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Flask教程:API

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This part of the documentation covers all the interfaces of Flask. For
parts where Flask depends on external libraries, we document the most
important right here and provide links to the canonical documentation.

应用对象¶

class flask.Flask(import_name, static_path=None, static_url_path=None, static_folder=’static’, template_folder=’templates’, instance_path=None, instance_relative_config=False)

The flask object implements a WSGI application and acts as the central
object. It is passed the name of the module or package of the
application. Once it is created it will act as a central registry for
the view functions, the URL rules, template configuration and much more.

The name of the package is used to resolve resources from inside the
package or the folder the module is contained in depending on if the
package parameter resolves to an actual python package (a folder with
an __init__.py file inside) or a standard module (just a .py file).

For more information about resource loading, see open_resource().

Usually you create a Flask instance in your main module or
in the __init__.py file of your package like this:

from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)

About the First Parameter

The idea of the first parameter is to give Flask an idea what
belongs to your application. This name is used to find resources
on the file system, can be used by extensions to improve debugging
information and a lot more.

So it’s important what you provide there. If you are using a single
module, __name__ is always the correct value. If you however are
using a package, it’s usually recommended to hardcode the name of
your package there.

For example if your application is defined in yourapplication/app.py
you should create it with one of the two versions below:

app = Flask('yourapplication')
app = Flask(__name__.split('.')[0])

Why is that? The application will work even with __name__, thanks
to how resources are looked up. However it will make debugging more
painful. Certain extensions can make assumptions based on the
import name of your application. For example the Flask-SQLAlchemy
extension will look for the code in your application that triggered
an SQL query in debug mode. If the import name is not properly set
up, that debugging information is lost. (For example it would only
pick up SQL queries in yourapplication.app and not
yourapplication.views.frontend)

New in version 0.7: The static_url_path, static_folder, and template_folder
parameters were added.

New in version 0.8: The instance_path and instance_relative_config parameters were
added.

Parameters:
  • import_name – the name of the application package
  • static_url_path – can be used to specify a different path for the
    static files on the web. Defaults to the name
    of the static_folder folder.
  • static_folder – the folder with static files that should be served
    at static_url_path. Defaults to the 'static'
    folder in the root path of the application.
  • template_folder – the folder that contains the templates that should
    be used by the application. Defaults to
    'templates' folder in the root path of the
    application.
  • instance_path – An alternative instance path for the application.
    By default the folder 'instance' next to the
    package or module is assumed to be the instance
    path.
  • instance_relative_config – if set to True relative filenames
    for loading the config are assumed to
    be relative to the instance path instead
    of the application root.
add_template_filter(*args, **kwargs)

Register a custom template filter. Works exactly like the
template_filter() decorator.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the filter, otherwise the
function name will be used.
add_template_global(*args, **kwargs)

Register a custom template global function. Works exactly like the
template_global() decorator.

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the global function, otherwise the
function name will be used.
add_template_test(*args, **kwargs)

Register a custom template test. Works exactly like the
template_test() decorator.

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the test, otherwise the
function name will be used.
add_url_rule(*args, **kwargs)

Connects a URL rule. Works exactly like the route()
decorator. If a view_func is provided it will be registered with the
endpoint.

Basically this example:

@app.route('/')
def index():
    pass

Is equivalent to the following:

def index():
    pass
app.add_url_rule('/', 'index', index)

If the view_func is not provided you will need to connect the endpoint
to a view function like so:

app.view_functions['index'] = index

Internally route() invokes add_url_rule() so if you want
to customize the behavior via subclassing you only need to change
this method.

For more information refer to URL 路由注册.

Changed in version 0.2: view_func parameter added.

Changed in version 0.6: OPTIONS is added automatically as method.

Parameters:
  • rule – the URL rule as string
  • endpoint – the endpoint for the registered URL rule. Flask
    itself assumes the name of the view function as
    endpoint
  • view_func – the function to call when serving a request to the
    provided endpoint
  • options – the options to be forwarded to the underlying
    Rule object. A change
    to Werkzeug is handling of method options. methods
    is a list of methods this rule should be limited
    to (GET, POST etc.). By default a rule
    just listens for GET (and implicitly HEAD).
    Starting with Flask 0.6, OPTIONS is implicitly
    added and handled by the standard request handling.
after_request(*args, **kwargs)

Register a function to be run after each request. Your function
must take one parameter, a response_class object and return
a new response object or the same (see process_response()).

