Fix indentation to match Melange/Google style.
#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Copyright 2007 Google Inc.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
#
"""An extremely simple WSGI web application framework.
This module exports three primary classes: Request, Response, and
RequestHandler. You implement a web application by subclassing RequestHandler.
As WSGI requests come in, they are passed to instances of your RequestHandlers.
The RequestHandler class provides access to the easy-to-use Request and
Response objects so you can interpret the request and write the response with
no knowledge of the esoteric WSGI semantics. Here is a simple example:
from google.appengine.ext import webapp
import wsgiref.simple_server
class MainPage(webapp.RequestHandler):
def get(self):
self.response.out.write(
'<html><body><form action="/hello" method="post">'
'Name: <input name="name" type="text" size="20"> '
'<input type="submit" value="Say Hello"></form></body></html>')
class HelloPage(webapp.RequestHandler):
def post(self):
self.response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/plain'
self.response.out.write('Hello, %s' % self.request.get('name'))
application = webapp.WSGIApplication([
('/', MainPage),
('/hello', HelloPage)
], debug=True)
server = wsgiref.simple_server.make_server('', 8080, application)
print 'Serving on port 8080...'
server.serve_forever()
The WSGIApplication class maps URI regular expressions to your RequestHandler
classes. It is a WSGI-compatible application object, so you can use it in
conjunction with wsgiref to make your web application into, e.g., a CGI
script or a simple HTTP server, as in the example above.
The framework does not support streaming output. All output from a response
is stored in memory before it is written.
"""
import cgi
import StringIO
import logging
import re
import sys
import traceback
import urlparse
import webob
import wsgiref.headers
import wsgiref.util
RE_FIND_GROUPS = re.compile('\(.*?\)')
_CHARSET_RE = re.compile(r';\s*charset=([^;\s]*)', re.I)
class Error(Exception):
"""Base of all exceptions in the webapp module."""
pass
class NoUrlFoundError(Error):
"""Thrown when RequestHandler.get_url() fails."""
pass
class Request(webob.Request):
"""Abstraction for an HTTP request.
Properties:
uri: the complete URI requested by the user
scheme: 'http' or 'https'
host: the host, including the port
path: the path up to the ';' or '?' in the URL
parameters: the part of the URL between the ';' and the '?', if any
query: the part of the URL after the '?'
You can access parsed query and POST values with the get() method; do not
parse the query string yourself.
"""
uri = property(lambda self: self.url)
query = property(lambda self: self.query_string)
def __init__(self, environ):
"""Constructs a Request object from a WSGI environment.
If the charset isn't specified in the Content-Type header, defaults
to UTF-8.
Args:
environ: A WSGI-compliant environment dictionary.
"""
match = _CHARSET_RE.search(environ.get('CONTENT_TYPE', ''))
if match:
charset = match.group(1).lower()
else:
charset = 'utf-8'
webob.Request.__init__(self, environ, charset=charset,
unicode_errors= 'ignore', decode_param_names=True)
def get(self, argument_name, default_value='', allow_multiple=False):
"""Returns the query or POST argument with the given name.
We parse the query string and POST payload lazily, so this will be a
slower operation on the first call.
Args:
argument_name: the name of the query or POST argument
default_value: the value to return if the given argument is not present
allow_multiple: return a list of values with the given name (deprecated)
Returns:
If allow_multiple is False (which it is by default), we return the first
value with the given name given in the request. If it is True, we always
return an list.
"""
param_value = self.get_all(argument_name)
if allow_multiple:
return param_value
else:
if len(param_value) > 0:
return param_value[0]
else:
return default_value
def get_all(self, argument_name):
"""Returns a list of query or POST arguments with the given name.
We parse the query string and POST payload lazily, so this will be a
slower operation on the first call.
Args:
argument_name: the name of the query or POST argument
Returns:
A (possibly empty) list of values.
"""
if self.charset:
argument_name = argument_name.encode(self.charset)
param_value = self.params.getall(argument_name)
for i in xrange(len(param_value)):
if isinstance(param_value[i], cgi.FieldStorage):
param_value[i] = param_value[i].value
return param_value
def arguments(self):
"""Returns a list of the arguments provided in the query and/or POST.
The return value is a list of strings.
"""
return list(set(self.params.keys()))
def get_range(self, name, min_value=None, max_value=None, default=0):
"""Parses the given int argument, limiting it to the given range.
Args:
name: the name of the argument
min_value: the minimum int value of the argument (if any)
max_value: the maximum int value of the argument (if any)
default: the default value of the argument if it is not given
Returns:
An int within the given range for the argument
"""
try:
value = int(self.get(name, default))
except ValueError:
value = default
if max_value != None:
value = min(value, max_value)
if min_value != None:
value = max(value, min_value)
return value
class Response(object):
"""Abstraction for an HTTP response.
