| from __future__ import annotations |
|
|
| import collections.abc as cabc |
| import inspect |
| import os |
| import sys |
| import typing as t |
| import weakref |
| from datetime import timedelta |
| from functools import update_wrapper |
| from inspect import iscoroutinefunction |
| from itertools import chain |
| from types import TracebackType |
| from urllib.parse import quote as _url_quote |
|
|
| import click |
| from werkzeug.datastructures import Headers |
| from werkzeug.datastructures import ImmutableDict |
| from werkzeug.exceptions import BadRequestKeyError |
| from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException |
| from werkzeug.exceptions import InternalServerError |
| from werkzeug.routing import BuildError |
| from werkzeug.routing import MapAdapter |
| from werkzeug.routing import RequestRedirect |
| from werkzeug.routing import RoutingException |
| from werkzeug.routing import Rule |
| from werkzeug.serving import is_running_from_reloader |
| from werkzeug.wrappers import Response as BaseResponse |
| from werkzeug.wsgi import get_host |
|
|
| from . import cli |
| from . import typing as ft |
| from .ctx import AppContext |
| from .globals import _cv_app |
| from .globals import app_ctx |
| from .globals import g |
| from .globals import request |
| from .globals import session |
| from .helpers import _CollectErrors |
| from .helpers import get_debug_flag |
| from .helpers import get_flashed_messages |
| from .helpers import get_load_dotenv |
| from .helpers import send_from_directory |
| from .sansio.app import App |
| from .sessions import SecureCookieSessionInterface |
| from .sessions import SessionInterface |
| from .signals import appcontext_tearing_down |
| from .signals import got_request_exception |
| from .signals import request_finished |
| from .signals import request_started |
| from .signals import request_tearing_down |
| from .templating import Environment |
| from .wrappers import Request |
| from .wrappers import Response |
|
|
| if t.TYPE_CHECKING: |
| from _typeshed.wsgi import StartResponse |
| from _typeshed.wsgi import WSGIEnvironment |
|
|
| from .testing import FlaskClient |
| from .testing import FlaskCliRunner |
| from .typing import HeadersValue |
|
|
| T_shell_context_processor = t.TypeVar( |
| "T_shell_context_processor", bound=ft.ShellContextProcessorCallable |
| ) |
| T_teardown = t.TypeVar("T_teardown", bound=ft.TeardownCallable) |
| T_template_filter = t.TypeVar("T_template_filter", bound=ft.TemplateFilterCallable) |
| T_template_global = t.TypeVar("T_template_global", bound=ft.TemplateGlobalCallable) |
| T_template_test = t.TypeVar("T_template_test", bound=ft.TemplateTestCallable) |
|
|
|
|
| def _make_timedelta(value: timedelta | int | None) -> timedelta | None: |
| if value is None or isinstance(value, timedelta): |
| return value |
|
|
| return timedelta(seconds=value) |
|
|
|
|
| F = t.TypeVar("F", bound=t.Callable[..., t.Any]) |
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
| def remove_ctx(f: F) -> F: |
| def wrapper(self: Flask, *args: t.Any, **kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Any: |
| if args and isinstance(args[0], AppContext): |
| args = args[1:] |
|
|
| return f(self, *args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| return update_wrapper(wrapper, f) |
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
| def add_ctx(f: F) -> F: |
| def wrapper(self: Flask, *args: t.Any, **kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Any: |
| if not args: |
| args = (app_ctx._get_current_object(),) |
| elif not isinstance(args[0], AppContext): |
| args = (app_ctx._get_current_object(), *args) |
|
|
| return f(self, *args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| return update_wrapper(wrapper, f) |
|
|
|
|
| class Flask(App): |
| """The flask object implements a WSGI application and acts as the central |
| object. It is passed the name of the module or package of the |
| application. Once it is created it will act as a central registry for |
| the view functions, the URL rules, template configuration and much more. |
| |
| The name of the package is used to resolve resources from inside the |
| package or the folder the module is contained in depending on if the |
| package parameter resolves to an actual python package (a folder with |
| an :file:`__init__.py` file inside) or a standard module (just a ``.py`` file). |
| |
| For more information about resource loading, see :func:`open_resource`. |
| |
| Usually you create a :class:`Flask` instance in your main module or |
| in the :file:`__init__.py` file of your package like this:: |
| |
| from flask import Flask |
| app = Flask(__name__) |
| |
| .. admonition:: About the First Parameter |
| |
| The idea of the first parameter is to give Flask an idea of what |
| belongs to your application. This name is used to find resources |
| on the filesystem, can be used by extensions to improve debugging |
| information and a lot more. |
| |
| So it's important what you provide there. If you are using a single |
| module, `__name__` is always the correct value. If you however are |
| using a package, it's usually recommended to hardcode the name of |
| your package there. |
| |
| For example if your application is defined in :file:`yourapplication/app.py` |
| you should create it with one of the two versions below:: |
| |
| app = Flask('yourapplication') |
| app = Flask(__name__.split('.')[0]) |
| |
| Why is that? The application will work even with `__name__`, thanks |
| to how resources are looked up. However it will make debugging more |
| painful. Certain extensions can make assumptions based on the |
| import name of your application. For example the Flask-SQLAlchemy |
| extension will look for the code in your application that triggered |
| an SQL query in debug mode. If the import name is not properly set |
| up, that debugging information is lost. (For example it would only |
| pick up SQL queries in `yourapplication.app` and not |
| `yourapplication.views.frontend`) |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| The `static_url_path`, `static_folder`, and `template_folder` |
| parameters were added. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.8 |
| The `instance_path` and `instance_relative_config` parameters were |
| added. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.11 |
| The `root_path` parameter was added. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
| The ``host_matching`` and ``static_host`` parameters were added. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
| The ``subdomain_matching`` parameter was added. Subdomain |
| matching needs to be enabled manually now. Setting |
| :data:`SERVER_NAME` does not implicitly enable it. |
| |
| :param import_name: the name of the application package |
| :param static_url_path: can be used to specify a different path for the |
| static files on the web. Defaults to the name |
| of the `static_folder` folder. |
