| | API |
| | === |
| |
|
| | .. module:: flask |
| |
|
| | This part of the documentation covers all the interfaces of Flask. For |
| | parts where Flask depends on external libraries, we document the most |
| | important right here and provide links to the canonical documentation. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Application Object |
| | ------------------ |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: Flask |
| | :members: |
| | :inherited-members: |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Blueprint Objects |
| | ----------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: Blueprint |
| | :members: |
| | :inherited-members: |
| |
|
| | Incoming Request Data |
| | --------------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: Request |
| | :members: |
| | :inherited-members: |
| | :exclude-members: json_module |
| |
|
| | .. attribute:: request |
| |
|
| | To access incoming request data, you can use the global `request` |
| | object. Flask parses incoming request data for you and gives you |
| | access to it through that global object. Internally Flask makes |
| | sure that you always get the correct data for the active thread if you |
| | are in a multithreaded environment. |
| |
|
| | This is a proxy. See :ref:`notes-on-proxies` for more information. |
| |
|
| | The request object is an instance of a :class:`~flask.Request`. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Response Objects |
| | ---------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.Response |
| | :members: |
| | :inherited-members: |
| | :exclude-members: json_module |
| |
|
| | Sessions |
| | -------- |
| |
|
| | If you have set :attr:`Flask.secret_key` (or configured it from |
| | :data:`SECRET_KEY`) you can use sessions in Flask applications. A session makes |
| | it possible to remember information from one request to another. The way Flask |
| | does this is by using a signed cookie. The user can look at the session |
| | contents, but can't modify it unless they know the secret key, so make sure to |
| | set that to something complex and unguessable. |
| |
|
| | To access the current session you can use the :class:`session` object: |
| |
|
| | .. class:: session |
| |
|
| | The session object works pretty much like an ordinary dict, with the |
| | difference that it keeps track of modifications. |
| |
|
| | This is a proxy. See :ref:`notes-on-proxies` for more information. |
| |
|
| | The following attributes are interesting: |
| |
|
| | .. attribute:: new |
| |
|
| | ``True`` if the session is new, ``False`` otherwise. |
| |
|
| | .. attribute:: modified |
| |
|
| | ``True`` if the session object detected a modification. Be advised |
| | that modifications on mutable structures are not picked up |
| | automatically, in that situation you have to explicitly set the |
| | attribute to ``True`` yourself. Here an example:: |
| | |
| | # this change is not picked up because a mutable object (here |
| | # a list) is changed. |
| | session['objects'].append(42) |
| | # so mark it as modified yourself |
| | session.modified = True |
| |
|
| | .. attribute:: permanent |
| |
|
| | If set to ``True`` the session lives for |
| | :attr:`~flask.Flask.permanent_session_lifetime` seconds. The |
| | default is 31 days. If set to ``False`` (which is the default) the |
| | session will be deleted when the user closes the browser. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Session Interface |
| | ----------------- |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.8 |
| |
|
| | The session interface provides a simple way to replace the session |
| | implementation that Flask is using. |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: flask.sessions |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: SessionInterface |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: SecureCookieSessionInterface |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: SecureCookieSession |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: NullSession |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: SessionMixin |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. admonition:: Notice |
| |
|
| | The ``PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME`` config key can also be an integer |
| | starting with Flask 0.8. Either catch this down yourself or use |
| | the :attr:`~flask.Flask.permanent_session_lifetime` attribute on the |
| | app which converts the result to an integer automatically. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Test Client |
| | ----------- |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: flask.testing |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: FlaskClient |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Test CLI Runner |
| | --------------- |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: flask.testing |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: FlaskCliRunner |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Application Globals |
| | ------------------- |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: flask |
| |
|
| | To share data that is valid for one request only from one function to |
| | another, a global variable is not good enough because it would break in |
| | threaded environments. Flask provides you with a special object that |
| | ensures it is only valid for the active request and that will return |
| | different values for each request. In a nutshell: it does the right |
| | thing, like it does for :class:`request` and :class:`session`. |