Properties:
out: file pointer for the output stream
headers: wsgiref.headers.Headers instance representing the output headers
"""
def __init__(self):
"""Constructs a response with the default settings."""
self.out = StringIO.StringIO()
self.__wsgi_headers = []
self.headers = wsgiref.headers.Headers(self.__wsgi_headers)
self.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/html; charset=utf-8'
self.headers['Cache-Control'] = 'no-cache'
self.set_status(200)
def set_status(self, code, message=None):
"""Sets the HTTP status code of this response.
Args:
message: the HTTP status string to use
If no status string is given, we use the default from the HTTP/1.1
specification.
"""
if not message:
message = Response.http_status_message(code)
self.__status = (code, message)
def clear(self):
"""Clears all data written to the output stream so that it is empty."""
self.out.seek(0)
self.out.truncate(0)
def wsgi_write(self, start_response):
"""Writes this response using WSGI semantics with the given WSGI function.
Args:
start_response: the WSGI-compatible start_response function
"""
body = self.out.getvalue()
if isinstance(body, unicode):
body = body.encode('utf-8')
elif self.headers.get('Content-Type', '').endswith('; charset=utf-8'):
try:
body.decode('utf-8')
except UnicodeError, e:
logging.warning('Response written is not UTF-8: %s', e)
self.headers['Content-Length'] = str(len(body))
write = start_response('%d %s' % self.__status, self.__wsgi_headers)
write(body)
self.out.close()
def http_status_message(code):
"""Returns the default HTTP status message for the given code.
Args:
code: the HTTP code for which we want a message
"""
if not Response.__HTTP_STATUS_MESSAGES.has_key(code):
raise Error('Invalid HTTP status code: %d' % code)
return Response.__HTTP_STATUS_MESSAGES[code]
http_status_message = staticmethod(http_status_message)
__HTTP_STATUS_MESSAGES = {
100: 'Continue',
101: 'Switching Protocols',
200: 'OK',
201: 'Created',
202: 'Accepted',
203: 'Non-Authoritative Information',
204: 'No Content',
205: 'Reset Content',
206: 'Partial Content',
300: 'Multiple Choices',
301: 'Moved Permanently',
302: 'Moved Temporarily',
303: 'See Other',
304: 'Not Modified',
305: 'Use Proxy',
306: 'Unused',
307: 'Temporary Redirect',
400: 'Bad Request',
401: 'Unauthorized',
402: 'Payment Required',
403: 'Forbidden',
404: 'Not Found',
405: 'Method Not Allowed',
406: 'Not Acceptable',
407: 'Proxy Authentication Required',
408: 'Request Time-out',
409: 'Conflict',
410: 'Gone',
411: 'Length Required',
412: 'Precondition Failed',
413: 'Request Entity Too Large',
414: 'Request-URI Too Large',
415: 'Unsupported Media Type',
416: 'Requested Range Not Satisfiable',
417: 'Expectation Failed',
500: 'Internal Server Error',
501: 'Not Implemented',
502: 'Bad Gateway',
503: 'Service Unavailable',
504: 'Gateway Time-out',
505: 'HTTP Version not supported'
}
class RequestHandler(object):
"""Our base HTTP request handler. Clients should subclass this class.
Subclasses should override get(), post(), head(), options(), etc to handle
different HTTP methods.
"""
def initialize(self, request, response):
"""Initializes this request handler with the given Request and Response."""
self.request = request
self.response = response
def get(self, *args):
"""Handler method for GET requests."""
self.error(405)
def post(self, *args):
"""Handler method for POST requests."""
self.error(405)
def head(self, *args):
"""Handler method for HEAD requests."""
self.error(405)
def options(self, *args):
"""Handler method for OPTIONS requests."""
self.error(405)
def put(self, *args):
"""Handler method for PUT requests."""
self.error(405)
def delete(self, *args):
"""Handler method for DELETE requests."""
self.error(405)
def trace(self, *args):
"""Handler method for TRACE requests."""
self.error(405)
def error(self, code):
"""Clears the response output stream and sets the given HTTP error code.
Args:
code: the HTTP status error code (e.g., 501)
"""
self.response.set_status(code)
self.response.clear()
def redirect(self, uri, permanent=False):
"""Issues an HTTP redirect to the given relative URL.
Args:
uri: a relative or absolute URI (e.g., '../flowers.html')
permanent: if true, we use a 301 redirect instead of a 302 redirect
"""
if permanent:
self.response.set_status(301)
else:
self.response.set_status(302)
absolute_url = urlparse.urljoin(self.request.uri, uri)
self.response.headers['Location'] = str(absolute_url)
self.response.clear()
def handle_exception(self, exception, debug_mode):
"""Called if this handler throws an exception during execution.
The default behavior is to call self.error(500) and print a stack trace
if debug_mode is True.
Args:
exception: the exception that was thrown
debug_mode: True if the web application is running in debug mode
"""
self.error(500)
logging.exception(exception)
if debug_mode:
lines = ''.join(traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info()))
self.response.clear()
self.response.out.write('<pre>%s</pre>' % (cgi.escape(lines, quote=True)))
@classmethod
def get_url(cls, *args, **kargs):
"""Returns the url for the given handler.
