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168 lines
6.2 KiB
168 lines
6.2 KiB
View Decorators |
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=============== |
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Python has a really interesting feature called function decorators. This |
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allow some really neat things for web applications. Because each view in |
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Flask is a function decorators can be used to inject additional |
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functionality to one or more functions. The :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` |
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decorator is the one you probably used already. But there are use cases |
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for implementing your own decorator. For instance, imagine you have a |
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view that should only be used by people that are logged in to. If a user |
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goes to the site and is not logged in, he should be redirected to the |
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login page. This is a good example of a use case where a decorator is an |
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excellent solution. |
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Login Required Decorator |
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------------------------ |
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So let's implement such a decorator. A decorator is a function that |
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returns a function. Pretty simple actually. The only thing you have to |
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keep in mind when implementing something like this is to update the |
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`__name__`, `__module__` and some other attributes of a function. This is |
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often forgotten, but you don't have to do that by hand, there is a |
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function for that that is used like a decorator (:func:`functools.wraps`). |
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This example assumes that the login page is called ``'login'`` and that |
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the current user is stored as `g.user` and `None` if there is no-one |
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logged in:: |
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from functools import wraps |
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from flask import g, request, redirect, url_for |
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def login_required(f): |
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@wraps(f) |
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def decorated_function(*args, **kwargs): |
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if g.user is None: |
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return redirect(url_for('login', next=request.url)) |
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return f(*args, **kwargs) |
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return decorated_function |
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So how would you use that decorator now? Apply it as innermost decorator |
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to a view function. When applying further decorators, always remember |
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that the :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` decorator is the outermost:: |
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@app.route('/secret_page') |
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@login_required |
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def secret_page(): |
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pass |
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Caching Decorator |
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----------------- |
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Imagine you have a view function that does an expensive calculation and |
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because of that you would like to cache the generated results for a |
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certain amount of time. A decorator would be nice for that. We're |
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assuming you have set up a cache like mentioned in :ref:`caching-pattern`. |
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Here an example cache function. It generates the cache key from a |
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specific prefix (actually a format string) and the current path of the |
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request. Notice that we are using a function that first creates the |
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decorator that then decorates the function. Sounds awful? Unfortunately |
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it is a little bit more complex, but the code should still be |
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straightforward to read. |
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The decorated function will then work as follows |
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1. get the unique cache key for the current request base on the current |
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path. |
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2. get the value for that key from the cache. If the cache returned |
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something we will return that value. |
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3. otherwise the original function is called and the return value is |
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stored in the cache for the timeout provided (by default 5 minutes). |
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Here the code:: |
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from functools import wraps |
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from flask import request |
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def cached(timeout=5 * 60, key='view/%s'): |
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def decorator(f): |
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@wraps(f) |
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def decorated_function(*args, **kwargs): |
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cache_key = key % request.path |
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rv = cache.get(cache_key) |
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if rv is not None: |
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return rv |
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rv = f(*args, **kwargs) |
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cache.set(cache_key, rv, timeout=timeout) |
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return rv |
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return decorated_function |
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return decorator |
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Notice that this assumes an instantiated `cache` object is available, see |
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:ref:`caching-pattern` for more information. |
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Templating Decorator |
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-------------------- |
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A common pattern invented by the TurboGears guys a while back is a |
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templating decorator. The idea of that decorator is that you return a |
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dictionary with the values passed to the template from the view function |
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and the template is automatically rendered. With that, the following |
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three examples do exactly the same:: |
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@app.route('/') |
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def index(): |
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return render_template('index.html', value=42) |
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@app.route('/') |
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@templated('index.html') |
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def index(): |
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return dict(value=42) |
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@app.route('/') |
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@templated() |
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def index(): |
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return dict(value=42) |
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As you can see, if no template name is provided it will use the endpoint |
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of the URL map with dots converted to slashes + ``'.html'``. Otherwise |
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the provided template name is used. When the decorated function returns, |
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the dictionary returned is passed to the template rendering function. If |
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`None` is returned, an empty dictionary is assumed, if something else than |
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a dictionary is returned we return it from the function unchanged. That |
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way you can still use the redirect function or return simple strings. |
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Here the code for that decorator:: |
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from functools import wraps |
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from flask import request |
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def templated(template=None): |
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def decorator(f): |
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@wraps(f) |
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def decorated_function(*args, **kwargs): |
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template_name = template |
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if template_name is None: |
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template_name = request.endpoint \ |
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.replace('.', '/') + '.html' |
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ctx = f(*args, **kwargs) |
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if ctx is None: |
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ctx = {} |
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elif not isinstance(ctx, dict): |
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return ctx |
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return render_template(template_name, **ctx) |
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return decorated_function |
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return decorator |
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Endpoint Decorator |
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------------------ |
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When you want to use the werkzeug routing system for more flexibility you |
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need to map the endpoint as defined in the :class:`~werkzeug.routing.Rule` |
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to a view function. This is possible with this decorator. For example:: |
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from flask import Flask |
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from werkzeug.routing import Rule |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.url_map.add(Rule('/', endpoint='index')) |
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@app.endpoint('index') |
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def my_index(): |
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return "Hello world" |
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