| | Quickstart |
| | ========== |
| |
|
| | Eager to get started? This page gives a good introduction to Flask. |
| | Follow :doc:`installation` to set up a project and install Flask first. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | A Minimal Application |
| | --------------------- |
| |
|
| | A minimal Flask application looks something like this: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | from flask import Flask |
| |
|
| | app = Flask(__name__) |
| |
|
| | @app.route("/") |
| | def hello_world(): |
| | return "<p>Hello, World!</p>" |
| |
|
| | So what did that code do? |
| |
|
| | 1. First we imported the :class:`~flask.Flask` class. An instance of |
| | this class will be our WSGI application. |
| | 2. Next we create an instance of this class. The first argument is the |
| | name of the application's module or package. ``__name__`` is a |
| | convenient shortcut for this that is appropriate for most cases. |
| | This is needed so that Flask knows where to look for resources such |
| | as templates and static files. |
| | 3. We then use the :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` decorator to tell Flask |
| | what URL should trigger our function. |
| | 4. The function returns the message we want to display in the user's |
| | browser. The default content type is HTML, so HTML in the string |
| | will be rendered by the browser. |
| |
|
| | Save it as :file:`hello.py` or something similar. Make sure to not call |
| | your application :file:`flask.py` because this would conflict with Flask |
| | itself. |
| |
|
| | To run the application, use the :command:`flask` command or |
| | :command:`python -m flask`. Before you can do that you need |
| | to tell your terminal the application to work with by exporting the |
| | ``FLASK_APP`` environment variable: |
| |
|
| | .. tabs:: |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: Bash |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | $ export FLASK_APP=hello |
| | $ flask run |
| | * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: Fish |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | $ set -x FLASK_APP hello |
| | $ flask run |
| | * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: CMD |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | > set FLASK_APP=hello |
| | > flask run |
| | * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: Powershell |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | > $env:FLASK_APP = "hello" |
| | > flask run |
| | * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
| |
|
| | .. admonition:: Application Discovery Behavior |
| |
|
| | As a shortcut, if the file is named ``app.py`` or ``wsgi.py``, you |
| | don't have to set the ``FLASK_APP`` environment variable. See |
| | :doc:`/cli` for more details. |
| |
|
| | This launches a very simple builtin server, which is good enough for |
| | testing but probably not what you want to use in production. For |
| | deployment options see :doc:`deploying/index`. |
| |
|
| | Now head over to http://127.0.0.1:5000/, and you should see your hello |
| | world greeting. |
| |
|
| | If another program is already using port 5000, you'll see |
| | ``OSError: [Errno 98]`` or ``OSError: [WinError 10013]`` when the |
| | server tries to start. See :ref:`address-already-in-use` for how to |
| | handle that. |
| |
|
| | .. _public-server: |
| |
|
| | .. admonition:: Externally Visible Server |
| |
|
| | If you run the server you will notice that the server is only accessible |
| | from your own computer, not from any other in the network. This is the |
| | default because in debugging mode a user of the application can execute |
| | arbitrary Python code on your computer. |
| |
|
| | If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network, |
| | you can make the server publicly available simply by adding |
| | ``--host=0.0.0.0`` to the command line:: |
| | |
| | $ flask run --host=0.0.0.0 |
| |
|
| | This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | What to do if the Server does not Start |
| | --------------------------------------- |
| |
|
| | In case the :command:`python -m flask` fails or :command:`flask` |
| | does not exist, there are multiple reasons this might be the case. |
| | First of all you need to look at the error message. |
| |
|
| | Old Version of Flask |
| | ```````````````````` |
| |
|
| | Versions of Flask older than 0.11 used to have different ways to start the |
| | application. In short, the :command:`flask` command did not exist, and |
| | neither did :command:`python -m flask`. In that case you have two options: |
| | either upgrade to newer Flask versions or have a look at :doc:`/server` |
| | to see the alternative method for running a server. |
