CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2014/ch1a 3 cp: Difference between revisions
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='''CherryPy'''= | ='''CherryPy'''= | ||
{| border="1" class="wikitable" style="float:{{{align|right}}}" | |||
|colspan="2" align="center" |[[File:Cherrypy.png|center|CherryPy Logo<ref>http://www.cherrypy.org/images/cherrypy.png</ref>]] | |||
|- | |||
|'''Name'''||[http://www.cherrypy.org/ CherryPy] | |||
|- | |||
|'''Category'''||[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_software Open Source Software] | |||
|- | |||
|'''Type'''||[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_application_framework Web Application Framework] | |||
|- | |||
|'''Developer(s)'''||[https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/CherryPyTeam CherryPyTeam] | |||
|- | |||
|'''License'''||[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BSD_licenses BSD] | |||
|- | |||
|'''Latest Stable Version'''||[https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.3.0/intro/install.html#download-stable-versions 3.3.0 / April 16, 2014] | |||
|- | |||
|'''Written in'''||[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_%28programming_language%29 Python] | |||
|} | |||
__TOC__ | __TOC__ | ||
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It is important to note that it is not a complete stack such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_on_Rails Ruby on Rails], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laravel Laravel], or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Django Django]. Complete stack web frameworks offer frontend utilities and storage communications along with other abilities. These aspects that make the frameworks so powerful, however, also contribute to the framework being bulky making development of small web applications such as blogs a bit cumbersome. CherryPy instead prefers to defer decisions such as storage management and interface utilities to the developer <ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/intro.html</ref> | It is important to note that it is not a complete stack such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_on_Rails Ruby on Rails], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laravel Laravel], or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Django Django]. Complete stack web frameworks offer frontend utilities and storage communications along with other abilities. These aspects that make the frameworks so powerful, however, also contribute to the framework being bulky making development of small web applications such as blogs a bit cumbersome. CherryPy instead prefers to defer decisions such as storage management and interface utilities to the developer <ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/intro.html</ref> | ||
===History=== | |||
The CherryPy project v0.1 was founded and release by Remi Delon in Jul 2002<ref>http://freecode.com/projects/cherrypy/</ref> on [http://freecode.com/ FreeCode]. Version v2.0 released in May 2005 and was moved to [https://bitbucket.org/ BitBucket] from v2.1 onwards. Remi Delon is now works full time on [http://www.webfaction.com WebFaction] (which he also founded in 2003) although he is still recognized as project leader for CherryPy. Finally in Dec 2006 v3.0 came out with much of the original code rewritten under Robert Brewer as the lead developer.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/CherryPyTeam</ref><ref>https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1NOGM5w1yu6dnXyEyYC4r6ZDuRgii4YaqlkrrlxfbnzM/edit?pli=1#slide=id.g178c5c5e9_032</ref> | |||
{| border="1" class="wikitable" style="{{{align|right}}}" | |||
|+Major Changes | |||
|- | |||
|'''v2.0'''|| Unpythonic features removed. There is no longer a compilation step; it is pure Python source code (no more "CherryClass"). <ref>http://freecode.com/projects/cherrypy/releases</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|'''v2.1'''||New HTTP servers, and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_Server_Gateway_Interface WSGI] support. New Profiler module. New config system added<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn21</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|'''v2.2'''||Custom WSGI server support<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn22</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|'''v3.0'''||[[#Per-Request Functions (Tools)| Tools]] support. New Logger. Multiple HTTP server support. Considerable speedup.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn30</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|'''v3.1'''||[[#Server Wide Functions (Plugins)| Plugins]] support. [[#Deployment| cherryd]] script.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn31</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|'''v3.2'''|| Python 3 support.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn32</ref> | |||
|} | |||