As of Flask 0.7 this function might not be executed at the end of the
request in case an unhandled exception occurred.

after_request_funcs = None

A dictionary with lists of functions that should be called after
each request. The key of the dictionary is the name of the blueprint
this function is active for, None for all requests. This can for
example be used to open database connections or getting hold of the
currently logged in user. To register a function here, use the
after_request() decorator.

app_context()

Binds the application only. For as long as the application is bound
to the current context the flask.current_app points to that
application. An application context is automatically created when a
request context is pushed if necessary.

Example usage:

with app.app_context():
    ...

New in version 0.9.

app_ctx_globals_class

The class that is used for the g instance.

Example use cases for a custom class:

  1. Store arbitrary attributes on flask.g.
  2. Add a property for lazy per-request database connectors.
  3. Return None instead of AttributeError on expected attributes.
  4. Raise exception if an unexpected attr is set, a “controlled” flask.g.

In Flask 0.9 this property was called request_globals_class but it
was changed in 0.10 to app_ctx_globals_class because the
flask.g object is not application context scoped.

New in version 0.10.

alias of _AppCtxGlobals

auto_find_instance_path()

Tries to locate the instance path if it was not provided to the
constructor of the application class. It will basically calculate
the path to a folder named instance next to your main file or
the package.

New in version 0.8.

before_first_request(*args, **kwargs)

Registers a function to be run before the first request to this
instance of the application.

New in version 0.8.

before_first_request_funcs = None

A lists of functions that should be called at the beginning of the
first request to this instance. To register a function here, use
the before_first_request() decorator.

New in version 0.8.

before_request(*args, **kwargs)

Registers a function to run before each request.

before_request_funcs = None

A dictionary with lists of functions that should be called at the
beginning of the request. The key of the dictionary is the name of
the blueprint this function is active for, None for all requests.
This can for example be used to open database connections or
getting hold of the currently logged in user. To register a
function here, use the before_request() decorator.

blueprints = None

all the attached blueprints in a dictionary by name. Blueprints
can be attached multiple times so this dictionary does not tell
you how often they got attached.

New in version 0.7.

config = None

The configuration dictionary as Config. This behaves
exactly like a regular dictionary but supports additional methods
to load a config from files.

context_processor(*args, **kwargs)

Registers a template context processor function.

create_global_jinja_loader()

Creates the loader for the Jinja2 environment. Can be used to
override just the loader and keeping the rest unchanged. It’s
discouraged to override this function. Instead one should override
the jinja_loader() function instead.

The global loader dispatches between the loaders of the application
and the individual blueprints.

New in version 0.7.

create_jinja_environment()

Creates the Jinja2 environment based on jinja_options
and select_jinja_autoescape(). Since 0.7 this also adds
the Jinja2 globals and filters after initialization. Override
this function to customize the behavior.

New in version 0.5.

create_url_adapter(request)

Creates a URL adapter for the given request. The URL adapter
is created at a point where the request context is not yet set up
so the request is passed explicitly.

New in version 0.6.

Changed in version 0.9: This can now also be called without a request object when the
URL adapter is created for the application context.

debug

The debug flag. Set this to True to enable debugging of the
application. In debug mode the debugger will kick in when an unhandled
exception occurs and the integrated server will automatically reload
the application if changes in the code are detected.

This attribute can also be configured from the config with the DEBUG
configuration key. Defaults to False.

debug_log_format = ‘——————————————————————————–\n%(levelname)s in %(module)s [%(pathname)s:%(lineno)d]:\n%(message)s\n——————————————————————————–‘

The logging format used for the debug logger. This is only used when
the application is in debug mode, otherwise the attached logging
handler does the formatting.