| |
|
| | Invalid Import Name |
| | ``````````````````` |
| | |
| | The ``FLASK_APP`` environment variable is the name of the module to import at |
| | :command:`flask run`. In case that module is incorrectly named you will get an |
| | import error upon start (or if debug is enabled when you navigate to the |
| | application). It will tell you what it tried to import and why it failed. |
| |
|
| | The most common reason is a typo or because you did not actually create an |
| | ``app`` object. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Debug Mode |
| | ---------- |
| |
|
| | The ``flask run`` command can do more than just start the development |
| | server. By enabling debug mode, the server will automatically reload if |
| | code changes, and will show an interactive debugger in the browser if an |
| | error occurs during a request. |
| |
|
| | .. image:: _static/debugger.png |
| | :align: center |
| | :class: screenshot |
| | :alt: The interactive debugger in action. |
| |
|
| | .. warning:: |
| |
|
| | The debugger allows executing arbitrary Python code from the |
| | browser. It is protected by a pin, but still represents a major |
| | security risk. Do not run the development server or debugger in a |
| | production environment. |
| |
|
| | To enable all development features, set the ``FLASK_ENV`` environment |
| | variable to ``development`` before calling ``flask run``. |
| |
|
| | .. tabs:: |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: Bash |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | $ export FLASK_ENV=development |
| | $ flask run |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: Fish |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | $ set -x FLASK_ENV development |
| | $ flask run |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: CMD |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | > set FLASK_ENV=development |
| | > flask run |
| |
|
| | .. group-tab:: Powershell |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | > $env:FLASK_ENV = "development" |
| | > flask run |
| |
|
| | See also: |
| |
|
| | - :doc:`/server` and :doc:`/cli` for information about running in |
| | development mode. |
| | - :doc:`/debugging` for information about using the built-in debugger |
| | and other debuggers. |
| | - :doc:`/logging` and :doc:`/errorhandling` to log errors and display |
| | nice error pages. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | HTML Escaping |
| | ------------- |
| |
|
| | When returning HTML (the default response type in Flask), any |
| | user-provided values rendered in the output must be escaped to protect |
| | from injection attacks. HTML templates rendered with Jinja, introduced |
| | later, will do this automatically. |
| |
|
| | :func:`~markupsafe.escape`, shown here, can be used manually. It is |
| | omitted in most examples for brevity, but you should always be aware of |
| | how you're using untrusted data. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | from markupsafe import escape |
| |
|
| | @app.route("/<name>") |
| | def hello(name): |
| | return f"Hello, {escape(name)}!" |
| |
|
| | If a user managed to submit the name ``<script>alert("bad")</script>``, |
| | escaping causes it to be rendered as text, rather than running the |
| | script in the user's browser. |
| |
|
| | ``<name>`` in the route captures a value from the URL and passes it to |
| | the view function. These variable rules are explained below. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Routing |
| | ------- |
| |
|
| | Modern web applications use meaningful URLs to help users. Users are more |
| | likely to like a page and come back if the page uses a meaningful URL they can |
| | remember and use to directly visit a page. |
| |
|
| | Use the :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` decorator to bind a function to a URL. :: |
| | |
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | return 'Index Page' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/hello') |
| | def hello(): |
| | return 'Hello, World' |
| |
|
| | You can do more! You can make parts of the URL dynamic and attach multiple |
| | rules to a function. |
| |
|
| | Variable Rules |
| | `````````````` |
| | |
| | You can add variable sections to a URL by marking sections with |
| | ``<variable_name>``. Your function then receives the ``<variable_name>`` |
| | as a keyword argument. Optionally, you can use a converter to specify the type |
| | of the argument like ``<converter:variable_name>``. :: |
| | |
| | from markupsafe import escape |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/user/<username>') |
| | def show_user_profile(username): |
| | # show the user profile for that user |