| :param static_folder: The folder with static files that is served at |
| ``static_url_path``. Relative to the application ``root_path`` |
| or an absolute path. Defaults to ``'static'``. |
| :param static_host: the host to use when adding the static route. |
| Defaults to None. Required when using ``host_matching=True`` |
| with a ``static_folder`` configured. |
| :param host_matching: set ``url_map.host_matching`` attribute. |
| Defaults to False. |
| :param subdomain_matching: consider the subdomain relative to |
| :data:`SERVER_NAME` when matching routes. Defaults to False. |
| :param template_folder: the folder that contains the templates that should |
| be used by the application. Defaults to |
| ``'templates'`` folder in the root path of the |
| application. |
| :param instance_path: An alternative instance path for the application. |
| By default the folder ``'instance'`` next to the |
| package or module is assumed to be the instance |
| path. |
| :param instance_relative_config: if set to ``True`` relative filenames |
| for loading the config are assumed to |
| be relative to the instance path instead |
| of the application root. |
| :param root_path: The path to the root of the application files. |
| This should only be set manually when it can't be detected |
| automatically, such as for namespace packages. |
| """ |
|
|
| default_config = ImmutableDict( |
| { |
| "DEBUG": None, |
| "TESTING": False, |
| "PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS": None, |
| "SECRET_KEY": None, |
| "SECRET_KEY_FALLBACKS": None, |
| "PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME": timedelta(days=31), |
| "USE_X_SENDFILE": False, |
| "TRUSTED_HOSTS": None, |
| "SERVER_NAME": None, |
| "APPLICATION_ROOT": "/", |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_NAME": "session", |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN": None, |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_PATH": None, |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY": True, |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE": False, |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_PARTITIONED": False, |
| "SESSION_COOKIE_SAMESITE": None, |
| "SESSION_REFRESH_EACH_REQUEST": True, |
| "MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH": None, |
| "MAX_FORM_MEMORY_SIZE": 500_000, |
| "MAX_FORM_PARTS": 1_000, |
| "SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT": None, |
| "TRAP_BAD_REQUEST_ERRORS": None, |
| "TRAP_HTTP_EXCEPTIONS": False, |
| "EXPLAIN_TEMPLATE_LOADING": False, |
| "PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME": "http", |
| "TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD": None, |
| "MAX_COOKIE_SIZE": 4093, |
| "PROVIDE_AUTOMATIC_OPTIONS": True, |
| } |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| |
| request_class: type[Request] = Request |
|
|
| |
| |
| response_class: type[Response] = Response |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| session_interface: SessionInterface = SecureCookieSessionInterface() |
|
|
| def __init_subclass__(cls, **kwargs: t.Any) -> None: |
| import warnings |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| for method in ( |
| cls.handle_http_exception, |
| cls.handle_user_exception, |
| cls.handle_exception, |
| cls.log_exception, |
| cls.dispatch_request, |
| cls.full_dispatch_request, |
| cls.finalize_request, |
| cls.make_default_options_response, |
| cls.preprocess_request, |
| cls.process_response, |
| cls.do_teardown_request, |
| cls.do_teardown_appcontext, |
| ): |
| base_method = getattr(Flask, method.__name__) |
|
|
| if method is base_method: |
| |
| continue |
|
|
| |
| iter_params = iter(inspect.signature(method).parameters.values()) |
| next(iter_params) |
| param = next(iter_params, None) |
|
|
| |
| if param is None or not ( |
| |
| (param.annotation is inspect.Parameter.empty and param.name == "ctx") |
| or ( |
| |
| isinstance(param.annotation, str) |
| and param.annotation.rpartition(".")[2] == "AppContext" |
| ) |
| or ( |
| |
| inspect.isclass(param.annotation) |
| and issubclass(param.annotation, AppContext) |
| ) |
| ): |
| warnings.warn( |
| f"The '{method.__name__}' method now takes 'ctx: AppContext'" |
| " as the first parameter. The old signature is deprecated" |
| " and will not be supported in Flask 4.0.", |
| DeprecationWarning, |
| stacklevel=2, |
| ) |
| setattr(cls, method.__name__, remove_ctx(method)) |
| setattr(Flask, method.__name__, add_ctx(base_method)) |
|
|
| def __init__( |
| self, |
| import_name: str, |
| static_url_path: str | None = None, |
| static_folder: str | os.PathLike[str] | None = "static", |
| static_host: str | None = None, |
| host_matching: bool = False, |
| subdomain_matching: bool = False, |
| template_folder: str | os.PathLike[str] | None = "templates", |
| instance_path: str | None = None, |
| instance_relative_config: bool = False, |
| root_path: str | None = None, |
| ): |
| super().__init__( |
| import_name=import_name, |
| static_url_path=static_url_path, |
| static_folder=static_folder, |
| static_host=static_host, |
| host_matching=host_matching, |
| subdomain_matching=subdomain_matching, |
| template_folder=template_folder, |
| instance_path=instance_path, |
| instance_relative_config=instance_relative_config, |
| root_path=root_path, |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| self.cli = cli.AppGroup() |
|
|
| |
| |
| self.cli.name = self.name |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| if self.has_static_folder: |
| assert bool(static_host) == host_matching, ( |
| "Invalid static_host/host_matching combination" |
| ) |
| |
| |
| self_ref = weakref.ref(self) |
| self.add_url_rule( |
| f"{self.static_url_path}/<path:filename>", |
| endpoint="static", |
| host=static_host, |
| view_func=lambda **kw: self_ref().send_static_file(**kw), |
| ) |
|
|
| def get_send_file_max_age(self, filename: str | None) -> int | None: |
| """Used by :func:`send_file` to determine the ``max_age`` cache |
| value for a given file path if it wasn't passed. |
| |
| By default, this returns :data:`SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT` from |
| the configuration of :data:`~flask.current_app`. This defaults |
| to ``None``, which tells the browser to use conditional requests |
| instead of a timed cache, which is usually preferable. |
| |
| Note this is a duplicate of the same method in the Flask |
| class. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.0 |
| The default configuration is ``None`` instead of 12 hours. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| """ |
| value = self.config["SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT"] |
|
|
| if value is None: |
| return None |
|
|
| if isinstance(value, timedelta): |
| return int(value.total_seconds()) |
|
|
| return value |
|
|
| def send_static_file(self, filename: str) -> Response: |
| """The view function used to serve files from |
| :attr:`static_folder`. A route is automatically registered for |