The default implementation uses the patterns passed to the active
WSGIApplication and the django urlresolvers module to create a url.
However, it is different from urlresolvers.reverse() in the following ways:
- It does not try to resolve handlers via module loading
- It does not support named arguments
- It performs some post-prosessing on the url to remove some regex
operators that urlresolvers.reverse_helper() seems to miss.
- It will try to fill in the left-most missing arguments with the args
used in the active request.
Args:
args: Parameters for the url pattern's groups.
kwargs: Optionally contains 'implicit_args' that can either be a boolean
or a tuple. When it is True, it will use the arguments to the
active request as implicit arguments. When it is False (default),
it will not use any implicit arguments. When it is a tuple, it
will use the tuple as the implicit arguments.
the left-most args if some are missing from args.
Returns:
The url for this handler/args combination.
Raises:
NoUrlFoundError: No url pattern for this handler has the same
number of args that were passed in.
"""
app = WSGIApplication.active_instance
pattern_map = app._pattern_map
implicit_args = kargs.get('implicit_args', ())
if implicit_args == True:
implicit_args = app.current_request_args
min_params = len(args)
urlresolvers = None
for pattern_tuple in pattern_map.get(cls, ()):
num_params_in_pattern = pattern_tuple[1]
if num_params_in_pattern < min_params:
continue
if urlresolvers is None:
from django.core import urlresolvers
try:
num_implicit_args = max(0, num_params_in_pattern - len(args))
merged_args = implicit_args[:num_implicit_args] + args
url = urlresolvers.reverse_helper(pattern_tuple[0], *merged_args)
url = url.replace('\\', '')
url = url.replace('?', '')
return url
except urlresolvers.NoReverseMatch:
continue
logging.warning('get_url failed for Handler name: %r, Args: %r',
cls.__name__, args)
raise NoUrlFoundError
class WSGIApplication(object):
"""Wraps a set of webapp RequestHandlers in a WSGI-compatible application.
To use this class, pass a list of (URI regular expression, RequestHandler)
pairs to the constructor, and pass the class instance to a WSGI handler.
See the example in the module comments for details.
The URL mapping is first-match based on the list ordering.
"""
def __init__(self, url_mapping, debug=False):
"""Initializes this application with the given URL mapping.
Args:
url_mapping: list of (URI, RequestHandler) pairs (e.g., [('/', ReqHan)])
debug: if true, we send Python stack traces to the browser on errors
"""
self._init_url_mappings(url_mapping)
self.__debug = debug
WSGIApplication.active_instance = self
self.current_request_args = ()
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
"""Called by WSGI when a request comes in."""
request = Request(environ)
response = Response()
WSGIApplication.active_instance = self
handler = None
groups = ()
for regexp, handler_class in self._url_mapping:
match = regexp.match(request.path)
if match:
handler = handler_class()
handler.initialize(request, response)
groups = match.groups()
break
self.current_request_args = groups
if handler:
try:
method = environ['REQUEST_METHOD']
if method == 'GET':
handler.get(*groups)
elif method == 'POST':
handler.post(*groups)
elif method == 'HEAD':
handler.head(*groups)
elif method == 'OPTIONS':
handler.options(*groups)
elif method == 'PUT':
handler.put(*groups)
elif method == 'DELETE':
handler.delete(*groups)
elif method == 'TRACE':
handler.trace(*groups)
else:
handler.error(501)
except Exception, e:
handler.handle_exception(e, self.__debug)
else:
response.set_status(404)
response.wsgi_write(start_response)
return ['']
def _init_url_mappings(self, handler_tuples):
"""Initializes the maps needed for mapping urls to handlers and handlers
to urls.
Args:
handler_tuples: list of (URI, RequestHandler) pairs.
"""
handler_map = {}
pattern_map = {}
url_mapping = []
for regexp, handler in handler_tuples:
handler_map[handler.__name__] = handler
if not regexp.startswith('^'):
regexp = '^' + regexp
if not regexp.endswith('$'):
regexp += '$'
compiled = re.compile(regexp)
url_mapping.append((compiled, handler))
num_groups = len(RE_FIND_GROUPS.findall(regexp))
handler_patterns = pattern_map.setdefault(handler, [])
handler_patterns.append((compiled, num_groups))
self._handler_map = handler_map
self._pattern_map = pattern_map
self._url_mapping = url_mapping
def get_registered_handler_by_name(self, handler_name):
"""Returns the handler given the handler's name.
This uses the application's url mapping.
Args:
handler_name: The __name__ of a handler to return.
Returns:
The handler with the given name.
Raises:
KeyError: If the handler name is not found in the parent application.
"""
try:
return self._handler_map[handler_name]
except:
logging.error('Handler does not map to any urls: %s', handler_name)
raise