| | return f'User {escape(username)}' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/post/<int:post_id>') |
| | def show_post(post_id): |
| | # show the post with the given id, the id is an integer |
| | return f'Post {post_id}' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/path/<path:subpath>') |
| | def show_subpath(subpath): |
| | # show the subpath after /path/ |
| | return f'Subpath {escape(subpath)}' |
| |
|
| | Converter types: |
| |
|
| | ========== ========================================== |
| | ``string`` (default) accepts any text without a slash |
| | ``int`` accepts positive integers |
| | ``float`` accepts positive floating point values |
| | ``path`` like ``string`` but also accepts slashes |
| | ``uuid`` accepts UUID strings |
| | ========== ========================================== |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Unique URLs / Redirection Behavior |
| | `````````````````````````````````` |
| | |
| | The following two rules differ in their use of a trailing slash. :: |
| | |
| | @app.route('/projects/') |
| | def projects(): |
| | return 'The project page' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/about') |
| | def about(): |
| | return 'The about page' |
| |
|
| | The canonical URL for the ``projects`` endpoint has a trailing slash. |
| | It's similar to a folder in a file system. If you access the URL without |
| | a trailing slash (``/projects``), Flask redirects you to the canonical URL |
| | with the trailing slash (``/projects/``). |
| |
|
| | The canonical URL for the ``about`` endpoint does not have a trailing |
| | slash. It's similar to the pathname of a file. Accessing the URL with a |
| | trailing slash (``/about/``) produces a 404 "Not Found" error. This helps |
| | keep URLs unique for these resources, which helps search engines avoid |
| | indexing the same page twice. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _url-building: |
| |
|
| | URL Building |
| | ```````````` |
| |
|
| | To build a URL to a specific function, use the :func:`~flask.url_for` function. |
| | It accepts the name of the function as its first argument and any number of |
| | keyword arguments, each corresponding to a variable part of the URL rule. |
| | Unknown variable parts are appended to the URL as query parameters. |
| |
|
| | Why would you want to build URLs using the URL reversing function |
| | :func:`~flask.url_for` instead of hard-coding them into your templates? |
| |
|
| | 1. Reversing is often more descriptive than hard-coding the URLs. |
| | 2. You can change your URLs in one go instead of needing to remember to |
| | manually change hard-coded URLs. |
| | 3. URL building handles escaping of special characters transparently. |
| | 4. The generated paths are always absolute, avoiding unexpected behavior |
| | of relative paths in browsers. |
| | 5. If your application is placed outside the URL root, for example, in |
| | ``/myapplication`` instead of ``/``, :func:`~flask.url_for` properly |
| | handles that for you. |
| |
|
| | For example, here we use the :meth:`~flask.Flask.test_request_context` method |
| | to try out :func:`~flask.url_for`. :meth:`~flask.Flask.test_request_context` |
| | tells Flask to behave as though it's handling a request even while we use a |
| | Python shell. See :ref:`context-locals`. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | from flask import url_for |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | return 'index' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/login') |
| | def login(): |
| | return 'login' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/user/<username>') |
| | def profile(username): |
| | return f'{username}\'s profile' |
| |
|
| | with app.test_request_context(): |
| | print(url_for('index')) |
| | print(url_for('login')) |
| | print(url_for('login', next='/')) |
| | print(url_for('profile', username='John Doe')) |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: text |
| |
|
| | / |
| | /login |
| | /login?next=/ |
| | /user/John%20Doe |
| |
|
| |
|
| | HTTP Methods |
| | ```````````` |
| |
|
| | Web applications use different HTTP methods when accessing URLs. You should |
| | familiarize yourself with the HTTP methods as you work with Flask. By default, |
| | a route only answers to ``GET`` requests. You can use the ``methods`` argument |
| | of the :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` decorator to handle different HTTP methods. |
| | :: |
| |
|
| | from flask import request |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/login', methods=['GET', 'POST']) |
| | def login(): |
| | if request.method == 'POST': |
| | return do_the_login() |
| | else: |
| | return show_the_login_form() |