| this view at :attr:`static_url_path` if :attr:`static_folder` is |
| set. |
| |
| Note this is a duplicate of the same method in the Flask |
| class. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| """ |
| if not self.has_static_folder: |
| raise RuntimeError("'static_folder' must be set to serve static_files.") |
|
|
| |
| |
| max_age = self.get_send_file_max_age(filename) |
| return send_from_directory( |
| t.cast(str, self.static_folder), filename, max_age=max_age |
| ) |
|
|
| def open_resource( |
| self, resource: str, mode: str = "rb", encoding: str | None = None |
| ) -> t.IO[t.AnyStr]: |
| """Open a resource file relative to :attr:`root_path` for reading. |
| |
| For example, if the file ``schema.sql`` is next to the file |
| ``app.py`` where the ``Flask`` app is defined, it can be opened |
| with: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| with app.open_resource("schema.sql") as f: |
| conn.executescript(f.read()) |
| |
| :param resource: Path to the resource relative to :attr:`root_path`. |
| :param mode: Open the file in this mode. Only reading is supported, |
| valid values are ``"r"`` (or ``"rt"``) and ``"rb"``. |
| :param encoding: Open the file with this encoding when opening in text |
| mode. This is ignored when opening in binary mode. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.1 |
| Added the ``encoding`` parameter. |
| """ |
| if mode not in {"r", "rt", "rb"}: |
| raise ValueError("Resources can only be opened for reading.") |
|
|
| path = os.path.join(self.root_path, resource) |
|
|
| if mode == "rb": |
| return open(path, mode) |
|
|
| return open(path, mode, encoding=encoding) |
|
|
| def open_instance_resource( |
| self, resource: str, mode: str = "rb", encoding: str | None = "utf-8" |
| ) -> t.IO[t.AnyStr]: |
| """Open a resource file relative to the application's instance folder |
| :attr:`instance_path`. Unlike :meth:`open_resource`, files in the |
| instance folder can be opened for writing. |
| |
| :param resource: Path to the resource relative to :attr:`instance_path`. |
| :param mode: Open the file in this mode. |
| :param encoding: Open the file with this encoding when opening in text |
| mode. This is ignored when opening in binary mode. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.1 |
| Added the ``encoding`` parameter. |
| """ |
| path = os.path.join(self.instance_path, resource) |
|
|
| if "b" in mode: |
| return open(path, mode) |
|
|
| return open(path, mode, encoding=encoding) |
|
|
| def create_jinja_environment(self) -> Environment: |
| """Create the Jinja environment based on :attr:`jinja_options` |
| and the various Jinja-related methods of the app. Changing |
| :attr:`jinja_options` after this will have no effect. Also adds |
| Flask-related globals and filters to the environment. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.11 |
| ``Environment.auto_reload`` set in accordance with |
| ``TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD`` configuration option. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| """ |
| options = dict(self.jinja_options) |
|
|
| if "autoescape" not in options: |
| options["autoescape"] = self.select_jinja_autoescape |
|
|
| if "auto_reload" not in options: |
| auto_reload = self.config["TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD"] |
|
|
| if auto_reload is None: |
| auto_reload = self.debug |
|
|
| options["auto_reload"] = auto_reload |
|
|
| rv = self.jinja_environment(self, **options) |
| rv.globals.update( |
| url_for=self.url_for, |
| get_flashed_messages=get_flashed_messages, |
| config=self.config, |
| |
| |
| |
| request=request, |
| session=session, |
| g=g, |
| ) |
| rv.policies["json.dumps_function"] = self.json.dumps |
| return rv |
|
|
| def create_url_adapter(self, request: Request | None) -> MapAdapter | None: |
| """Creates a URL adapter for the given request. The URL adapter |
| is created at a point where the request context is not yet set |
| up so the request is passed explicitly. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.1 |
| If :data:`SERVER_NAME` is set, it does not restrict requests to |
| only that domain, for both ``subdomain_matching`` and |
| ``host_matching``. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| :data:`SERVER_NAME` no longer implicitly enables subdomain |
| matching. Use :attr:`subdomain_matching` instead. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.9 |
| This can be called outside a request when the URL adapter is created |
| for an application context. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
| """ |
| if request is not None: |
| if (trusted_hosts := self.config["TRUSTED_HOSTS"]) is not None: |
| request.trusted_hosts = trusted_hosts |
|
|
| |
| request.host = get_host(request.environ, request.trusted_hosts) |
| subdomain = None |
| server_name = self.config["SERVER_NAME"] |
|
|
| if self.url_map.host_matching: |
| |
| |
| server_name = None |
| elif not self.subdomain_matching: |
| |
| |
| |
| subdomain = self.url_map.default_subdomain or "" |
|
|
| return self.url_map.bind_to_environ( |
| request.environ, server_name=server_name, subdomain=subdomain |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| if self.config["SERVER_NAME"] is not None: |
| return self.url_map.bind( |
| self.config["SERVER_NAME"], |
| script_name=self.config["APPLICATION_ROOT"], |
| url_scheme=self.config["PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME"], |
| ) |
|
|
| return None |
|
|
| def raise_routing_exception(self, request: Request) -> t.NoReturn: |
| """Intercept routing exceptions and possibly do something else. |
| |
| In debug mode, intercept a routing redirect and replace it with |
| an error if the body will be discarded. |
| |
| With modern Werkzeug this shouldn't occur, since it now uses a |
| 308 status which tells the browser to resend the method and |
| body. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.1 |
| Don't intercept 307 and 308 redirects. |
| |
| :meta private: |
| :internal: |
| """ |
| if ( |
| not self.debug |
| or not isinstance(request.routing_exception, RequestRedirect) |
| or request.routing_exception.code in {307, 308} |
| or request.method in {"GET", "HEAD", "OPTIONS"} |
| ): |
| raise request.routing_exception |
|
|
| from .debughelpers import FormDataRoutingRedirect |
|
|
| raise FormDataRoutingRedirect(request) |
|
|
| def update_template_context( |
| self, ctx: AppContext, context: dict[str, t.Any] |
| ) -> None: |
| """Update the template context with some commonly used variables. |
| This injects request, session, config and g into the template |
| context as well as everything template context processors want |
| to inject. Note that the as of Flask 0.6, the original values |
| in the context will not be overridden if a context processor |
| decides to return a value with the same key. |
| |
| :param context: the context as a dictionary that is updated in place |
| to add extra variables. |
| """ |
