| :mod:`wsgiref` --- WSGI Utilities and Reference Implementation |
| ============================================================== |
| |
| .. module:: wsgiref |
| :synopsis: WSGI Utilities and Reference Implementation. |
| .. moduleauthor:: Phillip J. Eby <pje@telecommunity.com> |
| .. sectionauthor:: Phillip J. Eby <pje@telecommunity.com> |
| |
| |
| The Web Server Gateway Interface (WSGI) is a standard interface between web |
| server software and web applications written in Python. Having a standard |
| interface makes it easy to use an application that supports WSGI with a number |
| of different web servers. |
| |
| Only authors of web servers and programming frameworks need to know every detail |
| and corner case of the WSGI design. You don't need to understand every detail |
| of WSGI just to install a WSGI application or to write a web application using |
| an existing framework. |
| |
| :mod:`wsgiref` is a reference implementation of the WSGI specification that can |
| be used to add WSGI support to a web server or framework. It provides utilities |
| for manipulating WSGI environment variables and response headers, base classes |
| for implementing WSGI servers, a demo HTTP server that serves WSGI applications, |
| and a validation tool that checks WSGI servers and applications for conformance |
| to the WSGI specification (:pep:`3333`). |
| |
| See http://www.wsgi.org for more information about WSGI, and links to tutorials |
| and other resources. |
| |
| .. XXX If you're just trying to write a web application... |
| |
| |
| :mod:`wsgiref.util` -- WSGI environment utilities |
| ------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| .. module:: wsgiref.util |
| :synopsis: WSGI environment utilities. |
| |
| |
| This module provides a variety of utility functions for working with WSGI |
| environments. A WSGI environment is a dictionary containing HTTP request |
| variables as described in :pep:`3333`. All of the functions taking an *environ* |
| parameter expect a WSGI-compliant dictionary to be supplied; please see |
| :pep:`3333` for a detailed specification. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: guess_scheme(environ) |
| |
| Return a guess for whether ``wsgi.url_scheme`` should be "http" or "https", by |
| checking for a ``HTTPS`` environment variable in the *environ* dictionary. The |
| return value is a string. |
| |
| This function is useful when creating a gateway that wraps CGI or a CGI-like |
| protocol such as FastCGI. Typically, servers providing such protocols will |
| include a ``HTTPS`` variable with a value of "1" "yes", or "on" when a request |
| is received via SSL. So, this function returns "https" if such a value is |
| found, and "http" otherwise. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: request_uri(environ, include_query=True) |
| |
| Return the full request URI, optionally including the query string, using the |
| algorithm found in the "URL Reconstruction" section of :pep:`3333`. If |
| *include_query* is false, the query string is not included in the resulting URI. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: application_uri(environ) |
| |
| Similar to :func:`request_uri`, except that the ``PATH_INFO`` and |
| ``QUERY_STRING`` variables are ignored. The result is the base URI of the |
| application object addressed by the request. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: shift_path_info(environ) |
| |
| Shift a single name from ``PATH_INFO`` to ``SCRIPT_NAME`` and return the name. |
| The *environ* dictionary is *modified* in-place; use a copy if you need to keep |
| the original ``PATH_INFO`` or ``SCRIPT_NAME`` intact. |
| |
| If there are no remaining path segments in ``PATH_INFO``, ``None`` is returned. |
| |
| Typically, this routine is used to process each portion of a request URI path, |
| for example to treat the path as a series of dictionary keys. This routine |
| modifies the passed-in environment to make it suitable for invoking another WSGI |
| application that is located at the target URI. For example, if there is a WSGI |
| application at ``/foo``, and the request URI path is ``/foo/bar/baz``, and the |
| WSGI application at ``/foo`` calls :func:`shift_path_info`, it will receive the |
| string "bar", and the environment will be updated to be suitable for passing to |
| a WSGI application at ``/foo/bar``. That is, ``SCRIPT_NAME`` will change from |
| ``/foo`` to ``/foo/bar``, and ``PATH_INFO`` will change from ``/bar/baz`` to |
| ``/baz``. |
| |
| When ``PATH_INFO`` is just a "/", this routine returns an empty string and |
| appends a trailing slash to ``SCRIPT_NAME``, even though empty path segments are |
| normally ignored, and ``SCRIPT_NAME`` doesn't normally end in a slash. This is |
| intentional behavior, to ensure that an application can tell the difference |
| between URIs ending in ``/x`` from ones ending in ``/x/`` when using this |