| |
|
| | If ``GET`` is present, Flask automatically adds support for the ``HEAD`` method |
| | and handles ``HEAD`` requests according to the `HTTP RFC`_. Likewise, |
| | ``OPTIONS`` is automatically implemented for you. |
| |
|
| | .. _HTTP RFC: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2068.txt |
| |
|
| | Static Files |
| | ------------ |
| |
|
| | Dynamic web applications also need static files. That's usually where |
| | the CSS and JavaScript files are coming from. Ideally your web server is |
| | configured to serve them for you, but during development Flask can do that |
| | as well. Just create a folder called :file:`static` in your package or next to |
| | your module and it will be available at ``/static`` on the application. |
| |
|
| | To generate URLs for static files, use the special ``'static'`` endpoint name:: |
| | |
| | url_for('static', filename='style.css') |
| |
|
| | The file has to be stored on the filesystem as :file:`static/style.css`. |
| |
|
| | Rendering Templates |
| | ------------------- |
| |
|
| | Generating HTML from within Python is not fun, and actually pretty |
| | cumbersome because you have to do the HTML escaping on your own to keep |
| | the application secure. Because of that Flask configures the `Jinja2 |
| | <https://palletsprojects.com/p/jinja/>`_ template engine for you automatically. |
| |
|
| | To render a template you can use the :func:`~flask.render_template` |
| | method. All you have to do is provide the name of the template and the |
| | variables you want to pass to the template engine as keyword arguments. |
| | Here's a simple example of how to render a template:: |
| | |
| | from flask import render_template |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/hello/') |
| | @app.route('/hello/<name>') |
| | def hello(name=None): |
| | return render_template('hello.html', name=name) |
| |
|
| | Flask will look for templates in the :file:`templates` folder. So if your |
| | application is a module, this folder is next to that module, if it's a |
| | package it's actually inside your package: |
| |
|
| | **Case 1**: a module:: |
| | |
| | /application.py |
| | /templates |
| | /hello.html |
| |
|
| | **Case 2**: a package:: |
| | |
| | /application |
| | /__init__.py |
| | /templates |
| | /hello.html |
| |
|
| | For templates you can use the full power of Jinja2 templates. Head over |
| | to the official `Jinja2 Template Documentation |
| | <https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/templates/>`_ for more information. |
| |
|
| | Here is an example template: |
| |
|
| | .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
|
| | <!doctype html> |
| | <title>Hello from Flask</title> |
| | {% if name %} |
| | <h1>Hello {{ name }}!</h1> |
| | {% else %} |
| | <h1>Hello, World!</h1> |
| | {% endif %} |
| |
|
| | Inside templates you also have access to the :data:`~flask.Flask.config`, |
| | :class:`~flask.request`, :class:`~flask.session` and :class:`~flask.g` [#]_ objects |
| | as well as the :func:`~flask.url_for` and :func:`~flask.get_flashed_messages` functions. |
| |
|
| | Templates are especially useful if inheritance is used. If you want to |
| | know how that works, see :doc:`patterns/templateinheritance`. Basically |
| | template inheritance makes it possible to keep certain elements on each |
| | page (like header, navigation and footer). |
| |
|
| | Automatic escaping is enabled, so if ``name`` contains HTML it will be escaped |
| | automatically. If you can trust a variable and you know that it will be |
| | safe HTML (for example because it came from a module that converts wiki |
| | markup to HTML) you can mark it as safe by using the |
| | :class:`~markupsafe.Markup` class or by using the ``|safe`` filter in the |
| | template. Head over to the Jinja 2 documentation for more examples. |
| |
|
| | Here is a basic introduction to how the :class:`~markupsafe.Markup` class works:: |
| | |
| | >>> from markupsafe import Markup |
| | >>> Markup('<strong>Hello %s!</strong>') % '<blink>hacker</blink>' |
| | Markup('<strong>Hello <blink>hacker</blink>!</strong>') |
| | >>> Markup.escape('<blink>hacker</blink>') |
| | Markup('<blink>hacker</blink>') |
| | >>> Markup('<em>Marked up</em> » HTML').striptags() |
| | 'Marked up » HTML' |
| |
|
| | .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| |
|
| | Autoescaping is no longer enabled for all templates. The following |
| | extensions for templates trigger autoescaping: ``.html``, ``.htm``, |
| | ``.xml``, ``.xhtml``. Templates loaded from a string will have |
| | autoescaping disabled. |
| |
|
| | .. [#] Unsure what that :class:`~flask.g` object is? It's something in which |
| | you can store information for your own needs. See the documentation |