New in version 0.3.

default_config = ImmutableDict({‘JSON_AS_ASCII’: True, ‘USE_X_SENDFILE’: False, ‘SESSION_COOKIE_PATH’: None, ‘SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN’: None, ‘SESSION_COOKIE_NAME’: ‘session’, ‘LOGGER_NAME’: None, ‘DEBUG’: False, ‘SECRET_KEY’: None, ‘MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH’: None, ‘APPLICATION_ROOT’: None, ‘SERVER_NAME’: None, ‘PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME’: ‘http’, ‘JSONIFY_PRETTYPRINT_REGULAR’: True, ‘TESTING’: False, ‘PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME’: datetime.timedelta(31), ‘PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS’: None, ‘TRAP_BAD_REQUEST_ERRORS’: False, ‘JSON_SORT_KEYS’: True, ‘SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY’: True, ‘SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT’: 43200, ‘PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION’: None, ‘SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE’: False, ‘TRAP_HTTP_EXCEPTIONS’: False})

Default configuration parameters.

dispatch_request()

Does the request dispatching. Matches the URL and returns the
return value of the view or error handler. This does not have to
be a response object. In order to convert the return value to a
proper response object, call make_response().

Changed in version 0.7: This no longer does the exception handling, this code was
moved to the new full_dispatch_request().

do_teardown_appcontext(exc=None)

Called when an application context is popped. This works pretty
much the same as do_teardown_request() but for the application
context.

New in version 0.9.

do_teardown_request(exc=None)

Called after the actual request dispatching and will
call every as teardown_request() decorated function. This is
not actually called by the Flask object itself but is always
triggered when the request context is popped. That way we have a
tighter control over certain resources under testing environments.

Changed in version 0.9: Added the exc argument. Previously this was always using the
current exception information.

enable_modules = True

Enable the deprecated module support? This is active by default
in 0.7 but will be changed to False in 0.8. With Flask 1.0 modules
will be removed in favor of Blueprints

endpoint(*args, **kwargs)

A decorator to register a function as an endpoint.
Example:

@app.endpoint('example.endpoint')
def example():
    return "example"
Parameters: endpoint – the name of the endpoint
error_handler_spec = None

A dictionary of all registered error handlers. The key is None
for error handlers active on the application, otherwise the key is
the name of the blueprint. Each key points to another dictionary
where they key is the status code of the http exception. The
special key None points to a list of tuples where the first item
is the class for the instance check and the second the error handler
function.

To register a error handler, use the errorhandler()
decorator.

errorhandler(*args, **kwargs)

A decorator that is used to register a function give a given
error code. Example:

@app.errorhandler(404)
def page_not_found(error):
    return 'This page does not exist', 404

You can also register handlers for arbitrary exceptions:

@app.errorhandler(DatabaseError)
def special_exception_handler(error):
    return 'Database connection failed', 500

You can also register a function as error handler without using
the errorhandler() decorator. The following example is
equivalent to the one above:

def page_not_found(error):
    return 'This page does not exist', 404
app.error_handler_spec[None][404] = page_not_found

Setting error handlers via assignments to error_handler_spec
however is discouraged as it requires fiddling with nested dictionaries
and the special case for arbitrary exception types.

The first None refers to the active blueprint. If the error
handler should be application wide None shall be used.

New in version 0.7: One can now additionally also register custom exception types
that do not necessarily have to be a subclass of the
HTTPException class.

Parameters: code – the code as integer for the handler
extensions = None

a place where extensions can store application specific state. For
example this is where an extension could store database engines and
similar things. For backwards compatibility extensions should register
themselves like this:

if not hasattr(app, 'extensions'):
    app.extensions = {}
app.extensions['extensionname'] = SomeObject()

The key must match the name of the flaskext module. For example in
case of a “Flask-Foo” extension in flaskext.foo, the key would be
'foo'.

New in version 0.7.

full_dispatch_request()

Dispatches the request and on top of that performs request
pre and postprocessing as well as HTTP exception catching and
error handling.

New in version 0.7.

get_send_file_max_age(filename)

Provides default cache_timeout for the send_file() functions.

By default, this function returns SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT from
the configuration of current_app.

Static file functions such as send_from_directory() use this
function, and send_file() calls this function on
current_app when the given cache_timeout is None. If a
cache_timeout is given in send_file(), that timeout is used;
otherwise, this method is called.

This allows subclasses to change the behavior when sending files based
on the filename. For example, to set the cache timeout for .js files
to 60 seconds:

class MyFlask(flask.Flask):
    def get_send_file_max_age(self, name):
        if name.lower().endswith('.js'):
            return 60
        return flask.Flask.get_send_file_max_age(self, name)

New in version 0.9.

got_first_request

This attribute is set to True if the application started
handling the first request.