| routine to do object traversal. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: setup_testing_defaults(environ) |
| |
| Update *environ* with trivial defaults for testing purposes. |
| |
| This routine adds various parameters required for WSGI, including ``HTTP_HOST``, |
| ``SERVER_NAME``, ``SERVER_PORT``, ``REQUEST_METHOD``, ``SCRIPT_NAME``, |
| ``PATH_INFO``, and all of the :pep:`3333`\ -defined ``wsgi.*`` variables. It |
| only supplies default values, and does not replace any existing settings for |
| these variables. |
| |
| This routine is intended to make it easier for unit tests of WSGI servers and |
| applications to set up dummy environments. It should NOT be used by actual WSGI |
| servers or applications, since the data is fake! |
| |
| Example usage:: |
| |
| from wsgiref.util import setup_testing_defaults |
| from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server |
| |
| # A relatively simple WSGI application. It's going to print out the |
| # environment dictionary after being updated by setup_testing_defaults |
| def simple_app(environ, start_response): |
| setup_testing_defaults(environ) |
| |
| status = '200 OK' |
| headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain; charset=utf-8')] |
| |
| start_response(status, headers) |
| |
| ret = [("%s: %s\n" % (key, value)).encode("utf-8") |
| for key, value in environ.items()] |
| return ret |
| |
| httpd = make_server('', 8000, simple_app) |
| print("Serving on port 8000...") |
| httpd.serve_forever() |
| |
| |
| In addition to the environment functions above, the :mod:`wsgiref.util` module |
| also provides these miscellaneous utilities: |
| |
| |
| .. function:: is_hop_by_hop(header_name) |
| |
| Return true if 'header_name' is an HTTP/1.1 "Hop-by-Hop" header, as defined by |
| :rfc:`2616`. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: FileWrapper(filelike, blksize=8192) |
| |
| A wrapper to convert a file-like object to an :term:`iterator`. The resulting objects |
| support both :meth:`__getitem__` and :meth:`__iter__` iteration styles, for |
| compatibility with Python 2.1 and Jython. As the object is iterated over, the |
| optional *blksize* parameter will be repeatedly passed to the *filelike* |
| object's :meth:`read` method to obtain bytestrings to yield. When :meth:`read` |
| returns an empty bytestring, iteration is ended and is not resumable. |
| |
| If *filelike* has a :meth:`close` method, the returned object will also have a |
| :meth:`close` method, and it will invoke the *filelike* object's :meth:`close` |
| method when called. |
| |
| Example usage:: |
| |
| from io import StringIO |
| from wsgiref.util import FileWrapper |
| |
| # We're using a StringIO-buffer for as the file-like object |
| filelike = StringIO("This is an example file-like object"*10) |
| wrapper = FileWrapper(filelike, blksize=5) |
| |
| for chunk in wrapper: |
| print(chunk) |
| |
| |
| |
| :mod:`wsgiref.headers` -- WSGI response header tools |
| ---------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| .. module:: wsgiref.headers |
| :synopsis: WSGI response header tools. |
| |
| |
| This module provides a single class, :class:`Headers`, for convenient |
| manipulation of WSGI response headers using a mapping-like interface. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: Headers(headers) |
| |
| Create a mapping-like object wrapping *headers*, which must be a list of header |
| name/value tuples as described in :pep:`3333`. |
| |
| :class:`Headers` objects support typical mapping operations including |
| :meth:`__getitem__`, :meth:`get`, :meth:`__setitem__`, :meth:`setdefault`, |
| :meth:`__delitem__` and :meth:`__contains__`. For each of |
| these methods, the key is the header name (treated case-insensitively), and the |
| value is the first value associated with that header name. Setting a header |
| deletes any existing values for that header, then adds a new value at the end of |
| the wrapped header list. Headers' existing order is generally maintained, with |
| new headers added to the end of the wrapped list. |
| |
| Unlike a dictionary, :class:`Headers` objects do not raise an error when you try |
| to get or delete a key that isn't in the wrapped header list. Getting a |
| nonexistent header just returns ``None``, and deleting a nonexistent header does |
| nothing. |
| |
| :class:`Headers` objects also support :meth:`keys`, :meth:`values`, and |
| :meth:`items` methods. The lists returned by :meth:`keys` and :meth:`items` can |
| include the same key more than once if there is a multi-valued header. The |
| ``len()`` of a :class:`Headers` object is the same as the length of its |
| :meth:`items`, which is the same as the length of the wrapped header list. In |
| fact, the :meth:`items` method just returns a copy of the wrapped header list. |
| |
| Calling ``bytes()`` on a :class:`Headers` object returns a formatted bytestring |
| suitable for transmission as HTTP response headers. Each header is placed on a |