| | for :class:`flask.g` and :doc:`patterns/sqlite3`. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Accessing Request Data |
| | ---------------------- |
| |
|
| | For web applications it's crucial to react to the data a client sends to |
| | the server. In Flask this information is provided by the global |
| | :class:`~flask.request` object. If you have some experience with Python |
| | you might be wondering how that object can be global and how Flask |
| | manages to still be threadsafe. The answer is context locals: |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _context-locals: |
| |
|
| | Context Locals |
| | `````````````` |
| | |
| | .. admonition:: Insider Information |
| |
|
| | If you want to understand how that works and how you can implement |
| | tests with context locals, read this section, otherwise just skip it. |
| |
|
| | Certain objects in Flask are global objects, but not of the usual kind. |
| | These objects are actually proxies to objects that are local to a specific |
| | context. What a mouthful. But that is actually quite easy to understand. |
| |
|
| | Imagine the context being the handling thread. A request comes in and the |
| | web server decides to spawn a new thread (or something else, the |
| | underlying object is capable of dealing with concurrency systems other |
| | than threads). When Flask starts its internal request handling it |
| | figures out that the current thread is the active context and binds the |
| | current application and the WSGI environments to that context (thread). |
| | It does that in an intelligent way so that one application can invoke another |
| | application without breaking. |
| |
|
| | So what does this mean to you? Basically you can completely ignore that |
| | this is the case unless you are doing something like unit testing. You |
| | will notice that code which depends on a request object will suddenly break |
| | because there is no request object. The solution is creating a request |
| | object yourself and binding it to the context. The easiest solution for |
| | unit testing is to use the :meth:`~flask.Flask.test_request_context` |
| | context manager. In combination with the ``with`` statement it will bind a |
| | test request so that you can interact with it. Here is an example:: |
| | |
| | from flask import request |
| |
|
| | with app.test_request_context('/hello', method='POST'): |
| | # now you can do something with the request until the |
| | # end of the with block, such as basic assertions: |
| | assert request.path == '/hello' |
| | assert request.method == 'POST' |
| |
|
| | The other possibility is passing a whole WSGI environment to the |
| | :meth:`~flask.Flask.request_context` method:: |
| |
|
| | with app.request_context(environ): |
| | assert request.method == 'POST' |
| |
|
| | The Request Object |
| | `````````````````` |
| | |
| | The request object is documented in the API section and we will not cover |
| | it here in detail (see :class:`~flask.Request`). Here is a broad overview of |
| | some of the most common operations. First of all you have to import it from |
| | the ``flask`` module:: |
| | |
| | from flask import request |
| |
|
| | The current request method is available by using the |
| | :attr:`~flask.Request.method` attribute. To access form data (data |
| | transmitted in a ``POST`` or ``PUT`` request) you can use the |
| | :attr:`~flask.Request.form` attribute. Here is a full example of the two |
| | attributes mentioned above:: |
| | |
| | @app.route('/login', methods=['POST', 'GET']) |
| | def login(): |
| | error = None |
| | if request.method == 'POST': |
| | if valid_login(request.form['username'], |
| | request.form['password']): |
| | return log_the_user_in(request.form['username']) |
| | else: |
| | error = 'Invalid username/password' |
| | # the code below is executed if the request method |
| | # was GET or the credentials were invalid |
| | return render_template('login.html', error=error) |
| |
|
| | What happens if the key does not exist in the ``form`` attribute? In that |
| | case a special :exc:`KeyError` is raised. You can catch it like a |
| | standard :exc:`KeyError` but if you don't do that, a HTTP 400 Bad Request |
| | error page is shown instead. So for many situations you don't have to |
| | deal with that problem. |
| |
|
| | To access parameters submitted in the URL (``?key=value``) you can use the |
| | :attr:`~flask.Request.args` attribute:: |
| |
|
| | searchword = request.args.get('key', '') |
| |
|
| | We recommend accessing URL parameters with `get` or by catching the |
| | :exc:`KeyError` because users might change the URL and presenting them a 400 |