| names: t.Iterable[str | None] = (None,) |
|
|
| |
| if ctx.has_request: |
| names = chain(names, reversed(ctx.request.blueprints)) |
|
|
| |
| |
| orig_ctx = context.copy() |
|
|
| for name in names: |
| if name in self.template_context_processors: |
| for func in self.template_context_processors[name]: |
| context.update(self.ensure_sync(func)()) |
|
|
| context.update(orig_ctx) |
|
|
| def make_shell_context(self) -> dict[str, t.Any]: |
| """Returns the shell context for an interactive shell for this |
| application. This runs all the registered shell context |
| processors. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.11 |
| """ |
| rv = {"app": self, "g": g} |
| for processor in self.shell_context_processors: |
| rv.update(processor()) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def run( |
| self, |
| host: str | None = None, |
| port: int | None = None, |
| debug: bool | None = None, |
| load_dotenv: bool = True, |
| **options: t.Any, |
| ) -> None: |
| """Runs the application on a local development server. |
| |
| Do not use ``run()`` in a production setting. It is not intended to |
| meet security and performance requirements for a production server. |
| Instead, see :doc:`/deploying/index` for WSGI server recommendations. |
| |
| If the :attr:`debug` flag is set the server will automatically reload |
| for code changes and show a debugger in case an exception happened. |
| |
| If you want to run the application in debug mode, but disable the |
| code execution on the interactive debugger, you can pass |
| ``use_evalex=False`` as parameter. This will keep the debugger's |
| traceback screen active, but disable code execution. |
| |
| It is not recommended to use this function for development with |
| automatic reloading as this is badly supported. Instead you should |
| be using the :command:`flask` command line script's ``run`` support. |
| |
| .. admonition:: Keep in Mind |
| |
| Flask will suppress any server error with a generic error page |
| unless it is in debug mode. As such to enable just the |
| interactive debugger without the code reloading, you have to |
| invoke :meth:`run` with ``debug=True`` and ``use_reloader=False``. |
| Setting ``use_debugger`` to ``True`` without being in debug mode |
| won't catch any exceptions because there won't be any to |
| catch. |
| |
| :param host: the hostname to listen on. Set this to ``'0.0.0.0'`` to |
| have the server available externally as well. Defaults to |
| ``'127.0.0.1'`` or the host in the ``SERVER_NAME`` config variable |
| if present. |
| :param port: the port of the webserver. Defaults to ``5000`` or the |
| port defined in the ``SERVER_NAME`` config variable if present. |
| :param debug: if given, enable or disable debug mode. See |
| :attr:`debug`. |
| :param load_dotenv: Load the nearest :file:`.env` and :file:`.flaskenv` |
| files to set environment variables. Will also change the working |
| directory to the directory containing the first file found. |
| :param options: the options to be forwarded to the underlying Werkzeug |
| server. See :func:`werkzeug.serving.run_simple` for more |
| information. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| If installed, python-dotenv will be used to load environment |
| variables from :file:`.env` and :file:`.flaskenv` files. |
| |
| The :envvar:`FLASK_DEBUG` environment variable will override :attr:`debug`. |
| |
| Threaded mode is enabled by default. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.10 |
| The default port is now picked from the ``SERVER_NAME`` |
| variable. |
| """ |
| |
| |
| if os.environ.get("FLASK_RUN_FROM_CLI") == "true": |
| if not is_running_from_reloader(): |
| click.secho( |
| " * Ignoring a call to 'app.run()' that would block" |
| " the current 'flask' CLI command.\n" |
| " Only call 'app.run()' in an 'if __name__ ==" |
| ' "__main__"\' guard.', |
| fg="red", |
| ) |
|
|
| return |
|
|
| if get_load_dotenv(load_dotenv): |
| cli.load_dotenv() |
|
|
| |
| if "FLASK_DEBUG" in os.environ: |
| self.debug = get_debug_flag() |
|
|
| |
| if debug is not None: |
| self.debug = bool(debug) |
|
|
| server_name = self.config.get("SERVER_NAME") |
| sn_host = sn_port = None |
|
|
| if server_name: |
| sn_host, _, sn_port = server_name.partition(":") |
|
|
| if not host: |
| if sn_host: |
| host = sn_host |
| else: |
| host = "127.0.0.1" |
|
|
| if port or port == 0: |
| port = int(port) |
| elif sn_port: |
| port = int(sn_port) |
| else: |
| port = 5000 |
|
|
| options.setdefault("use_reloader", self.debug) |
| options.setdefault("use_debugger", self.debug) |
| options.setdefault("threaded", True) |
|
|
| cli.show_server_banner(self.debug, self.name) |
|
|
| from werkzeug.serving import run_simple |
|
|
| try: |
| run_simple(t.cast(str, host), port, self, **options) |
| finally: |
| |
| |
| |
| self._got_first_request = False |
|
|
| def test_client(self, use_cookies: bool = True, **kwargs: t.Any) -> FlaskClient: |
| """Creates a test client for this application. For information |
| about unit testing head over to :doc:`/testing`. |
| |
| Note that if you are testing for assertions or exceptions in your |
| application code, you must set ``app.testing = True`` in order for the |
| exceptions to propagate to the test client. Otherwise, the exception |
| will be handled by the application (not visible to the test client) and |
| the only indication of an AssertionError or other exception will be a |
| 500 status code response to the test client. See the :attr:`testing` |
| attribute. For example:: |
| |
| app.testing = True |
| client = app.test_client() |
| |
| The test client can be used in a ``with`` block to defer the closing down |
| of the context until the end of the ``with`` block. This is useful if |
| you want to access the context locals for testing:: |
| |
| with app.test_client() as c: |
| rv = c.get('/?vodka=42') |
| assert request.args['vodka'] == '42' |
| |
| Additionally, you may pass optional keyword arguments that will then |
| be passed to the application's :attr:`test_client_class` constructor. |
| For example:: |
| |
| from flask.testing import FlaskClient |
| |
| class CustomClient(FlaskClient): |
| def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| self._authentication = kwargs.pop("authentication") |
| super(CustomClient,self).__init__( *args, **kwargs) |
| |
| app.test_client_class = CustomClient |
| client = app.test_client(authentication='Basic ....') |
| |
| See :class:`~flask.testing.FlaskClient` for more information. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.4 |
| added support for ``with`` block usage for the client. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| The `use_cookies` parameter was added as well as the ability |
| to override the client to be used by setting the |
| :attr:`test_client_class` attribute. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.11 |
| Added `**kwargs` to support passing additional keyword arguments to |
| the constructor of :attr:`test_client_class`. |