| line with its value, separated by a colon and a space. Each line is terminated |
| by a carriage return and line feed, and the bytestring is terminated with a |
| blank line. |
| |
| In addition to their mapping interface and formatting features, :class:`Headers` |
| objects also have the following methods for querying and adding multi-valued |
| headers, and for adding headers with MIME parameters: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: Headers.get_all(name) |
| |
| Return a list of all the values for the named header. |
| |
| The returned list will be sorted in the order they appeared in the original |
| header list or were added to this instance, and may contain duplicates. Any |
| fields deleted and re-inserted are always appended to the header list. If no |
| fields exist with the given name, returns an empty list. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: Headers.add_header(name, value, **_params) |
| |
| Add a (possibly multi-valued) header, with optional MIME parameters specified |
| via keyword arguments. |
| |
| *name* is the header field to add. Keyword arguments can be used to set MIME |
| parameters for the header field. Each parameter must be a string or ``None``. |
| Underscores in parameter names are converted to dashes, since dashes are illegal |
| in Python identifiers, but many MIME parameter names include dashes. If the |
| parameter value is a string, it is added to the header value parameters in the |
| form ``name="value"``. If it is ``None``, only the parameter name is added. |
| (This is used for MIME parameters without a value.) Example usage:: |
| |
| h.add_header('content-disposition', 'attachment', filename='bud.gif') |
| |
| The above will add a header that looks like this:: |
| |
| Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="bud.gif" |
| |
| |
| :mod:`wsgiref.simple_server` -- a simple WSGI HTTP server |
| --------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| .. module:: wsgiref.simple_server |
| :synopsis: A simple WSGI HTTP server. |
| |
| |
| This module implements a simple HTTP server (based on :mod:`http.server`) |
| that serves WSGI applications. Each server instance serves a single WSGI |
| application on a given host and port. If you want to serve multiple |
| applications on a single host and port, you should create a WSGI application |
| that parses ``PATH_INFO`` to select which application to invoke for each |
| request. (E.g., using the :func:`shift_path_info` function from |
| :mod:`wsgiref.util`.) |
| |
| |
| .. function:: make_server(host, port, app, server_class=WSGIServer, handler_class=WSGIRequestHandler) |
| |
| Create a new WSGI server listening on *host* and *port*, accepting connections |
| for *app*. The return value is an instance of the supplied *server_class*, and |
| will process requests using the specified *handler_class*. *app* must be a WSGI |
| application object, as defined by :pep:`3333`. |
| |
| Example usage:: |
| |
| from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server, demo_app |
| |
| httpd = make_server('', 8000, demo_app) |
| print("Serving HTTP on port 8000...") |
| |
| # Respond to requests until process is killed |
| httpd.serve_forever() |
| |
| # Alternative: serve one request, then exit |
| httpd.handle_request() |
| |
| |
| .. function:: demo_app(environ, start_response) |
| |
| This function is a small but complete WSGI application that returns a text page |
| containing the message "Hello world!" and a list of the key/value pairs provided |
| in the *environ* parameter. It's useful for verifying that a WSGI server (such |
| as :mod:`wsgiref.simple_server`) is able to run a simple WSGI application |
| correctly. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: WSGIServer(server_address, RequestHandlerClass) |
| |
| Create a :class:`WSGIServer` instance. *server_address* should be a |
| ``(host,port)`` tuple, and *RequestHandlerClass* should be the subclass of |
| :class:`http.server.BaseHTTPRequestHandler` that will be used to process |
| requests. |
| |
| You do not normally need to call this constructor, as the :func:`make_server` |
| function can handle all the details for you. |
| |
| :class:`WSGIServer` is a subclass of :class:`http.server.HTTPServer`, so all |
| of its methods (such as :meth:`serve_forever` and :meth:`handle_request`) are |
| available. :class:`WSGIServer` also provides these WSGI-specific methods: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: WSGIServer.set_app(application) |
| |
| Sets the callable *application* as the WSGI application that will receive |
| requests. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: WSGIServer.get_app() |
| |
| Returns the currently-set application callable. |
| |
| Normally, however, you do not need to use these additional methods, as |
| :meth:`set_app` is normally called by :func:`make_server`, and the |
| :meth:`get_app` exists mainly for the benefit of request handler instances. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: WSGIRequestHandler(request, client_address, server) |