==Installation== | ==Installation== | ||
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$cherryd -c <config file> -d -p <PID file> | $cherryd -c <config file> -d -p <PID file> | ||
==Testing== | |||
CherryPy provides a helper class for testing. The feature of the framework is that test are run against a running cherrypy server and testing small cmponents without actually starting the server is not natively suported. | |||
Lets look at an example<ref>http://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/latest/advanced.html#testing-your-application</ref> | |||
<pre> | |||
#importing cherrypy library | |||
import cherrypy | |||
#importing the helper class | |||
from cherrypy.test import helper | |||
#creating a simple test class | |||
class SimpleCPTest(helper.CPWebCase): | |||
# function to start the cherrypy server | |||
def setup_server(): | |||
# root class of application to be tested | |||
class Root(object): | |||
# the expose method which we are trying to test | |||
# this method will respond to localhost/echo and actually echo the argument sent to it | |||
@cherrypy.expose | |||
def echo(self, message): | |||
return message | |||
# settingup the root class to be created on server start | |||
cherrypy.tree.mount(Root()) | |||
# grabbing the decorator for starting the server | |||
setup_server = staticmethod(setup_server) | |||
# This is the actual test code | |||
def test_message_should_be_returned_as_is(self): | |||
# sending arguments to the echo method via html request | |||
self.getPage("/echo?message=Hello%20world") | |||
# chechink if server accepted our request | |||
self.assertStatus('200 OK') | |||
# cheching response from server | |||
self.assertHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html;charset=utf-8') | |||
# checking if the was an "Hello World" in the response from server | |||
self.assertBody('Hello world') | |||
</pre> | |||
==Extensions== | ==Extensions== | ||
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CherryPy is used as a building block for [http://www.hulu.com/ Hulu]<ref>http://tech.hulu.com/blog/2013/03/13/python-and-hulu</ref> and [https://www.netflix.com/ Netflix]<ref>http://techblog.netflix.com/2013/03/python-at-netflix.html</ref> | CherryPy is used as a building block for [http://www.hulu.com/ Hulu]<ref>http://tech.hulu.com/blog/2013/03/13/python-and-hulu</ref> and [https://www.netflix.com/ Netflix]<ref>http://techblog.netflix.com/2013/03/python-at-netflix.html</ref> | ||
==Further Reading== | |||
[https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1NOGM5w1yu6dnXyEyYC4r6ZDuRgii4YaqlkrrlxfbnzM/edit?pli=1#slide=id.p PowerPoint Presentation] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Latest revision as of 01:40, 26 September 2014
CherryPy
Name | CherryPy |
Category | Open Source Software |
Type | Web Application Framework |
Developer(s) | CherryPyTeam |
License | BSD |
Latest Stable Version | 3.3.0 / April 16, 2014 |
Written in | Python |
Overview
CherryPy is an Object-Oriented Web Application Framework meant to be Python-like (sparse and clean code).
It is important to note that it is not a complete stack such as Ruby on Rails, Laravel, or Django. Complete stack web frameworks offer frontend utilities and storage communications along with other abilities. These aspects that make the frameworks so powerful, however, also contribute to the framework being bulky making development of small web applications such as blogs a bit cumbersome. CherryPy instead prefers to defer decisions such as storage management and interface utilities to the developer <ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/intro.html</ref>
History
The CherryPy project v0.1 was founded and release by Remi Delon in Jul 2002<ref>http://freecode.com/projects/cherrypy/</ref> on FreeCode. Version v2.0 released in May 2005 and was moved to BitBucket from v2.1 onwards. Remi Delon is now works full time on WebFaction (which he also founded in 2003) although he is still recognized as project leader for CherryPy. Finally in Dec 2006 v3.0 came out with much of the original code rewritten under Robert Brewer as the lead developer.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/CherryPyTeam</ref><ref>https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1NOGM5w1yu6dnXyEyYC4r6ZDuRgii4YaqlkrrlxfbnzM/edit?pli=1#slide=id.g178c5c5e9_032</ref>
v2.0 | Unpythonic features removed. There is no longer a compilation step; it is pure Python source code (no more "CherryClass"). <ref>http://freecode.com/projects/cherrypy/releases</ref> |
v2.1 | New HTTP servers, and WSGI support. New Profiler module. New config system added<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn21</ref> |
v2.2 | Custom WSGI server support<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn22</ref> |
v3.0 | Tools support. New Logger. Multiple HTTP server support. Considerable speedup.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn30</ref> |