| """ |
| cls = self.test_client_class |
| if cls is None: |
| from .testing import FlaskClient as cls |
| return cls( |
| self, self.response_class, use_cookies=use_cookies, **kwargs |
| ) |
|
|
| def test_cli_runner(self, **kwargs: t.Any) -> FlaskCliRunner: |
| """Create a CLI runner for testing CLI commands. |
| See :ref:`testing-cli`. |
| |
| Returns an instance of :attr:`test_cli_runner_class`, by default |
| :class:`~flask.testing.FlaskCliRunner`. The Flask app object is |
| passed as the first argument. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
| """ |
| cls = self.test_cli_runner_class |
|
|
| if cls is None: |
| from .testing import FlaskCliRunner as cls |
|
|
| return cls(self, **kwargs) |
|
|
| def handle_http_exception( |
| self, ctx: AppContext, e: HTTPException |
| ) -> HTTPException | ft.ResponseReturnValue: |
| """Handles an HTTP exception. By default this will invoke the |
| registered error handlers and fall back to returning the |
| exception as response. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0.3 |
| ``RoutingException``, used internally for actions such as |
| slash redirects during routing, is not passed to error |
| handlers. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| Exceptions are looked up by code *and* by MRO, so |
| ``HTTPException`` subclasses can be handled with a catch-all |
| handler for the base ``HTTPException``. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.3 |
| """ |
| |
| |
| if e.code is None: |
| return e |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| if isinstance(e, RoutingException): |
| return e |
|
|
| handler = self._find_error_handler(e, ctx.request.blueprints) |
| if handler is None: |
| return e |
| return self.ensure_sync(handler)(e) |
|
|
| def handle_user_exception( |
| self, ctx: AppContext, e: Exception |
| ) -> HTTPException | ft.ResponseReturnValue: |
| """This method is called whenever an exception occurs that |
| should be handled. A special case is :class:`~werkzeug |
| .exceptions.HTTPException` which is forwarded to the |
| :meth:`handle_http_exception` method. This function will either |
| return a response value or reraise the exception with the same |
| traceback. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| Key errors raised from request data like ``form`` show the |
| bad key in debug mode rather than a generic bad request |
| message. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
| if isinstance(e, BadRequestKeyError) and ( |
| self.debug or self.config["TRAP_BAD_REQUEST_ERRORS"] |
| ): |
| e.show_exception = True |
|
|
| if isinstance(e, HTTPException) and not self.trap_http_exception(e): |
| return self.handle_http_exception(ctx, e) |
|
|
| handler = self._find_error_handler(e, ctx.request.blueprints) |
|
|
| if handler is None: |
| raise |
|
|
| return self.ensure_sync(handler)(e) |
|
|
| def handle_exception(self, ctx: AppContext, e: Exception) -> Response: |
| """Handle an exception that did not have an error handler |
| associated with it, or that was raised from an error handler. |
| This always causes a 500 ``InternalServerError``. |
| |
| Always sends the :data:`got_request_exception` signal. |
| |
| If :data:`PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS` is ``True``, such as in debug |
| mode, the error will be re-raised so that the debugger can |
| display it. Otherwise, the original exception is logged, and |
| an :exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.InternalServerError` is returned. |
| |
| If an error handler is registered for ``InternalServerError`` or |
| ``500``, it will be used. For consistency, the handler will |
| always receive the ``InternalServerError``. The original |
| unhandled exception is available as ``e.original_exception``. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.1.0 |
| Always passes the ``InternalServerError`` instance to the |
| handler, setting ``original_exception`` to the unhandled |
| error. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.1.0 |
| ``after_request`` functions and other finalization is done |
| even for the default 500 response when there is no handler. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.3 |
| """ |
| exc_info = sys.exc_info() |
| got_request_exception.send(self, _async_wrapper=self.ensure_sync, exception=e) |
| propagate = self.config["PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS"] |
|
|
| if propagate is None: |
| propagate = self.testing or self.debug |
|
|
| if propagate: |
| |
| |
| if exc_info[1] is e: |
| raise |
|
|
| raise e |
|
|
| self.log_exception(ctx, exc_info) |
| server_error: InternalServerError | ft.ResponseReturnValue |
| server_error = InternalServerError(original_exception=e) |
| handler = self._find_error_handler(server_error, ctx.request.blueprints) |
|
|
| if handler is not None: |
| server_error = self.ensure_sync(handler)(server_error) |
|
|
| return self.finalize_request(ctx, server_error, from_error_handler=True) |
|
|
| def log_exception( |
| self, |
| ctx: AppContext, |
| exc_info: tuple[type, BaseException, TracebackType] | tuple[None, None, None], |
| ) -> None: |
| """Logs an exception. This is called by :meth:`handle_exception` |
| if debugging is disabled and right before the handler is called. |
| The default implementation logs the exception as error on the |
| :attr:`logger`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.8 |
| """ |
| self.logger.error( |
| f"Exception on {ctx.request.path} [{ctx.request.method}]", exc_info=exc_info |
| ) |
|
|
| def dispatch_request(self, ctx: AppContext) -> ft.ResponseReturnValue: |
| """Does the request dispatching. Matches the URL and returns the |
| return value of the view or error handler. This does not have to |
| be a response object. In order to convert the return value to a |
| proper response object, call :func:`make_response`. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.7 |
| This no longer does the exception handling, this code was |
| moved to the new :meth:`full_dispatch_request`. |
| """ |
| req = ctx.request |
|
|
| if req.routing_exception is not None: |
| self.raise_routing_exception(req) |
| rule: Rule = req.url_rule |
| |
| |
| if ( |
| getattr(rule, "provide_automatic_options", False) |
| and req.method == "OPTIONS" |
| ): |
| return self.make_default_options_response(ctx) |
| |
| view_args: dict[str, t.Any] = req.view_args |
| return self.ensure_sync(self.view_functions[rule.endpoint])(**view_args) |
|
|
| def full_dispatch_request(self, ctx: AppContext) -> Response: |
| """Dispatches the request and on top of that performs request |
| pre and postprocessing as well as HTTP exception catching and |
| error handling. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
| if not self._got_first_request and self.should_ignore_error is not None: |
| import warnings |
|
|
| warnings.warn( |
| "The 'should_ignore_error' method is deprecated and will" |
| " be removed in Flask 3.3. Handle errors as needed in" |
