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'''CherryPy Framework''' | '''CherryPy Framework''' | ||
CherryPy is a | CherryPy is a Python based, object-oriented web framework that enables developers to quickly create lightweight and fast web applications.<ref>http://www.cherrypy.org/</ref><ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CherryPy</ref> | ||
== Background == | == Background == | ||
CherryPy is a lightweight web server framework written in | CherryPy is a lightweight web server framework written in Python. It has an object-oriented design and provides a basic HTTP web server as defined in RFC 7321. It includes built-in profiling, coverage, and testing tools to assist in development. | ||
CherryPy does not have any built-in templating or database engines, and instead relies on external libraries and plugins. <ref>http://www.cherrypy.org/</ref> | CherryPy does not have any built-in templating or database engines, and instead relies on external libraries and plugins. <ref>http://www.cherrypy.org/</ref> Python comes with a rich library support, so this typically is not an issue. | ||
It is distributed under the BSD License<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/src/697c7af588b8/cherrypy/LICENSE.txt</ref>. The latest version is 3.6 as | It is distributed under the BSD License<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/src/697c7af588b8/cherrypy/LICENSE.txt</ref>. The latest stable version is 3.6 as of August 19, 2014<ref>https://pypi.python.org/pypi/CherryPy</ref>. | ||
Some of the | Some of the well known websites using CherryPy are 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>. The full list can be found [http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/intro.html#websites-running-atop-cherrypy here]. | ||
== Basic Example == | == Basic Example == | ||
The following code demonstrates | The following code demonstrates a very simple web server using the CherryPy framework. | ||
'''WebApp.py''' | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
import cherrypy | import cherrypy | ||
Line 28: | Line 29: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
The line <code>cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())</code> tells the CherryPy framework to start the HTTP server, which hosts the application class <code>WebApp</code>. The method <code>index</code> is exposed as a URL handler by the <code>@cherrypy.expose</code> statement. The return value of the method is what is sent as the HTTP response. | |||
Start the application by running the above Python file "WebApp.py" and open your web browser to http://localhost:8080. The following page is displayed | |||
[[File:Screenshot_-_09132014_-_03-26-32_PM.png]] | [[File:Screenshot_-_09132014_-_03-26-32_PM.png]] | ||
== Features == | == Features == | ||
=== Query Strings === | === Query Strings === | ||
Line 88: | Line 52: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
A URL of | A URL of http://localhost:8080/test?value=5 gives the following | ||
[[File:Screenshot_-_09132014_-_06-37-27_PM.png]] | [[File:Screenshot_-_09132014_-_06-37-27_PM.png]] | ||
Line 94: | Line 58: | ||
=== Cookies === | === Cookies === | ||
CherryPy can set browser cookies with <tt>cherrypy.response.cookie</tt> and read browser cookies with <tt>cherrypy.request.cookie</tt> by accessing these variables as | CherryPy can set browser cookies with <tt>cherrypy.response.cookie</tt> and read browser cookies with <tt>cherrypy.request.cookie</tt> by accessing these variables as Python dictionary objects. | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Line 114: | Line 78: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Navigating to | Navigating to http://localhost:8080/set?value=test followed by http://localhost:8080/get gives the following | ||
[[File:CherryPyCookieTest.png]] | [[File:CherryPyCookieTest.png]] | ||
=== | === Logging === | ||
CherryPy provides the following method for application logging | |||
<pre> | |||
cherrypy.log("Hello, CherryPy!") | |||
</pre> | |||
By default, all logging is written to the console. The configuration keys <tt>log.access_file</tt> and <tt>log.error_file</tt> are also available for writing logging and errors to a text file. | |||
=== Starting the HTTP Server === | |||
CherryPy provides two ways to start the HTTP server, depending on the developer's needs. | |||
==== Single Application ==== | |||
The simplest way is to call the <tt>cherrypy.quickstart()</tt> function. This function takes at least one argument. | |||
<pre>cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())</pre> | |||
This starts the application class 'WebApp' at http://localhost:8080/. | |||
It can also take 2 more arguments. | |||
<pre>cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp(), '/app', {'/': {'tools.gzip.on': True}})</pre> | |||
This starts the application class 'WebApp' at http://localhost:8080/app. | |||
The third argument defines the configuration for the application. It can either be a Python dictionary object or a configuration file. | |||
==== Multiple Applications ==== | |||
The function <tt>cherrypy.tree.mount</tt> is used to host multiple application classes. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
cherrypy.tree.mount(MyApp1(), '/app1', app1_conf) | |||
cherrypy.tree.mount(MyApp2(), '/app2', app2_conf) | |||
cherrypy.engine.start() | |||
cherrypy.engine.block() | |||
cherrypy. | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
This | This will host two applications classes having paths http://localhost:8080/app1 and http://localhost:8080/app2. | ||
=== Server Configuration === | === Server Configuration === | ||
The < | The <tt>cherrypy.config.update</tt> function can be used to configure the CherryPy framework | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Line 154: | Line 132: | ||
return "Hello, CherryPy!" | return "Hello, CherryPy!" | ||
cherrypy.config.update({'server.socket_port': | cherrypy.config.update({'server.socket_port': 9999}) | ||
cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp()) | cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp()) | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
This will start the server on port 9999 instead of the default port 8080. The application can then be accessed at http://localhost:9999/. | This will start the HTTP server on port 9999 instead of the default port 8080. The application can then be accessed at http://localhost:9999/. | ||
A configuration file path instead can be passed as an argument to this function. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
cherrypy.config.update("WebAppServer.conf") | cherrypy.config.update("WebAppServer.conf") | ||
Line 172: | Line 150: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
=== | === Sessions === | ||
In CherryPy, sessions are disabled by default. To enable sessions, set the configuration <tt>tools.sessions.on</tt> to <tt>True</tt>. <ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/basics.html#using-sessions</ref> | |||
Session variables can be accessed with <tt>cherrypy.session</tt>, which is a Python dictionary object. | |||
<pre> | |||
import cherrypy | |||
class WebApp(object): | |||
@cherrypy.expose | |||
def index(self): | |||
if 'number' not in cherrypy.session: | |||
cherrypy.session['number'] = 0 | |||
else: | |||
cherrypy.session['number'] += 1 | |||
return "Number = " + str(cherrypy.session['number']) | |||
cherrypy.config.update({'tools.sessions.on': True}) | |||
cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp()) | |||
</pre> | |||
This example shows a number that increments by 1 every time the user navigates to http://localhost:8080. | |||
=== Static Content === | |||
Files with static content, such as binaries, images, or stylesheets, can be served by the HTTP server by adding the following lines to the application configuration file. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Line 181: | Line 183: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
This will allow | This will allow the user to access some file "user.jpg" present in the folder "/site/public/images/user.jpg" using the url http://localhost:8080/images/user.jpg. | ||
=== | === REST APIs === | ||
CherryPy can be used to expose the APIs as RESTful Web Services. This allows third party applications to easily communicate with the system. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Line 208: | Line 210: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
The above code exposes the GET API with url http://localhost:8080/. The API returns the string "Hello, CherryPy!". | |||
=== Multiple | === Multiple Ports === | ||
The default HTTP server started by CherryPy can be used to host the application only on one socket port (default 8080). However, it is possible to host the application on multiple ports. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Line 224: | Line 226: | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
The above code hosts | The above code hosts the application with one more HTTP server which runs on port 443. It is possible to create any number of additional HTTP servers. | ||
=== Authentication === | |||
CherryPy provides two authentication mechanisms: Simple and Digest. It follows the specification defined by [http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2617.html RFC 2617] | |||
=== WSGI Support === | |||
CherryPy supports the WSGI (Web Server Gateway Interface) specification defined by [http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0333 PEP 0333] and [http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3333 PEP 3333]. | |||
This allows two things: | |||
* Instead of using the default CherryPy server, a CherryPy application can be hosted on an external WSGI server. | |||
* The CherryPy server can be used independently to host an external WSGI application. | |||
=== Test Suite === | === Test Suite === | ||
The CherryPy framework provides a class, named <tt>helper</tt> which can be used as a base class for writing functional tests. | |||
Running a test will start the complete application and thus can be used to simulate the scenario when a user actually tries to access the server on web. | |||
The sample code to run a test can be found [http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/advanced.html#testing-your-application here] | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Latest revision as of 01:28, 20 September 2014
CherryPy Framework
CherryPy is a Python based, object-oriented web framework that enables developers to quickly create lightweight and fast web applications.<ref>http://www.cherrypy.org/</ref><ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CherryPy</ref>
Background
CherryPy is a lightweight web server framework written in Python. It has an object-oriented design and provides a basic HTTP web server as defined in RFC 7321. It includes built-in profiling, coverage, and testing tools to assist in development.
CherryPy does not have any built-in templating or database engines, and instead relies on external libraries and plugins. <ref>http://www.cherrypy.org/</ref> Python comes with a rich library support, so this typically is not an issue.
It is distributed under the BSD License<ref>https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/src/697c7af588b8/cherrypy/LICENSE.txt</ref>. The latest stable version is 3.6 as of August 19, 2014<ref>https://pypi.python.org/pypi/CherryPy</ref>.
Some of the well known websites using CherryPy are 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>. The full list can be found here.
Basic Example
The following code demonstrates a very simple web server using the CherryPy framework.
WebApp.py
import cherrypy class WebApp(object): @cherrypy.expose def index(self): return "Hello, CherryPy!" cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
The line cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
tells the CherryPy framework to start the HTTP server, which hosts the application class WebApp
. The method index
is exposed as a URL handler by the @cherrypy.expose
statement. The return value of the method is what is sent as the HTTP response.