v3.1 | Plugins support. cherryd script.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn31</ref> |
v3.2 | Python 3 support.<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/WhatsNewIn32</ref> |
Installation
Overview
Because CherryPy is nothing more than a Python library, it needs a Python environment (Python 2.3 through to 3.4) and can also run on various implementations of Python including IronPython for .NET and Jython for Java.<ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/install.html</ref>
Requirements
CherryPy requires a Python version between 2.3 and 3.4 inclusively. Certain features require packages but none are mandatory for installation.<ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/install.html</ref>
- routes for declarative URL mapping dispatcher
- psycopg2 for PostgreSQL database backend session
- pywin32 for Windows services
- python-memcached for Memcached backend session
- simplejson for a better JSON support
- pyOpenSSL if your Python environment does not have the built in ssl module
Installing
CherryPy can be installed through common Python package managers with the following commands:<ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/install.html</ref>
Install (choose on of the following commands appropriately):
$ easy_install cherrypy $ pip install cherrypy $ yum install python-cherrypy $ apt-get install python python-dev
Install via yum
CherryPy is provided by the fedora base repository. In Fedora (and other RPM based Linux distributions, such as CentOS and Red Hat Enterprise Linux):
$ yum install python-cherrypy
Install via apt-get
CherryPy is also provided in the Ubuntu base repository. In Ubuntu (and other Debian-based Linux distributions such as Debian and Linux Mint):
$ apt-get install python python-dev
Installation from source
The source code is hosted on BitBucket and requires Mercurial to pull and install from the site itself.
$ hg clone https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy $ cd cherrypy $ python setup.py install
Alternatively, the source can be manually downloaded from here in a tarball.
$ tar -xvf CherryPy-#.#.#.tar.gz $ cd CherryPy-#.#.# $ python setup.py install
Install for Windows
- If you are using Windows, install Linux and follow any of the a forementioned methods.
- If you absolutely must use windows, you can download the .exe file to install CherryPy from here.
Interface
CherryPy is meant to be pythonic, meaning that development time is meant to be minimized and code is meant to be sparse and clean <ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/intro.html</ref>
Basic Example
Lets look at a hello world example<ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.2.6/concepts/basics.html</ref><ref>http://stackoverflow.com/questions/419163/what-does-if-name-main-do</ref>
#Use the cherrypy python library import cherrypy #Hello World project class HelloWorld(object): # index page def index(self): # Return the page contents return “Hello World!” # Allow the page to be visible index.exposed = True #designates this module as main if __name__ == ‘__main__’: # instantiates app and starts server cherrypy.quickstart(HelloWorld())
The above script sets up a basic Hello World application, by defining the index page (http://localhost:8080/) as an object that returns the string “Hello World!”. The page is exposed, meaning that the method can be called to answer a RESTful request. Otherwise, the method is internal only. This is similar to making a method public in Java. <ref>http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/accesscontrol.html</ref>
Routing, Parameters, and Exposure
Routing is the act of finding the appropriate code to handle a request. CherryPy uses a dispatcher to perform most of these, but premade dispatchers exist to handle more sophisticated handling of request. The most common is a page handler (the name of the object). Parameters can be passed into the handler via http query strings. These strings are appended to the URL of a site after a "?". Exposure is just the way CherryPy prevents access to objects from the users. Without the exposed attribute set to true, an object won't be accessible to the user.
#import python library import cherrypy #More Routes application class MoreRoutes(object): # Method decorator for index and equates to index.exposed = True @cherrypy.expose def index(self): return "Hello world!" # http://localhost:8080/route1 def route1(self, id=”charles”): # http://localhost:8080/route1?id=somestring return “Your name is ” + id # Params passed as a GET request. # Default string is “charles” route1.exposed = True # No explicit indication of exposure so calling this route will generate a 404 error def route2(self): return “Still another one” if __name__ == '__main__': cherrypy.quickstart(MoreRoutes())
The above shows how multiple routes are handled from the Hello World application and the expose decorator. Since route2 is not exposed, the user can not access it and will be shown a 404 HTTP status code (Not Found error).