| " teardown handlers instead.", |
| DeprecationWarning, |
| stacklevel=1, |
| ) |
|
|
| self._got_first_request = True |
|
|
| try: |
| request_started.send(self, _async_wrapper=self.ensure_sync) |
| rv = self.preprocess_request(ctx) |
| if rv is None: |
| rv = self.dispatch_request(ctx) |
| except Exception as e: |
| rv = self.handle_user_exception(ctx, e) |
| return self.finalize_request(ctx, rv) |
|
|
| def finalize_request( |
| self, |
| ctx: AppContext, |
| rv: ft.ResponseReturnValue | HTTPException, |
| from_error_handler: bool = False, |
| ) -> Response: |
| """Given the return value from a view function this finalizes |
| the request by converting it into a response and invoking the |
| postprocessing functions. This is invoked for both normal |
| request dispatching as well as error handlers. |
| |
| Because this means that it might be called as a result of a |
| failure a special safe mode is available which can be enabled |
| with the `from_error_handler` flag. If enabled, failures in |
| response processing will be logged and otherwise ignored. |
| |
| :internal: |
| """ |
| response = self.make_response(rv) |
| try: |
| response = self.process_response(ctx, response) |
| request_finished.send( |
| self, _async_wrapper=self.ensure_sync, response=response |
| ) |
| except Exception: |
| if not from_error_handler: |
| raise |
| self.logger.exception( |
| "Request finalizing failed with an error while handling an error" |
| ) |
| return response |
|
|
| def make_default_options_response(self, ctx: AppContext) -> Response: |
| """This method is called to create the default ``OPTIONS`` response. |
| This can be changed through subclassing to change the default |
| behavior of ``OPTIONS`` responses. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
| methods = ctx.url_adapter.allowed_methods() |
| rv = self.response_class() |
| rv.allow.update(methods) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def ensure_sync(self, func: t.Callable[..., t.Any]) -> t.Callable[..., t.Any]: |
| """Ensure that the function is synchronous for WSGI workers. |
| Plain ``def`` functions are returned as-is. ``async def`` |
| functions are wrapped to run and wait for the response. |
| |
| Override this method to change how the app runs async views. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.0 |
| """ |
| if iscoroutinefunction(func): |
| return self.async_to_sync(func) |
|
|
| return func |
|
|
| def async_to_sync( |
| self, func: t.Callable[..., t.Coroutine[t.Any, t.Any, t.Any]] |
| ) -> t.Callable[..., t.Any]: |
| """Return a sync function that will run the coroutine function. |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| result = app.async_to_sync(func)(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| Override this method to change how the app converts async code |
| to be synchronously callable. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.0 |
| """ |
| try: |
| from asgiref.sync import async_to_sync as asgiref_async_to_sync |
| except ImportError: |
| raise RuntimeError( |
| "Install Flask with the 'async' extra in order to use async views." |
| ) from None |
|
|
| return asgiref_async_to_sync(func) |
|
|
| def url_for( |
| self, |
| /, |
| endpoint: str, |
| *, |
| _anchor: str | None = None, |
| _method: str | None = None, |
| _scheme: str | None = None, |
| _external: bool | None = None, |
| **values: t.Any, |
| ) -> str: |
| """Generate a URL to the given endpoint with the given values. |
| |
| This is called by :func:`flask.url_for`, and can be called |
| directly as well. |
| |
| An *endpoint* is the name of a URL rule, usually added with |
| :meth:`@app.route() <route>`, and usually the same name as the |
| view function. A route defined in a :class:`~flask.Blueprint` |
| will prepend the blueprint's name separated by a ``.`` to the |
| endpoint. |
| |
| In some cases, such as email messages, you want URLs to include |
| the scheme and domain, like ``https://example.com/hello``. When |
| not in an active request, URLs will be external by default, but |
| this requires setting :data:`SERVER_NAME` so Flask knows what |
| domain to use. :data:`APPLICATION_ROOT` and |
| :data:`PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME` should also be configured as |
| needed. This config is only used when not in an active request. |
| |
| Functions can be decorated with :meth:`url_defaults` to modify |
| keyword arguments before the URL is built. |
| |
| If building fails for some reason, such as an unknown endpoint |
| or incorrect values, the app's :meth:`handle_url_build_error` |
| method is called. If that returns a string, that is returned, |
| otherwise a :exc:`~werkzeug.routing.BuildError` is raised. |
| |
| :param endpoint: The endpoint name associated with the URL to |
| generate. If this starts with a ``.``, the current blueprint |
| name (if any) will be used. |
| :param _anchor: If given, append this as ``#anchor`` to the URL. |
| :param _method: If given, generate the URL associated with this |
| method for the endpoint. |
| :param _scheme: If given, the URL will have this scheme if it |
| is external. |
| :param _external: If given, prefer the URL to be internal |
| (False) or require it to be external (True). External URLs |
| include the scheme and domain. When not in an active |
| request, URLs are external by default. |
| :param values: Values to use for the variable parts of the URL |
| rule. Unknown keys are appended as query string arguments, |
| like ``?a=b&c=d``. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.2 |
| Moved from ``flask.url_for``, which calls this method. |
| """ |
| if (ctx := _cv_app.get(None)) is not None and ctx.has_request: |
| url_adapter = ctx.url_adapter |
| blueprint_name = ctx.request.blueprint |
|
|
| |
| |
| if endpoint[:1] == ".": |
| if blueprint_name is not None: |
| endpoint = f"{blueprint_name}{endpoint}" |
| else: |
| endpoint = endpoint[1:] |
|
|
| |
| |
| if _external is None: |
| _external = _scheme is not None |
| else: |
| |
| |
| |
| if ctx is not None: |
| url_adapter = ctx.url_adapter |
| else: |
| url_adapter = self.create_url_adapter(None) |
|
|
| if url_adapter is None: |
| raise RuntimeError( |
| "Unable to build URLs outside an active request" |
| " without 'SERVER_NAME' configured. Also configure" |
| " 'APPLICATION_ROOT' and 'PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME' as" |
| " needed." |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| |
| if _external is None: |
| _external = True |
|
|
| |
| |
| if _scheme is not None and not _external: |
| raise ValueError("When specifying '_scheme', '_external' must be True.") |
|
|
| self.inject_url_defaults(endpoint, values) |
|
|
| try: |
| rv = url_adapter.build( |
| endpoint, |
| values, |
| method=_method, |
| url_scheme=_scheme, |
| force_external=_external, |
| ) |
| except BuildError as error: |
| values.update( |
| _anchor=_anchor, _method=_method, _scheme=_scheme, _external=_external |
| ) |