| | bad request page in that case is not user friendly. |
| |
|
| | For a full list of methods and attributes of the request object, head over |
| | to the :class:`~flask.Request` documentation. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | File Uploads |
| | ```````````` |
| |
|
| | You can handle uploaded files with Flask easily. Just make sure not to |
| | forget to set the ``enctype="multipart/form-data"`` attribute on your HTML |
| | form, otherwise the browser will not transmit your files at all. |
| |
|
| | Uploaded files are stored in memory or at a temporary location on the |
| | filesystem. You can access those files by looking at the |
| | :attr:`~flask.request.files` attribute on the request object. Each |
| | uploaded file is stored in that dictionary. It behaves just like a |
| | standard Python :class:`file` object, but it also has a |
| | :meth:`~werkzeug.datastructures.FileStorage.save` method that |
| | allows you to store that file on the filesystem of the server. |
| | Here is a simple example showing how that works:: |
| | |
| | from flask import request |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/upload', methods=['GET', 'POST']) |
| | def upload_file(): |
| | if request.method == 'POST': |
| | f = request.files['the_file'] |
| | f.save('/var/www/uploads/uploaded_file.txt') |
| | ... |
| |
|
| | If you want to know how the file was named on the client before it was |
| | uploaded to your application, you can access the |
| | :attr:`~werkzeug.datastructures.FileStorage.filename` attribute. |
| | However please keep in mind that this value can be forged |
| | so never ever trust that value. If you want to use the filename |
| | of the client to store the file on the server, pass it through the |
| | :func:`~werkzeug.utils.secure_filename` function that |
| | Werkzeug provides for you:: |
| | |
| | from werkzeug.utils import secure_filename |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/upload', methods=['GET', 'POST']) |
| | def upload_file(): |
| | if request.method == 'POST': |
| | file = request.files['the_file'] |
| | file.save(f"/var/www/uploads/{secure_filename(file.filename)}") |
| | ... |
| |
|
| | For some better examples, see :doc:`patterns/fileuploads`. |
| |
|
| | Cookies |
| | ``````` |
| | |
| | To access cookies you can use the :attr:`~flask.Request.cookies` |
| | attribute. To set cookies you can use the |
| | :attr:`~flask.Response.set_cookie` method of response objects. The |
| | :attr:`~flask.Request.cookies` attribute of request objects is a |
| | dictionary with all the cookies the client transmits. If you want to use |
| | sessions, do not use the cookies directly but instead use the |
| | :ref:`sessions` in Flask that add some security on top of cookies for you. |
| |
|
| | Reading cookies:: |
| | |
| | from flask import request |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | username = request.cookies.get('username') |
| | # use cookies.get(key) instead of cookies[key] to not get a |
| | # KeyError if the cookie is missing. |
| |
|
| | Storing cookies:: |
| | |
| | from flask import make_response |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | resp = make_response(render_template(...)) |
| | resp.set_cookie('username', 'the username') |
| | return resp |
| |
|
| | Note that cookies are set on response objects. Since you normally |
| | just return strings from the view functions Flask will convert them into |
| | response objects for you. If you explicitly want to do that you can use |
| | the :meth:`~flask.make_response` function and then modify it. |
| |
|
| | Sometimes you might want to set a cookie at a point where the response |
| | object does not exist yet. This is possible by utilizing the |
| | :doc:`patterns/deferredcallbacks` pattern. |
| |
|
| | For this also see :ref:`about-responses`. |
| |
|
| | Redirects and Errors |
| | -------------------- |
| |
|
| | To redirect a user to another endpoint, use the :func:`~flask.redirect` |
| | function; to abort a request early with an error code, use the |
| | :func:`~flask.abort` function:: |
| |
|
| | from flask import abort, redirect, url_for |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | return redirect(url_for('login')) |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/login') |
| | def login(): |
| | abort(401) |
| | this_is_never_executed() |
| |
|
| | This is a rather pointless example because a user will be redirected from |
| | the index to a page they cannot access (401 means access denied) but it |
| | shows how that works. |
| |
|
| | By default a black and white error page is shown for each error code. If |
| | you want to customize the error page, you can use the |
| | :meth:`~flask.Flask.errorhandler` decorator:: |
| |