Multiple Applications
import cherrypy #blog module class Blog(object): ...<blog code>... #forum module class Forum(object): ...<forum code>... #”main” method if __name__ == '__main__': #designates the blog to be under /blog route cherrypy.tree.mount(Blog(), ‘/blog’, “blog.conf”) #designates the forum to be under /forum route cherrypy.tree.mount(Forum(), ‘/forum’, “forum.conf”)
<ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/basics.html#multiple-applications</ref>
In the above example, the blog would be found under /blog in the URL, wheras the forum will be mounted at /forum in the application tree. The XXX.conf files are configuration files, which are dictionaries containing string keys and polymorphic values and can be used to set attributes on the engine, server, request, response, and log objects. <ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.2.6/concepts/config.html</ref>
Database Support
CherryPy offers multiple database integration possibilities including
- Relational: PostgreSQL, SQLite, MariaDB, Firebird
- Column-Oriented: HBase, Cassandra
- Key-Store: Redis, Memcached
- Document-Oriented: Couchdb, MongoDB
- Graph-Oriented: Neo4j
Unfortunately, unlike Ruby on Rails, CherryPy does not have a sophisticated Active Record Pattern based class for database abstraction, and the database connection has to be established manually. The queries are constructed as static SQL strings with values concatenated during function calls.
Here is an example of how it would look like<ref>http://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/latest/tutorials.html#tutorial-9-data-is-all-my-life</ref>
# import the Handles import MySQLdb import cherrypy # defining the connection function def connect(thread_index): # Create a connection and store it in the current thread cherrypy.thread_data.db = MySQLdb.connect('host', 'user', 'password', 'dbname') # tell cherrypy to call connect function for each thread cherrypy.engine.subscribe('start_thread', connect) # example query function @cherrypy.expose def count(val) # fetching instance of db connection c = cherrypy.thread_data.db.cursor() # executing query c.execute( 'select count(‘ + val + ’) from table' ) # fetching results from db res = c.fetchone() # releasing instance of the connection c.close() # returning the count value return res
RESTful CherryPy
REST (Representational State Transfer) is an abstraction of the architectural elements within a distributed hypermedia system. It ignores the details of component implementation and protocol syntax in order to focus on the roles of components, the constraints upon their interaction with other components, and their interpretation of significant data elements. It encompasses the fundamental constraints upon components, connectors, and data that define the basis of the Web architecture, and thus the essence of its behavior as a network-based application. <ref>http://www.ics.uci.edu/~fielding/pubs/dissertation/rest_arch_style.htm</ref>
In othe words, REST is defined by four interface constraints: identification of resources, manipulation of resources through representations, self-descriptive messages, and hypermedia as the engine of application state.<ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.2.6/progguide/REST.html</ref>
Identification of Resources
Since Cherrypy is an HTTP service provider, resources are referenced by HTTP URIs (Uniform Resource Identifiers), which consist of a scheme, hierarchical identitfier, query, and fragment.<ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.3.0/progguide/REST.html#implementing-rest-in-cherrypy</ref>
- Scheme: in http, the scheme is always http or https.
- Hierarchical Identifier: consists of an authority and a path (host/port and a path similar to the system file path but not the actual path). The path is mapped to Python Objects via a dispatch mechanism.
Manipulation of Resources Through Representations
The standard HTTP methods are as follows<ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.3.0/progguide/REST.html#manipulation-of-resources-through-representations</ref>
GET
retrieves the state of a specific resourcePUT
creates or replaces the state of a specific resourcePOST
passes information to a resource to use as it sees fitDELETE
removes resources
Self-Descriptive Messages
REST requires messages to be self-descriptive, meaning everything about a message is within the message itself. Such information can be found in the method headers or the definitions of the message’s media type. cherrypy.request.headers and cherrypy.response.headers are used to get this information. Custom-Types are allowed as well.<ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.3.0/progguide/REST.html#self-descriptive-messages</ref>
Hypermedia as the Engine of the Application State
Since REST is stateless and the state is maintained by the application in question, sessions are not maintained by REST, so, by association, CherryPy does not enable sessions by default. However, the REST server helps clients maintain a meaningful state through meaningful URIs<ref>https://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/3.3.0/progguide/REST.html#hypermedia-as-the-engine-of-application-state</ref>
Crash Course
Development
Create an application. Application requirements:
- The module needs to define a
__main__
cherrypy.quickstart(<Application Name>())
for hosting a single application. For example: cherrypy.quickstart(Blog())cherrypy.tree.mount(<Application Name>(), ‘/<hosting path segment>’, <configuration>)
for hosting multiple applications. For example:cherrypy.tree.mount(Blog(), ‘/blog’, blog_conf)
- All parts the users will see must be exposed with either the decorator
@cherrypy.expose or attribues exposed = True
orroute.exposed = True.
import cherrypy class HelloWorld(object): def index(self): return “Hello World!” index.exposed = True if __name__ == ‘__main__’: cherrypy.quickstart(HelloWorld())
Deployment
The application can be run as a python script in the Python interpreter.