| |
|
| | .. data:: g |
| |
|
| | A namespace object that can store data during an |
| | :doc:`application context </appcontext>`. This is an instance of |
| | :attr:`Flask.app_ctx_globals_class`, which defaults to |
| | :class:`ctx._AppCtxGlobals`. |
| |
|
| | This is a good place to store resources during a request. For |
| | example, a ``before_request`` function could load a user object from |
| | a session id, then set ``g.user`` to be used in the view function. |
| |
|
| | This is a proxy. See :ref:`notes-on-proxies` for more information. |
| |
|
| | .. versionchanged:: 0.10 |
| | Bound to the application context instead of the request context. |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.ctx._AppCtxGlobals |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Useful Functions and Classes |
| | ---------------------------- |
| |
|
| | .. data:: current_app |
| |
|
| | A proxy to the application handling the current request. This is |
| | useful to access the application without needing to import it, or if |
| | it can't be imported, such as when using the application factory |
| | pattern or in blueprints and extensions. |
| |
|
| | This is only available when an |
| | :doc:`application context </appcontext>` is pushed. This happens |
| | automatically during requests and CLI commands. It can be controlled |
| | manually with :meth:`~flask.Flask.app_context`. |
| |
|
| | This is a proxy. See :ref:`notes-on-proxies` for more information. |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: has_request_context |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: copy_current_request_context |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: has_app_context |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: url_for |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: abort |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: redirect |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: make_response |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: after_this_request |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: send_file |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: send_from_directory |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: escape |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: Markup |
| | :members: escape, unescape, striptags |
| |
|
| | Message Flashing |
| | ---------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: flash |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: get_flashed_messages |
| |
|
| |
|
| | JSON Support |
| | ------------ |
| |
|
| | .. module:: flask.json |
| |
|
| | Flask uses the built-in :mod:`json` module for handling JSON. It will |
| | use the current blueprint's or application's JSON encoder and decoder |
| | for easier customization. By default it handles some extra data types: |
| |
|
| | - :class:`datetime.datetime` and :class:`datetime.date` are serialized |
| | to :rfc:`822` strings. This is the same as the HTTP date format. |
| | - :class:`uuid.UUID` is serialized to a string. |
| | - :class:`dataclasses.dataclass` is passed to |
| | :func:`dataclasses.asdict`. |
| | - :class:`~markupsafe.Markup` (or any object with a ``__html__`` |
| | method) will call the ``__html__`` method to get a string. |
| |
|
| | Jinja's ``|tojson`` filter is configured to use Flask's :func:`dumps` |
| | function. The filter marks the output with ``|safe`` automatically. Use |
| | the filter to render data inside ``<script>`` tags. |
| |
|
| | .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
|
| | <script> |
| | const names = {{ names|tosjon }}; |
| | renderChart(names, {{ axis_data|tojson }}); |
| | </script> |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: jsonify |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: dumps |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: dump |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: loads |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: load |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: JSONEncoder |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: JSONDecoder |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. automodule:: flask.json.tag |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Template Rendering |
| | ------------------ |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: flask |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: render_template |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: render_template_string |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: get_template_attribute |
| |
|
| | Configuration |
| | ------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: Config |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Stream Helpers |
| | -------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: stream_with_context |
| |
|
| | Useful Internals |
| | ---------------- |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.ctx.RequestContext |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. data:: _request_ctx_stack |
| |
|
| | The internal :class:`~werkzeug.local.LocalStack` that holds |
| | :class:`~flask.ctx.RequestContext` instances. Typically, the |
| | :data:`request` and :data:`session` proxies should be accessed |
| | instead of the stack. It may be useful to access the stack in |
| | extension code. |
| |
|
| | The following attributes are always present on each layer of the |
| | stack: |
| |
|
| | `app` |
| | the active Flask application. |
| |
|
| | `url_adapter` |
| | the URL adapter that was used to match the request. |
