current request |
|
was dispatched to any other admin blueprint endpoint.
|
|
|