$ python <app file>.py
It will hosted at http://127.0.0.1:8080/ It can also be run as a daemon process with
$cherryd -c <config file> -d -p <PID file>
Testing
CherryPy provides a helper class for testing. The feature of the framework is that test are run against a running cherrypy server and testing small cmponents without actually starting the server is not natively suported.
Lets look at an example<ref>http://cherrypy.readthedocs.org/en/latest/advanced.html#testing-your-application</ref>
#importing cherrypy library import cherrypy #importing the helper class from cherrypy.test import helper #creating a simple test class class SimpleCPTest(helper.CPWebCase): # function to start the cherrypy server def setup_server(): # root class of application to be tested class Root(object): # the expose method which we are trying to test # this method will respond to localhost/echo and actually echo the argument sent to it @cherrypy.expose def echo(self, message): return message # settingup the root class to be created on server start cherrypy.tree.mount(Root()) # grabbing the decorator for starting the server setup_server = staticmethod(setup_server) # This is the actual test code def test_message_should_be_returned_as_is(self): # sending arguments to the echo method via html request self.getPage("/echo?message=Hello%20world") # chechink if server accepted our request self.assertStatus('200 OK') # cheching response from server self.assertHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html;charset=utf-8') # checking if the was an "Hello World" in the response from server self.assertBody('Hello world')
Extensions
CherryPy provides a flexible open framework. Similar to RubyGems in Ruby on Rails which add a range of functionality to the framework CherryPy also supports plugins in the the following forms
Server Wide Functions (Plugins)
This type of extension is typically used to provide the application server itself with additional functionality. Such functions are executed with respect to events in the server even when there is no client request processing taking place.<ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/extend.html#id13</ref>
Typical use case involve
- Background Tasks (Tasks which involve server mentainance, data management etc. which are independent of user requests)
- External Connections (For establishing and maintaining threaded connections to external database or other servers)
- Delayed/Queued Processing (Cases when certain tasks are required by the user request which take a long time process and the HTTP response should not be blocked.)
These function utilize the Publish-Subscribe Framework implementation of CherryPy. Each function subscribes to one or more events on the bus which are published by the CherryPy engine.
The database connection is a good example of such a function
# import the Handles import MySQLdb import cherrypy # defining the connection function def connect(thread_index): # Create a connection and store it in the current thread cherrypy.thread_data.db = MySQLdb.connect('host', 'user', 'password', 'dbname') # tell cherrypy to call connect function for each thread cherrypy.engine.subscribe('start_thread', connect)
Here the function connect subscribes to the start_thread
channel. An event is published on the start_thread
channel whenever a server thread is started. Here engine
is the central bus of the CherryPy server.
Similarly it is also possible to create new channels and even buses themselves.
Per-Request Functions (Tools)
This type of extension is typically used to insert functionality between stages of request processing. Also known as Tools these are simple call-back functions registered with a Hook Point. Hook Points are predefined stages of request processing. CherryPy provides a Default ToolBox containing many tools. Users have the freedom to create their own tools and add them to the default toolbox or create a new one.<ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/extend.html#per-request-functions</ref>
An example for creating a tool
# defining the function to be called def my_tool(): # put tool functunality here print (“Super Amazing Tool”); # creating the decorator for the tool # specifying the hook point and function to be called cherrypy.tools.mytool = cherrypy.Tool(‘on_end_request’, my_tool()) #Sample Usage class Root(object): @cherrypy.expose() @cherrypy.tools.mytool() def index() return “Hello World”
Watch It In Action
CherryPy is used as a building block for Hulu<ref>http://tech.hulu.com/blog/2013/03/13/python-and-hulu</ref> and Netflix<ref>http://techblog.netflix.com/2013/03/python-at-netflix.html</ref>
Further Reading
References
<references/>