| |
| Create an HTTP handler for the given *request* (i.e. a socket), *client_address* |
| (a ``(host,port)`` tuple), and *server* (:class:`WSGIServer` instance). |
| |
| You do not need to create instances of this class directly; they are |
| automatically created as needed by :class:`WSGIServer` objects. You can, |
| however, subclass this class and supply it as a *handler_class* to the |
| :func:`make_server` function. Some possibly relevant methods for overriding in |
| subclasses: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: WSGIRequestHandler.get_environ() |
| |
| Returns a dictionary containing the WSGI environment for a request. The default |
| implementation copies the contents of the :class:`WSGIServer` object's |
| :attr:`base_environ` dictionary attribute and then adds various headers derived |
| from the HTTP request. Each call to this method should return a new dictionary |
| containing all of the relevant CGI environment variables as specified in |
| :pep:`3333`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: WSGIRequestHandler.get_stderr() |
| |
| Return the object that should be used as the ``wsgi.errors`` stream. The default |
| implementation just returns ``sys.stderr``. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: WSGIRequestHandler.handle() |
| |
| Process the HTTP request. The default implementation creates a handler instance |
| using a :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` class to implement the actual WSGI application |
| interface. |
| |
| |
| :mod:`wsgiref.validate` --- WSGI conformance checker |
| ---------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| .. module:: wsgiref.validate |
| :synopsis: WSGI conformance checker. |
| |
| |
| When creating new WSGI application objects, frameworks, servers, or middleware, |
| it can be useful to validate the new code's conformance using |
| :mod:`wsgiref.validate`. This module provides a function that creates WSGI |
| application objects that validate communications between a WSGI server or |
| gateway and a WSGI application object, to check both sides for protocol |
| conformance. |
| |
| Note that this utility does not guarantee complete :pep:`3333` compliance; an |
| absence of errors from this module does not necessarily mean that errors do not |
| exist. However, if this module does produce an error, then it is virtually |
| certain that either the server or application is not 100% compliant. |
| |
| This module is based on the :mod:`paste.lint` module from Ian Bicking's "Python |
| Paste" library. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: validator(application) |
| |
| Wrap *application* and return a new WSGI application object. The returned |
| application will forward all requests to the original *application*, and will |
| check that both the *application* and the server invoking it are conforming to |
| the WSGI specification and to RFC 2616. |
| |
| Any detected nonconformance results in an :exc:`AssertionError` being raised; |
| note, however, that how these errors are handled is server-dependent. For |
| example, :mod:`wsgiref.simple_server` and other servers based on |
| :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` (that don't override the error handling methods to do |
| something else) will simply output a message that an error has occurred, and |
| dump the traceback to ``sys.stderr`` or some other error stream. |
| |
| This wrapper may also generate output using the :mod:`warnings` module to |
| indicate behaviors that are questionable but which may not actually be |
| prohibited by :pep:`3333`. Unless they are suppressed using Python command-line |
| options or the :mod:`warnings` API, any such warnings will be written to |
| ``sys.stderr`` (*not* ``wsgi.errors``, unless they happen to be the same |
| object). |
| |
| Example usage:: |
| |
| from wsgiref.validate import validator |
| from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server |
| |
| # Our callable object which is intentionally not compliant to the |
| # standard, so the validator is going to break |
| def simple_app(environ, start_response): |
| status = '200 OK' # HTTP Status |
| headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain')] # HTTP Headers |
| start_response(status, headers) |
| |
| # This is going to break because we need to return a list, and |
| # the validator is going to inform us |
| return b"Hello World" |
| |
| # This is the application wrapped in a validator |
| validator_app = validator(simple_app) |
| |
| httpd = make_server('', 8000, validator_app) |
| print("Listening on port 8000....") |
| httpd.serve_forever() |
| |
| |
| :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` -- server/gateway base classes |
| ------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| .. module:: wsgiref.handlers |
| :synopsis: WSGI server/gateway base classes. |
| |
| |