Start the application by running the above Python file "WebApp.py" and open your web browser to http://localhost:8080. The following page is displayed
Features
Query Strings
CherryPy will automatically parse the query string of a URL. Fields are passed as method arguments with matching names, and can take advantage of default argument values.
import cherrypy class WebApp(object): @cherrypy.expose def test(self, value=1): return "Value = " + str(value) cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
A URL of http://localhost:8080/test?value=5 gives the following
Cookies
CherryPy can set browser cookies with cherrypy.response.cookie and read browser cookies with cherrypy.request.cookie by accessing these variables as Python dictionary objects.
import cherrypy class WebApp(object): @cherrypy.expose def set(self, value = "Test"): cookie = cherrypy.response.cookie cookie['Value'] = value return "Cookie set" @cherrypy.expose def get(self): cookie = cherrypy.request.cookie return "Cookie value = " + str(cookie['Value'].value) cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
Navigating to http://localhost:8080/set?value=test followed by http://localhost:8080/get gives the following
Logging
CherryPy provides the following method for application logging
cherrypy.log("Hello, CherryPy!")
By default, all logging is written to the console. The configuration keys log.access_file and log.error_file are also available for writing logging and errors to a text file.
Starting the HTTP Server
CherryPy provides two ways to start the HTTP server, depending on the developer's needs.
Single Application
The simplest way is to call the cherrypy.quickstart() function. This function takes at least one argument.
cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
This starts the application class 'WebApp' at http://localhost:8080/.
It can also take 2 more arguments.
cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp(), '/app', {'/': {'tools.gzip.on': True}})
This starts the application class 'WebApp' at http://localhost:8080/app. The third argument defines the configuration for the application. It can either be a Python dictionary object or a configuration file.
Multiple Applications
The function cherrypy.tree.mount is used to host multiple application classes.
cherrypy.tree.mount(MyApp1(), '/app1', app1_conf) cherrypy.tree.mount(MyApp2(), '/app2', app2_conf) cherrypy.engine.start() cherrypy.engine.block()
This will host two applications classes having paths http://localhost:8080/app1 and http://localhost:8080/app2.
Server Configuration
The cherrypy.config.update function can be used to configure the CherryPy framework
import cherrypy class WebApp(object): @cherrypy.expose def index(self): return "Hello, CherryPy!" cherrypy.config.update({'server.socket_port': 9999}) cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
This will start the HTTP server on port 9999 instead of the default port 8080. The application can then be accessed at http://localhost:9999/.
A configuration file path instead can be passed as an argument to this function.
cherrypy.config.update("WebAppServer.conf")
WebAppServer.conf
[global] server.socket_port: 9999
Sessions
In CherryPy, sessions are disabled by default. To enable sessions, set the configuration tools.sessions.on to True. <ref>http://docs.cherrypy.org/en/latest/basics.html#using-sessions</ref>
Session variables can be accessed with cherrypy.session, which is a Python dictionary object.
import cherrypy class WebApp(object): @cherrypy.expose def index(self): if 'number' not in cherrypy.session: cherrypy.session['number'] = 0 else: cherrypy.session['number'] += 1 return "Number = " + str(cherrypy.session['number']) cherrypy.config.update({'tools.sessions.on': True}) cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
This example shows a number that increments by 1 every time the user navigates to http://localhost:8080.
Static Content
Files with static content, such as binaries, images, or stylesheets, can be served by the HTTP server by adding the following lines to the application configuration file.
[/images] tools.staticdir.on = True tools.staticdir.dir = "/site/public/images"
This will allow the user to access some file "user.jpg" present in the folder "/site/public/images/user.jpg" using the url http://localhost:8080/images/user.jpg.
REST APIs
CherryPy can be used to expose the APIs as RESTful Web Services. This allows third party applications to easily communicate with the system.
import cherrypy class MyAppRestMode(object): exposed = True def GET(self): return "Hello, CherryPy!" conf = { '/': { 'request.dispatch': cherrypy.dispatch.MethodDispatcher(), 'tools.response_headers.on': True, 'tools.response_headers.headers': [('Content-Type', 'text/plain')], } } cherrypy.quickstart(MyAppRestMode(), '/', conf)
The above code exposes the GET API with url http://localhost:8080/. The API returns the string "Hello, CherryPy!".
Multiple Ports
The default HTTP server started by CherryPy can be used to host the application only on one socket port (default 8080). However, it is possible to host the application on multiple ports.
from cherrypy._cpserver import Server server = Server() server.socket_port = 443 server.subscribe() cherrypy.quickstart(WebApp())
The above code hosts the application with one more HTTP server which runs on port 443. It is possible to create any number of additional HTTP servers.
Authentication
CherryPy provides two authentication mechanisms: Simple and Digest. It follows the specification defined by RFC 2617
WSGI Support
CherryPy supports the WSGI (Web Server Gateway Interface) specification defined by PEP 0333 and PEP 3333.
This allows two things:
- Instead of using the default CherryPy server, a CherryPy application can be hosted on an external WSGI server.
- The CherryPy server can be used independently to host an external WSGI application.
Test Suite
The CherryPy framework provides a class, named helper which can be used as a base class for writing functional tests.
Running a test will start the complete application and thus can be used to simulate the scenario when a user actually tries to access the server on web.
The sample code to run a test can be found here
References
<references/>