| |
|
| | `request` |
| | the current request object. |
| |
|
| | `session` |
| | the active session object. |
| |
|
| | `g` |
| | an object with all the attributes of the :data:`flask.g` object. |
| |
|
| | `flashes` |
| | an internal cache for the flashed messages. |
| |
|
| | Example usage:: |
| | |
| | from flask import _request_ctx_stack |
| |
|
| | def get_session(): |
| | ctx = _request_ctx_stack.top |
| | if ctx is not None: |
| | return ctx.session |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.ctx.AppContext |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. data:: _app_ctx_stack |
| |
|
| | The internal :class:`~werkzeug.local.LocalStack` that holds |
| | :class:`~flask.ctx.AppContext` instances. Typically, the |
| | :data:`current_app` and :data:`g` proxies should be accessed instead |
| | of the stack. Extensions can access the contexts on the stack as a |
| | namespace to store data. |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.blueprints.BlueprintSetupState |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. _core-signals-list: |
| |
|
| | Signals |
| | ------- |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
| |
|
| | .. data:: signals.signals_available |
| |
|
| | ``True`` if the signaling system is available. This is the case |
| | when `blinker`_ is installed. |
| |
|
| | The following signals exist in Flask: |
| |
|
| | .. data:: template_rendered |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when a template was successfully rendered. The |
| | signal is invoked with the instance of the template as `template` |
| | and the context as dictionary (named `context`). |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | def log_template_renders(sender, template, context, **extra): |
| | sender.logger.debug('Rendering template "%s" with context %s', |
| | template.name or 'string template', |
| | context) |
| |
|
| | from flask import template_rendered |
| | template_rendered.connect(log_template_renders, app) |
| |
|
| | .. data:: flask.before_render_template |
| | :noindex: |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent before template rendering process. The |
| | signal is invoked with the instance of the template as `template` |
| | and the context as dictionary (named `context`). |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | def log_template_renders(sender, template, context, **extra): |
| | sender.logger.debug('Rendering template "%s" with context %s', |
| | template.name or 'string template', |
| | context) |
| |
|
| | from flask import before_render_template |
| | before_render_template.connect(log_template_renders, app) |
| |
|
| | .. data:: request_started |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when the request context is set up, before |
| | any request processing happens. Because the request context is already |
| | bound, the subscriber can access the request with the standard global |
| | proxies such as :class:`~flask.request`. |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | def log_request(sender, **extra): |
| | sender.logger.debug('Request context is set up') |
| |
|
| | from flask import request_started |
| | request_started.connect(log_request, app) |
| |
|
| | .. data:: request_finished |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent right before the response is sent to the client. |
| | It is passed the response to be sent named `response`. |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | def log_response(sender, response, **extra): |
| | sender.logger.debug('Request context is about to close down. ' |
| | 'Response: %s', response) |
| |
|
| | from flask import request_finished |
| | request_finished.connect(log_response, app) |
| |
|
| | .. data:: got_request_exception |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when an unhandled exception happens during |
| | request processing, including when debugging. The exception is |
| | passed to the subscriber as ``exception``. |
| |
|
| | This signal is not sent for |
| | :exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.HTTPException`, or other exceptions that |
| | have error handlers registered, unless the exception was raised from |
| | an error handler. |
| |
|
| | This example shows how to do some extra logging if a theoretical |
| | ``SecurityException`` was raised: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | from flask import got_request_exception |
| |
|
| | def log_security_exception(sender, exception, **extra): |
| | if not isinstance(exception, SecurityException): |
| | return |
| |
|
| | security_logger.exception( |
| | f"SecurityException at {request.url!r}", |
| | exc_info=exception, |
| | ) |
| |
|
| | got_request_exception.connect(log_security_exception, app) |
| |
|
| | .. data:: request_tearing_down |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when the request is tearing down. This is always |
| | called, even if an exception is caused. Currently functions listening |
| | to this signal are called after the regular teardown handlers, but this |
| | is not something you can rely on. |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | def close_db_connection(sender, **extra): |
| | session.close() |
| |
|
| | from flask import request_tearing_down |
| | request_tearing_down.connect(close_db_connection, app) |
| |
|
| | As of Flask 0.9, this will also be passed an `exc` keyword argument |
| | that has a reference to the exception that caused the teardown if |
| | there was one. |
| |
|