|
| | from flask import render_template |
| |
|
| | @app.errorhandler(404) |
| | def page_not_found(error): |
| | return render_template('page_not_found.html'), 404 |
| |
|
| | Note the ``404`` after the :func:`~flask.render_template` call. This |
| | tells Flask that the status code of that page should be 404 which means |
| | not found. By default 200 is assumed which translates to: all went well. |
| |
|
| | See :doc:`errorhandling` for more details. |
| |
|
| | .. _about-responses: |
| |
|
| | About Responses |
| | --------------- |
| |
|
| | The return value from a view function is automatically converted into |
| | a response object for you. If the return value is a string it's |
| | converted into a response object with the string as response body, a |
| | ``200 OK`` status code and a :mimetype:`text/html` mimetype. If the |
| | return value is a dict, :func:`jsonify` is called to produce a response. |
| | The logic that Flask applies to converting return values into response |
| | objects is as follows: |
| |
|
| | 1. If a response object of the correct type is returned it's directly |
| | returned from the view. |
| | 2. If it's a string, a response object is created with that data and |
| | the default parameters. |
| | 3. If it's a dict, a response object is created using ``jsonify``. |
| | 4. If a tuple is returned the items in the tuple can provide extra |
| | information. Such tuples have to be in the form |
| | ``(response, status)``, ``(response, headers)``, or |
| | ``(response, status, headers)``. The ``status`` value will override |
| | the status code and ``headers`` can be a list or dictionary of |
| | additional header values. |
| | 5. If none of that works, Flask will assume the return value is a |
| | valid WSGI application and convert that into a response object. |
| |
|
| | If you want to get hold of the resulting response object inside the view |
| | you can use the :func:`~flask.make_response` function. |
| |
|
| | Imagine you have a view like this:: |
| | |
| | from flask import render_template |
| |
|
| | @app.errorhandler(404) |
| | def not_found(error): |
| | return render_template('error.html'), 404 |
| |
|
| | You just need to wrap the return expression with |
| | :func:`~flask.make_response` and get the response object to modify it, then |
| | return it:: |
| | |
| | from flask import make_response |
| |
|
| | @app.errorhandler(404) |
| | def not_found(error): |
| | resp = make_response(render_template('error.html'), 404) |
| | resp.headers['X-Something'] = 'A value' |
| | return resp |
| |
|
| |
|
| | APIs with JSON |
| | `````````````` |
| | |
| | A common response format when writing an API is JSON. It's easy to get |
| | started writing such an API with Flask. If you return a ``dict`` from a |
| | view, it will be converted to a JSON response. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | @app.route("/me") |
| | def me_api(): |
| | user = get_current_user() |
| | return { |
| | "username": user.username, |
| | "theme": user.theme, |
| | "image": url_for("user_image", filename=user.image), |
| | } |
| |
|
| | Depending on your API design, you may want to create JSON responses for |
| | types other than ``dict``. In that case, use the |
| | :func:`~flask.json.jsonify` function, which will serialize any supported |
| | JSON data type. Or look into Flask community extensions that support |
| | more complex applications. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | from flask import jsonify |
| |
|
| | @app.route("/users") |
| | def users_api(): |
| | users = get_all_users() |
| | return jsonify([user.to_json() for user in users]) |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _sessions: |
| |
|
| | Sessions |
| | -------- |
| |
|
| | In addition to the request object there is also a second object called |
| | :class:`~flask.session` which allows you to store information specific to a |
| | user from one request to the next. This is implemented on top of cookies |
| | for you and signs the cookies cryptographically. What this means is that |
| | the user could look at the contents of your cookie but not modify it, |
| | unless they know the secret key used for signing. |
| |
|
| | In order to use sessions you have to set a secret key. Here is how |
| | sessions work:: |
| | |
| | from flask import session |
| |
|
| | # Set the secret key to some random bytes. Keep this really secret! |
| | app.secret_key = b'_5#y2L"F4Q8z\n\xec]/' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/') |
| | def index(): |
| | if 'username' in session: |
| | return f'Logged in as {session["username"]}' |
| | return 'You are not logged in' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/login', methods=['GET', 'POST']) |