| This module provides base handler classes for implementing WSGI servers and |
| gateways. These base classes handle most of the work of communicating with a |
| WSGI application, as long as they are given a CGI-like environment, along with |
| input, output, and error streams. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: CGIHandler() |
| |
| CGI-based invocation via ``sys.stdin``, ``sys.stdout``, ``sys.stderr`` and |
| ``os.environ``. This is useful when you have a WSGI application and want to run |
| it as a CGI script. Simply invoke ``CGIHandler().run(app)``, where ``app`` is |
| the WSGI application object you wish to invoke. |
| |
| This class is a subclass of :class:`BaseCGIHandler` that sets ``wsgi.run_once`` |
| to true, ``wsgi.multithread`` to false, and ``wsgi.multiprocess`` to true, and |
| always uses :mod:`sys` and :mod:`os` to obtain the necessary CGI streams and |
| environment. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: IISCGIHandler() |
| |
| A specialized alternative to :class:`CGIHandler`, for use when deploying on |
| Microsoft's IIS web server, without having set the config allowPathInfo |
| option (IIS>=7) or metabase allowPathInfoForScriptMappings (IIS<7). |
| |
| By default, IIS gives a ``PATH_INFO`` that duplicates the ``SCRIPT_NAME`` at |
| the front, causing problems for WSGI applications that wish to implement |
| routing. This handler strips any such duplicated path. |
| |
| IIS can be configured to pass the correct ``PATH_INFO``, but this causes |
| another bug where ``PATH_TRANSLATED`` is wrong. Luckily this variable is |
| rarely used and is not guaranteed by WSGI. On IIS<7, though, the |
| setting can only be made on a vhost level, affecting all other script |
| mappings, many of which break when exposed to the ``PATH_TRANSLATED`` bug. |
| For this reason IIS<7 is almost never deployed with the fix. (Even IIS7 |
| rarely uses it because there is still no UI for it.) |
| |
| There is no way for CGI code to tell whether the option was set, so a |
| separate handler class is provided. It is used in the same way as |
| :class:`CGIHandler`, i.e., by calling ``IISCGIHandler().run(app)``, where |
| ``app`` is the WSGI application object you wish to invoke. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.2 |
| |
| |
| .. class:: BaseCGIHandler(stdin, stdout, stderr, environ, multithread=True, multiprocess=False) |
| |
| Similar to :class:`CGIHandler`, but instead of using the :mod:`sys` and |
| :mod:`os` modules, the CGI environment and I/O streams are specified explicitly. |
| The *multithread* and *multiprocess* values are used to set the |
| ``wsgi.multithread`` and ``wsgi.multiprocess`` flags for any applications run by |
| the handler instance. |
| |
| This class is a subclass of :class:`SimpleHandler` intended for use with |
| software other than HTTP "origin servers". If you are writing a gateway |
| protocol implementation (such as CGI, FastCGI, SCGI, etc.) that uses a |
| ``Status:`` header to send an HTTP status, you probably want to subclass this |
| instead of :class:`SimpleHandler`. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: SimpleHandler(stdin, stdout, stderr, environ, multithread=True, multiprocess=False) |
| |
| Similar to :class:`BaseCGIHandler`, but designed for use with HTTP origin |
| servers. If you are writing an HTTP server implementation, you will probably |
| want to subclass this instead of :class:`BaseCGIHandler` |
| |
| This class is a subclass of :class:`BaseHandler`. It overrides the |
| :meth:`__init__`, :meth:`get_stdin`, :meth:`get_stderr`, :meth:`add_cgi_vars`, |
| :meth:`_write`, and :meth:`_flush` methods to support explicitly setting the |
| environment and streams via the constructor. The supplied environment and |
| streams are stored in the :attr:`stdin`, :attr:`stdout`, :attr:`stderr`, and |
| :attr:`environ` attributes. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: BaseHandler() |
| |
| This is an abstract base class for running WSGI applications. Each instance |
| will handle a single HTTP request, although in principle you could create a |
| subclass that was reusable for multiple requests. |
| |
| :class:`BaseHandler` instances have only one method intended for external use: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.run(app) |
| |
| Run the specified WSGI application, *app*. |
| |
| All of the other :class:`BaseHandler` methods are invoked by this method in the |
| process of running the application, and thus exist primarily to allow |
| customizing the process. |
| |
| The following methods MUST be overridden in a subclass: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler._write(data) |
| |
| Buffer the bytes *data* for transmission to the client. It's okay if this |
| method actually transmits the data; :class:`BaseHandler` just separates write |
| and flush operations for greater efficiency when the underlying system actually |