| return self.handle_url_build_error(error, endpoint, values) |
|
|
| if _anchor is not None: |
| _anchor = _url_quote(_anchor, safe="%!#$&'()*+,/:;=?@") |
| rv = f"{rv}#{_anchor}" |
|
|
| return rv |
|
|
| def make_response(self, rv: ft.ResponseReturnValue) -> Response: |
| """Convert the return value from a view function to an instance of |
| :attr:`response_class`. |
| |
| :param rv: the return value from the view function. The view function |
| must return a response. Returning ``None``, or the view ending |
| without returning, is not allowed. The following types are allowed |
| for ``view_rv``: |
| |
| ``str`` |
| A response object is created with the string encoded to UTF-8 |
| as the body. |
| |
| ``bytes`` |
| A response object is created with the bytes as the body. |
| |
| ``dict`` |
| A dictionary that will be jsonify'd before being returned. |
| |
| ``list`` |
| A list that will be jsonify'd before being returned. |
| |
| ``generator`` or ``iterator`` |
| A generator that returns ``str`` or ``bytes`` to be |
| streamed as the response. |
| |
| ``tuple`` |
| Either ``(body, status, headers)``, ``(body, status)``, or |
| ``(body, headers)``, where ``body`` is any of the other types |
| allowed here, ``status`` is a string or an integer, and |
| ``headers`` is a dictionary or a list of ``(key, value)`` |
| tuples. If ``body`` is a :attr:`response_class` instance, |
| ``status`` overwrites the exiting value and ``headers`` are |
| extended. |
| |
| :attr:`response_class` |
| The object is returned unchanged. |
| |
| other :class:`~werkzeug.wrappers.Response` class |
| The object is coerced to :attr:`response_class`. |
| |
| :func:`callable` |
| The function is called as a WSGI application. The result is |
| used to create a response object. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.2 |
| A generator will be converted to a streaming response. |
| A list will be converted to a JSON response. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.1 |
| A dict will be converted to a JSON response. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.9 |
| Previously a tuple was interpreted as the arguments for the |
| response object. |
| """ |
|
|
| status: int | None = None |
| headers: HeadersValue | None = None |
|
|
| |
| if isinstance(rv, tuple): |
| len_rv = len(rv) |
|
|
| |
| if len_rv == 3: |
| rv, status, headers = rv |
| |
| elif len_rv == 2: |
| if isinstance(rv[1], (Headers, dict, tuple, list)): |
| rv, headers = rv |
| else: |
| rv, status = rv |
| |
| else: |
| raise TypeError( |
| "The view function did not return a valid response tuple." |
| " The tuple must have the form (body, status, headers)," |
| " (body, status), or (body, headers)." |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| if rv is None: |
| raise TypeError( |
| f"The view function for {request.endpoint!r} did not" |
| " return a valid response. The function either returned" |
| " None or ended without a return statement." |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| if not isinstance(rv, self.response_class): |
| if isinstance(rv, (str, bytes, bytearray)) or isinstance(rv, cabc.Iterator): |
| |
| |
| |
| rv = self.response_class( |
| rv, |
| status=status, |
| headers=headers, |
| ) |
| status = headers = None |
| elif isinstance(rv, (dict, list)): |
| rv = self.json.response(rv) |
| elif isinstance(rv, BaseResponse) or callable(rv): |
| |
| |
| try: |
| rv = self.response_class.force_type( |
| rv, |
| request.environ, |
| ) |
| except TypeError as e: |
| raise TypeError( |
| f"{e}\nThe view function did not return a valid" |
| " response. The return type must be a string," |
| " dict, list, tuple with headers or status," |
| " Response instance, or WSGI callable, but it" |
| f" was a {type(rv).__name__}." |
| ).with_traceback(sys.exc_info()[2]) from None |
| else: |
| raise TypeError( |
| "The view function did not return a valid" |
| " response. The return type must be a string," |
| " dict, list, tuple with headers or status," |
| " Response instance, or WSGI callable, but it was a" |
| f" {type(rv).__name__}." |
| ) |
|
|
| rv = t.cast(Response, rv) |
| |
| if status is not None: |
| if isinstance(status, (str, bytes, bytearray)): |
| rv.status = status |
| else: |
| rv.status_code = status |
|
|
| |
| if headers: |
| rv.headers.update(headers) |
|
|
| return rv |
|
|
| def preprocess_request(self, ctx: AppContext) -> ft.ResponseReturnValue | None: |
| """Called before the request is dispatched. Calls |
| :attr:`url_value_preprocessors` registered with the app and the |
| current blueprint (if any). Then calls :attr:`before_request_funcs` |
| registered with the app and the blueprint. |
| |
| If any :meth:`before_request` handler returns a non-None value, the |
| value is handled as if it was the return value from the view, and |
| further request handling is stopped. |
| """ |
| req = ctx.request |
| names = (None, *reversed(req.blueprints)) |
|
|
| for name in names: |
| if name in self.url_value_preprocessors: |
| for url_func in self.url_value_preprocessors[name]: |
| url_func(req.endpoint, req.view_args) |
|
|
| for name in names: |
| if name in self.before_request_funcs: |
| for before_func in self.before_request_funcs[name]: |
| rv = self.ensure_sync(before_func)() |
|
|
| if rv is not None: |
| return rv |
|
|
| return None |
|
|
| def process_response(self, ctx: AppContext, response: Response) -> Response: |
| """Can be overridden in order to modify the response object |
| before it's sent to the WSGI server. By default this will |
| call all the :meth:`after_request` decorated functions. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| As of Flask 0.5 the functions registered for after request |
| execution are called in reverse order of registration. |
| |
| :param response: a :attr:`response_class` object. |
| :return: a new response object or the same, has to be an |
| instance of :attr:`response_class`. |
| """ |
| for func in ctx._after_request_functions: |
| response = self.ensure_sync(func)(response) |
|
|
| for name in chain(ctx.request.blueprints, (None,)): |
| if name in self.after_request_funcs: |
| for func in reversed(self.after_request_funcs[name]): |
| response = self.ensure_sync(func)(response) |
|
|
| if not self.session_interface.is_null_session(ctx._get_session()): |
| self.session_interface.save_session(self, ctx._get_session(), response) |
|
|
| return response |
|
|
| def do_teardown_request( |
| self, ctx: AppContext, exc: BaseException | None = None |
| ) -> None: |
| """Called after the request is dispatched and the response is finalized, |
| right before the request context is popped. Called by |
| :meth:`.AppContext.pop`. |
| |
| This calls all functions decorated with :meth:`teardown_request`, and |
| :meth:`Blueprint.teardown_request` if a blueprint handled the request. |
| Finally, the :data:`request_tearing_down` signal is sent. |
| |
| :param exc: An unhandled exception raised while dispatching the request. |