| | def login(): |
| | if request.method == 'POST': |
| | session['username'] = request.form['username'] |
| | return redirect(url_for('index')) |
| | return ''' |
| | <form method="post"> |
| | <p><input type=text name=username> |
| | <p><input type=submit value=Login> |
| | </form> |
| | ''' |
| |
|
| | @app.route('/logout') |
| | def logout(): |
| | # remove the username from the session if it's there |
| | session.pop('username', None) |
| | return redirect(url_for('index')) |
| |
|
| | .. admonition:: How to generate good secret keys |
| |
|
| | A secret key should be as random as possible. Your operating system has |
| | ways to generate pretty random data based on a cryptographic random |
| | generator. Use the following command to quickly generate a value for |
| | :attr:`Flask.secret_key` (or :data:`SECRET_KEY`):: |
| | |
| | $ python -c 'import secrets; print(secrets.token_hex())' |
| | '192b9bdd22ab9ed4d12e236c78afcb9a393ec15f71bbf5dc987d54727823bcbf' |
| |
|
| | A note on cookie-based sessions: Flask will take the values you put into the |
| | session object and serialize them into a cookie. If you are finding some |
| | values do not persist across requests, cookies are indeed enabled, and you are |
| | not getting a clear error message, check the size of the cookie in your page |
| | responses compared to the size supported by web browsers. |
| |
|
| | Besides the default client-side based sessions, if you want to handle |
| | sessions on the server-side instead, there are several |
| | Flask extensions that support this. |
| |
|
| | Message Flashing |
| | ---------------- |
| |
|
| | Good applications and user interfaces are all about feedback. If the user |
| | does not get enough feedback they will probably end up hating the |
| | application. Flask provides a really simple way to give feedback to a |
| | user with the flashing system. The flashing system basically makes it |
| | possible to record a message at the end of a request and access it on the next |
| | (and only the next) request. This is usually combined with a layout |
| | template to expose the message. |
| |
|
| | To flash a message use the :func:`~flask.flash` method, to get hold of the |
| | messages you can use :func:`~flask.get_flashed_messages` which is also |
| | available in the templates. See :doc:`patterns/flashing` for a full |
| | example. |
| |
|
| | Logging |
| | ------- |
| |
|
| | .. versionadded:: 0.3 |
| |
|
| | Sometimes you might be in a situation where you deal with data that |
| | should be correct, but actually is not. For example you may have |
| | some client-side code that sends an HTTP request to the server |
| | but it's obviously malformed. This might be caused by a user tampering |
| | with the data, or the client code failing. Most of the time it's okay |
| | to reply with ``400 Bad Request`` in that situation, but sometimes |
| | that won't do and the code has to continue working. |
| |
|
| | You may still want to log that something fishy happened. This is where |
| | loggers come in handy. As of Flask 0.3 a logger is preconfigured for you |
| | to use. |
| |
|
| | Here are some example log calls:: |
| | |
| | app.logger.debug('A value for debugging') |
| | app.logger.warning('A warning occurred (%d apples)', 42) |
| | app.logger.error('An error occurred') |
| |
|
| | The attached :attr:`~flask.Flask.logger` is a standard logging |
| | :class:`~logging.Logger`, so head over to the official :mod:`logging` |
| | docs for more information. |
| |
|
| | See :doc:`errorhandling`. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Hooking in WSGI Middleware |
| | -------------------------- |
| |
|
| | To add WSGI middleware to your Flask application, wrap the application's |
| | ``wsgi_app`` attribute. For example, to apply Werkzeug's |
| | :class:`~werkzeug.middleware.proxy_fix.ProxyFix` middleware for running |
| | behind Nginx: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | from werkzeug.middleware.proxy_fix import ProxyFix |
| | app.wsgi_app = ProxyFix(app.wsgi_app) |
| |
|
| | Wrapping ``app.wsgi_app`` instead of ``app`` means that ``app`` still |
| | points at your Flask application, not at the middleware, so you can |
| | continue to use and configure ``app`` directly. |
| |
|
| | Using Flask Extensions |
| | ---------------------- |
| |
|
| | Extensions are packages that help you accomplish common tasks. For |
| | example, Flask-SQLAlchemy provides SQLAlchemy support that makes it simple |
| | and easy to use with Flask. |
| |
|
| | For more on Flask extensions, see :doc:`extensions`. |
| |
|
| | Deploying to a Web Server |
| | ------------------------- |
| |
|
| | Ready to deploy your new Flask app? See :doc:`deploying/index`. |
| |
|