| has such a distinction. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler._flush() |
| |
| Force buffered data to be transmitted to the client. It's okay if this method |
| is a no-op (i.e., if :meth:`_write` actually sends the data). |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.get_stdin() |
| |
| Return an input stream object suitable for use as the ``wsgi.input`` of the |
| request currently being processed. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.get_stderr() |
| |
| Return an output stream object suitable for use as the ``wsgi.errors`` of the |
| request currently being processed. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.add_cgi_vars() |
| |
| Insert CGI variables for the current request into the :attr:`environ` attribute. |
| |
| Here are some other methods and attributes you may wish to override. This list |
| is only a summary, however, and does not include every method that can be |
| overridden. You should consult the docstrings and source code for additional |
| information before attempting to create a customized :class:`BaseHandler` |
| subclass. |
| |
| Attributes and methods for customizing the WSGI environment: |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_multithread |
| |
| The value to be used for the ``wsgi.multithread`` environment variable. It |
| defaults to true in :class:`BaseHandler`, but may have a different default (or |
| be set by the constructor) in the other subclasses. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_multiprocess |
| |
| The value to be used for the ``wsgi.multiprocess`` environment variable. It |
| defaults to true in :class:`BaseHandler`, but may have a different default (or |
| be set by the constructor) in the other subclasses. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_run_once |
| |
| The value to be used for the ``wsgi.run_once`` environment variable. It |
| defaults to false in :class:`BaseHandler`, but :class:`CGIHandler` sets it to |
| true by default. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.os_environ |
| |
| The default environment variables to be included in every request's WSGI |
| environment. By default, this is a copy of ``os.environ`` at the time that |
| :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` was imported, but subclasses can either create their own |
| at the class or instance level. Note that the dictionary should be considered |
| read-only, since the default value is shared between multiple classes and |
| instances. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.server_software |
| |
| If the :attr:`origin_server` attribute is set, this attribute's value is used to |
| set the default ``SERVER_SOFTWARE`` WSGI environment variable, and also to set a |
| default ``Server:`` header in HTTP responses. It is ignored for handlers (such |
| as :class:`BaseCGIHandler` and :class:`CGIHandler`) that are not HTTP origin |
| servers. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.3 |
| The term "Python" is replaced with implementation specific term like |
| "CPython", "Jython" etc. |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.get_scheme() |
| |
| Return the URL scheme being used for the current request. The default |
| implementation uses the :func:`guess_scheme` function from :mod:`wsgiref.util` |
| to guess whether the scheme should be "http" or "https", based on the current |
| request's :attr:`environ` variables. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.setup_environ() |
| |
| Set the :attr:`environ` attribute to a fully-populated WSGI environment. The |
| default implementation uses all of the above methods and attributes, plus the |
| :meth:`get_stdin`, :meth:`get_stderr`, and :meth:`add_cgi_vars` methods and the |
| :attr:`wsgi_file_wrapper` attribute. It also inserts a ``SERVER_SOFTWARE`` key |
| if not present, as long as the :attr:`origin_server` attribute is a true value |
| and the :attr:`server_software` attribute is set. |
| |
| Methods and attributes for customizing exception handling: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.log_exception(exc_info) |
| |
| Log the *exc_info* tuple in the server log. *exc_info* is a ``(type, value, |
| traceback)`` tuple. The default implementation simply writes the traceback to |
| the request's ``wsgi.errors`` stream and flushes it. Subclasses can override |
| this method to change the format or retarget the output, mail the traceback to |
| an administrator, or whatever other action may be deemed suitable. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.traceback_limit |
| |
| The maximum number of frames to include in tracebacks output by the default |
| :meth:`log_exception` method. If ``None``, all frames are included. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.error_output(environ, start_response) |
| |
| This method is a WSGI application to generate an error page for the user. It is |
| only invoked if an error occurs before headers are sent to the client. |
| |