| | .. data:: appcontext_tearing_down |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when the app context is tearing down. This is always |
| | called, even if an exception is caused. Currently functions listening |
| | to this signal are called after the regular teardown handlers, but this |
| | is not something you can rely on. |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | def close_db_connection(sender, **extra): |
| | session.close() |
| |
|
| | from flask import appcontext_tearing_down |
| | appcontext_tearing_down.connect(close_db_connection, app) |
| |
|
| | This will also be passed an `exc` keyword argument that has a reference |
| | to the exception that caused the teardown if there was one. |
| |
|
| | .. data:: appcontext_pushed |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when an application context is pushed. The sender |
| | is the application. This is usually useful for unittests in order to |
| | temporarily hook in information. For instance it can be used to |
| | set a resource early onto the `g` object. |
| |
|
| | Example usage:: |
| | |
| | from contextlib import contextmanager |
| | from flask import appcontext_pushed |
| |
|
| | @contextmanager |
| | def user_set(app, user): |
| | def handler(sender, **kwargs): |
| | g.user = user |
| | with appcontext_pushed.connected_to(handler, app): |
| | yield |
| |
|
| | And in the testcode:: |
| | |
| | def test_user_me(self): |
| | with user_set(app, 'john'): |
| | c = app.test_client() |
| | resp = c.get('/users/me') |
| | assert resp.data == 'username=john' |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.10 |
| |
|
| | .. data:: appcontext_popped |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when an application context is popped. The sender |
| | is the application. This usually falls in line with the |
| | :data:`appcontext_tearing_down` signal. |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.10 |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. data:: message_flashed |
| |
|
| | This signal is sent when the application is flashing a message. The |
| | messages is sent as `message` keyword argument and the category as |
| | `category`. |
| |
|
| | Example subscriber:: |
| | |
| | recorded = [] |
| | def record(sender, message, category, **extra): |
| | recorded.append((message, category)) |
| |
|
| | from flask import message_flashed |
| | message_flashed.connect(record, app) |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.10 |
| |
|
| | .. class:: signals.Namespace |
| |
|
| | An alias for :class:`blinker.base.Namespace` if blinker is available, |
| | otherwise a dummy class that creates fake signals. This class is |
| | available for Flask extensions that want to provide the same fallback |
| | system as Flask itself. |
| |
|
| | .. method:: signal(name, doc=None) |
| |
|
| | Creates a new signal for this namespace if blinker is available, |
| | otherwise returns a fake signal that has a send method that will |
| | do nothing but will fail with a :exc:`RuntimeError` for all other |
| | operations, including connecting. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _blinker: https://pypi.org/project/blinker/ |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Class-Based Views |
| | ----------------- |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: None |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.views.View |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: flask.views.MethodView |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. _url-route-registrations: |
| |
|
| | URL Route Registrations |
| | ----------------------- |
| |
|
| | Generally there are three ways to define rules for the routing system: |
| |
|
| | 1. You can use the :meth:`flask.Flask.route` decorator. |
| | 2. You can use the :meth:`flask.Flask.add_url_rule` function. |
| | 3. You can directly access the underlying Werkzeug routing system |
| | which is exposed as :attr:`flask.Flask.url_map`. |
| |
|
| | Variable parts in the route can be specified with angular brackets |
| | (``/user/<username>``). By default a variable part in the URL accepts any |
| | string without a slash however a different converter can be specified as |
| | well by using ``<converter:name>``. |
| |
|
| | Variable parts are passed to the view function as keyword arguments. |
| |
|
| | The following converters are available: |
| |
|
| | =========== =============================================== |
| | `string` accepts any text without a slash (the default) |
| | `int` accepts integers |
| | `float` like `int` but for floating point values |
| | `path` like the default but also accepts slashes |
| | `any` matches one of the items provided |
| | `uuid` accepts UUID strings |
| | =========== =============================================== |
| |
|
| | Custom converters can be defined using :attr:`flask.Flask.url_map`. |
| |
|
| | Here are some examples:: |
| | |
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | pass |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/<username>') |
| | def show_user(username): |
| | pass |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/post/<int:post_id>') |
| | def show_post(post_id): |
| | pass |
| |
|
| | An important detail to keep in mind is how Flask deals with trailing |
| | slashes. The idea is to keep each URL unique so the following rules |
| | apply: |
| |
|
| | 1. If a rule ends with a slash and is requested without a slash by the |
| | user, the user is automatically redirected to the same page with a |
| | trailing slash attached. |
| | 2. If a rule does not end with a trailing slash and the user requests the |