| Passed to each teardown function. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.2 |
| All callbacks are called rather than stopping on the first error. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.9 |
| Added the ``exc`` argument. |
| """ |
| collect_errors = _CollectErrors() |
|
|
| for name in chain(ctx.request.blueprints, (None,)): |
| if name in self.teardown_request_funcs: |
| for func in reversed(self.teardown_request_funcs[name]): |
| with collect_errors: |
| self.ensure_sync(func)(exc) |
|
|
| with collect_errors: |
| request_tearing_down.send(self, _async_wrapper=self.ensure_sync, exc=exc) |
|
|
| collect_errors.raise_any("Errors during request teardown") |
|
|
| def do_teardown_appcontext( |
| self, ctx: AppContext, exc: BaseException | None = None |
| ) -> None: |
| """Called right before the application context is popped. Called by |
| :meth:`.AppContext.pop`. |
| |
| This calls all functions decorated with :meth:`teardown_appcontext`. |
| Then the :data:`appcontext_tearing_down` signal is sent. |
| |
| :param exc: An unhandled exception raised while the context was active. |
| Passed to each teardown function. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.2 |
| All callbacks are called rather than stopping on the first error. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| """ |
| collect_errors = _CollectErrors() |
|
|
| for func in reversed(self.teardown_appcontext_funcs): |
| with collect_errors: |
| self.ensure_sync(func)(exc) |
|
|
| with collect_errors: |
| appcontext_tearing_down.send(self, _async_wrapper=self.ensure_sync, exc=exc) |
|
|
| collect_errors.raise_any("Errors during app teardown") |
|
|
| def app_context(self) -> AppContext: |
| """Create an :class:`.AppContext`. When the context is pushed, |
| :data:`.current_app` and :data:`.g` become available. |
| |
| A context is automatically pushed when handling each request, and when |
| running any ``flask`` CLI command. Use this as a ``with`` block to |
| manually push a context outside of those situations, such as during |
| setup or testing. |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| with app.app_context(): |
| init_db() |
| |
| See :doc:`/appcontext`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| """ |
| return AppContext(self) |
|
|
| def request_context(self, environ: WSGIEnvironment) -> AppContext: |
| """Create an :class:`.AppContext` with request information representing |
| the given WSGI environment. A context is automatically pushed when |
| handling each request. When the context is pushed, :data:`.request`, |
| :data:`.session`, :data:`g:, and :data:`.current_app` become available. |
| |
| This method should not be used in your own code. Creating a valid WSGI |
| environ is not trivial. Use :meth:`test_request_context` to correctly |
| create a WSGI environ and request context instead. |
| |
| See :doc:`/appcontext`. |
| |
| :param environ: A WSGI environment. |
| """ |
| return AppContext.from_environ(self, environ) |
|
|
| def test_request_context(self, *args: t.Any, **kwargs: t.Any) -> AppContext: |
| """Create an :class:`.AppContext` with request information created from |
| the given arguments. When the context is pushed, :data:`.request`, |
| :data:`.session`, :data:`g:, and :data:`.current_app` become available. |
| |
| This is useful during testing to run a function that uses request data |
| without dispatching a full request. Use this as a ``with`` block to push |
| a context. |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| with app.test_request_context(...): |
| generate_report() |
| |
| See :doc:`/appcontext`. |
| |
| Takes the same arguments as Werkzeug's |
| :class:`~werkzeug.test.EnvironBuilder`, with some defaults from |
| the application. See the linked Werkzeug docs for most of the |
| available arguments. Flask-specific behavior is listed here. |
| |
| :param path: URL path being requested. |
| :param base_url: Base URL where the app is being served, which |
| ``path`` is relative to. If not given, built from |
| :data:`PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME`, ``subdomain``, :data:`SERVER_NAME`, |
| and :data:`APPLICATION_ROOT`. |
| :param subdomain: Subdomain name to prepend to :data:`SERVER_NAME`. |
| :param url_scheme: Scheme to use instead of |
| :data:`PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME`. |
| :param data: The request body text or bytes,or a dict of form data. |
| :param json: If given, this is serialized as JSON and passed as |
| ``data``. Also defaults ``content_type`` to |
| ``application/json``. |
| :param args: Other positional arguments passed to |
| :class:`~werkzeug.test.EnvironBuilder`. |
| :param kwargs: Other keyword arguments passed to |
| :class:`~werkzeug.test.EnvironBuilder`. |
| """ |
| from .testing import EnvironBuilder |
|
|
| builder = EnvironBuilder(self, *args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| try: |
| environ = builder.get_environ() |
| finally: |
| builder.close() |
|
|
| return self.request_context(environ) |
|
|
| def wsgi_app( |
| self, environ: WSGIEnvironment, start_response: StartResponse |
| ) -> cabc.Iterable[bytes]: |
| """The actual WSGI application. This is not implemented in |
| :meth:`__call__` so that middlewares can be applied without |
| losing a reference to the app object. Instead of doing this:: |
| |
| app = MyMiddleware(app) |
| |
| It's a better idea to do this instead:: |
| |
| app.wsgi_app = MyMiddleware(app.wsgi_app) |
| |
| Then you still have the original application object around and |
| can continue to call methods on it. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.7 |
| Teardown events for the request and app contexts are called |
| even if an unhandled error occurs. Other events may not be |
| called depending on when an error occurs during dispatch. |
| |
| :param environ: A WSGI environment. |
| :param start_response: A callable accepting a status code, |
| a list of headers, and an optional exception context to |
| start the response. |
| """ |
| ctx = self.request_context(environ) |
| error: BaseException | None = None |
| try: |
| try: |
| ctx.push() |
| response = self.full_dispatch_request(ctx) |
| except Exception as e: |
| error = e |
| response = self.handle_exception(ctx, e) |
| except: |
| error = sys.exc_info()[1] |
| raise |
| return response(environ, start_response) |
| finally: |
| if "werkzeug.debug.preserve_context" in environ: |
| environ["werkzeug.debug.preserve_context"](ctx) |
|
|
| if ( |
| error is not None |
| and self.should_ignore_error is not None |
| and self.should_ignore_error(error) |
| ): |
| error = None |
|
|
| ctx.pop(error) |
|
|
| def __call__( |
| self, environ: WSGIEnvironment, start_response: StartResponse |
| ) -> cabc.Iterable[bytes]: |
| """The WSGI server calls the Flask application object as the |
| WSGI application. This calls :meth:`wsgi_app`, which can be |
| wrapped to apply middleware. |
| """ |
| return self.wsgi_app(environ, start_response) |
|
|