| This method can access the current error information using ``sys.exc_info()``, |
| and should pass that information to *start_response* when calling it (as |
| described in the "Error Handling" section of :pep:`3333`). |
| |
| The default implementation just uses the :attr:`error_status`, |
| :attr:`error_headers`, and :attr:`error_body` attributes to generate an output |
| page. Subclasses can override this to produce more dynamic error output. |
| |
| Note, however, that it's not recommended from a security perspective to spit out |
| diagnostics to any old user; ideally, you should have to do something special to |
| enable diagnostic output, which is why the default implementation doesn't |
| include any. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.error_status |
| |
| The HTTP status used for error responses. This should be a status string as |
| defined in :pep:`3333`; it defaults to a 500 code and message. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.error_headers |
| |
| The HTTP headers used for error responses. This should be a list of WSGI |
| response headers (``(name, value)`` tuples), as described in :pep:`3333`. The |
| default list just sets the content type to ``text/plain``. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.error_body |
| |
| The error response body. This should be an HTTP response body bytestring. It |
| defaults to the plain text, "A server error occurred. Please contact the |
| administrator." |
| |
| Methods and attributes for :pep:`3333`'s "Optional Platform-Specific File |
| Handling" feature: |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_file_wrapper |
| |
| A ``wsgi.file_wrapper`` factory, or ``None``. The default value of this |
| attribute is the :class:`wsgiref.util.FileWrapper` class. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: BaseHandler.sendfile() |
| |
| Override to implement platform-specific file transmission. This method is |
| called only if the application's return value is an instance of the class |
| specified by the :attr:`wsgi_file_wrapper` attribute. It should return a true |
| value if it was able to successfully transmit the file, so that the default |
| transmission code will not be executed. The default implementation of this |
| method just returns a false value. |
| |
| Miscellaneous methods and attributes: |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.origin_server |
| |
| This attribute should be set to a true value if the handler's :meth:`_write` and |
| :meth:`_flush` are being used to communicate directly to the client, rather than |
| via a CGI-like gateway protocol that wants the HTTP status in a special |
| ``Status:`` header. |
| |
| This attribute's default value is true in :class:`BaseHandler`, but false in |
| :class:`BaseCGIHandler` and :class:`CGIHandler`. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: BaseHandler.http_version |
| |
| If :attr:`origin_server` is true, this string attribute is used to set the HTTP |
| version of the response set to the client. It defaults to ``"1.0"``. |
| |
| |
| .. function:: read_environ() |
| |
| Transcode CGI variables from ``os.environ`` to PEP 3333 "bytes in unicode" |
| strings, returning a new dictionary. This function is used by |
| :class:`CGIHandler` and :class:`IISCGIHandler` in place of directly using |
| ``os.environ``, which is not necessarily WSGI-compliant on all platforms |
| and web servers using Python 3 -- specifically, ones where the OS's |
| actual environment is Unicode (i.e. Windows), or ones where the environment |
| is bytes, but the system encoding used by Python to decode it is anything |
| other than ISO-8859-1 (e.g. Unix systems using UTF-8). |
| |
| If you are implementing a CGI-based handler of your own, you probably want |
| to use this routine instead of just copying values out of ``os.environ`` |
| directly. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.2 |
| |
| |
| Examples |
| -------- |
| |
| This is a working "Hello World" WSGI application:: |
| |
| from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server |
| |
| # Every WSGI application must have an application object - a callable |
| # object that accepts two arguments. For that purpose, we're going to |
| # use a function (note that you're not limited to a function, you can |
| # use a class for example). The first argument passed to the function |
| # is a dictionary containing CGI-style envrironment variables and the |
| # second variable is the callable object (see PEP 333). |
| def hello_world_app(environ, start_response): |
| status = '200 OK' # HTTP Status |
| headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain; charset=utf-8')] # HTTP Headers |
| start_response(status, headers) |
| |
| # The returned object is going to be printed |
| return [b"Hello World"] |
| |
| httpd = make_server('', 8000, hello_world_app) |
| print("Serving on port 8000...") |
| |
| # Serve until process is killed |
| httpd.serve_forever() |