| | page with a trailing slash, a 404 not found is raised. |
| |
|
| | This is consistent with how web servers deal with static files. This |
| | also makes it possible to use relative link targets safely. |
| |
|
| | You can also define multiple rules for the same function. They have to be |
| | unique however. Defaults can also be specified. Here for example is a |
| | definition for a URL that accepts an optional page:: |
| | |
| | @app.route('/users/', defaults={'page': 1}) |
| | @app.route('/users/page/<int:page>') |
| | def show_users(page): |
| | pass |
| |
|
| | This specifies that ``/users/`` will be the URL for page one and |
| | ``/users/page/N`` will be the URL for page ``N``. |
| |
|
| | If a URL contains a default value, it will be redirected to its simpler |
| | form with a 301 redirect. In the above example, ``/users/page/1`` will |
| | be redirected to ``/users/``. If your route handles ``GET`` and ``POST`` |
| | requests, make sure the default route only handles ``GET``, as redirects |
| | can't preserve form data. :: |
| | |
| | @app.route('/region/', defaults={'id': 1}) |
| | @app.route('/region/<int:id>', methods=['GET', 'POST']) |
| | def region(id): |
| | pass |
| |
|
| | Here are the parameters that :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` and |
| | :meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule` accept. The only difference is that |
| | with the route parameter the view function is defined with the decorator |
| | instead of the `view_func` parameter. |
| |
|
| | =============== ========================================================== |
| | `rule` the URL rule as string |
| | `endpoint` the endpoint for the registered URL rule. Flask itself |
| | assumes that the name of the view function is the name |
| | of the endpoint if not explicitly stated. |
| | `view_func` the function to call when serving a request to the |
| | provided endpoint. If this is not provided one can |
| | specify the function later by storing it in the |
| | :attr:`~flask.Flask.view_functions` dictionary with the |
| | endpoint as key. |
| | `defaults` A dictionary with defaults for this rule. See the |
| | example above for how defaults work. |
| | `subdomain` specifies the rule for the subdomain in case subdomain |
| | matching is in use. If not specified the default |
| | subdomain is assumed. |
| | `**options` the options to be forwarded to the underlying |
| | :class:`~werkzeug.routing.Rule` object. A change to |
| | Werkzeug is handling of method options. methods is a list |
| | of methods this rule should be limited to (``GET``, ``POST`` |
| | etc.). By default a rule just listens for ``GET`` (and |
| | implicitly ``HEAD``). Starting with Flask 0.6, ``OPTIONS`` is |
| | implicitly added and handled by the standard request |
| | handling. They have to be specified as keyword arguments. |
| | =============== ========================================================== |
| |
|
| |
|
| | View Function Options |
| | --------------------- |
| |
|
| | For internal usage the view functions can have some attributes attached to |
| | customize behavior the view function would normally not have control over. |
| | The following attributes can be provided optionally to either override |
| | some defaults to :meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule` or general behavior: |
| |
|
| | - `__name__`: The name of a function is by default used as endpoint. If |
| | endpoint is provided explicitly this value is used. Additionally this |
| | will be prefixed with the name of the blueprint by default which |
| | cannot be customized from the function itself. |
| |
|
| | - `methods`: If methods are not provided when the URL rule is added, |
| | Flask will look on the view function object itself if a `methods` |
| | attribute exists. If it does, it will pull the information for the |
| | methods from there. |
| |
|
| | - `provide_automatic_options`: if this attribute is set Flask will |
| | either force enable or disable the automatic implementation of the |
| | HTTP ``OPTIONS`` response. This can be useful when working with |
| | decorators that want to customize the ``OPTIONS`` response on a per-view |
| | basis. |
| |
|
| | - `required_methods`: if this attribute is set, Flask will always add |
| | these methods when registering a URL rule even if the methods were |
| | explicitly overridden in the ``route()`` call. |
| |
|
| | Full example:: |
| | |
| | def index(): |
| | if request.method == 'OPTIONS': |
| | # custom options handling here |
| | ... |
| | return 'Hello World!' |
| | index.provide_automatic_options = False |
| | index.methods = ['GET', 'OPTIONS'] |
| |
|
| | app.add_url_rule('/', index) |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.8 |
| | The `provide_automatic_options` functionality was added. |
| |
|
| | Command Line Interface |
| | ---------------------- |
| |
|
| | .. currentmodule:: flask.cli |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: FlaskGroup |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: AppGroup |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autoclass:: ScriptInfo |
| | :members: |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: load_dotenv |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: with_appcontext |
| |
|
| | .. autofunction:: pass_script_info |
| |
|
| | Marks a function so that an instance of :class:`ScriptInfo` is passed |
| | as first argument to the click callback. |
| |
|
| | .. autodata:: run_command |
| |
|
| | .. autodata:: shell_command |
| |
|