New in version 0.8.

handle_exception(e)

Default exception handling that kicks in when an exception
occurs that is not caught. In debug mode the exception will
be re-raised immediately, otherwise it is logged and the handler
for a 500 internal server error is used. If no such handler
exists, a default 500 internal server error message is displayed.

New in version 0.3.

handle_http_exception(e)

Handles an HTTP exception. By default this will invoke the
registered error handlers and fall back to returning the
exception as response.

New in version 0.3.

handle_url_build_error(error, endpoint, values)

Handle BuildError on url_for().

handle_user_exception(e)

This method is called whenever an exception occurs that should be
handled. A special case are
HTTPExceptions which are forwarded by
this function to the handle_http_exception() method. This
function will either return a response value or reraise the
exception with the same traceback.

New in version 0.7.

has_static_folder

This is True if the package bound object’s container has a
folder named 'static'.

New in version 0.5.

init_jinja_globals()

Deprecated. Used to initialize the Jinja2 globals.

New in version 0.5.

Changed in version 0.7: This method is deprecated with 0.7. Override
create_jinja_environment() instead.

inject_url_defaults(endpoint, values)

Injects the URL defaults for the given endpoint directly into
the values dictionary passed. This is used internally and
automatically called on URL building.

New in version 0.7.

instance_path = None

Holds the path to the instance folder.

New in version 0.8.

jinja_env

The Jinja2 environment used to load templates.

jinja_loader

The Jinja loader for this package bound object.

New in version 0.5.

jinja_options = ImmutableDict({‘extensions’: [‘jinja2.ext.autoescape’, ‘jinja2.ext.with_’]})

Options that are passed directly to the Jinja2 environment.

json_decoder

The JSON decoder class to use. Defaults to JSONDecoder.

New in version 0.10.

alias of JSONDecoder

json_encoder

The JSON encoder class to use. Defaults to JSONEncoder.

New in version 0.10.

alias of JSONEncoder

log_exception(exc_info)

Logs an exception. This is called by handle_exception()
if debugging is disabled and right before the handler is called.
The default implementation logs the exception as error on the
logger.

New in version 0.8.

logger

A logging.Logger object for this application. The
default configuration is to log to stderr if the application is
in debug mode. This logger can be used to (surprise) log messages.
Here some examples:

app.logger.debug('A value for debugging')
app.logger.warning('A warning occurred (%d apples)', 42)
app.logger.error('An error occurred')

New in version 0.3.

logger_name

The name of the logger to use. By default the logger name is the
package name passed to the constructor.

New in version 0.4.

make_config(instance_relative=False)

Used to create the config attribute by the Flask constructor.
The instance_relative parameter is passed in from the constructor
of Flask (there named instance_relative_config) and indicates if
the config should be relative to the instance path or the root path
of the application.

New in version 0.8.

make_default_options_response()

This method is called to create the default OPTIONS response.
This can be changed through subclassing to change the default
behavior of OPTIONS responses.

New in version 0.7.

make_null_session()

Creates a new instance of a missing session. Instead of overriding
this method we recommend replacing the session_interface.

New in version 0.7.

make_response(rv)

Converts the return value from a view function to a real
response object that is an instance of response_class.

The following types are allowed for rv:

response_class the object is returned unchanged
str a response object is created with the
string as body
unicode a response object is created with the
string encoded to utf-8 as body
a WSGI function the function is called as WSGI application
and buffered as response object
tuple A tuple in the form (response, status,
headers)
where response is any of the
types defined here, status is a string
or an integer and headers is a list of
a dictionary with header values.
Parameters: rv – the return value from the view function

Changed in version 0.9: Previously a tuple was interpreted as the arguments for the
response object.

name

The name of the application. This is usually the import name
with the difference that it’s guessed from the run file if the
import name is main. This name is used as a display name when
Flask needs the name of the application. It can be set and overridden
to change the value.

New in version 0.8.

open_instance_resource(resource, mode=’rb’)

Opens a resource from the application’s instance folder
(instance_path). Otherwise works like
open_resource(). Instance resources can also be opened for
writing.

Parameters:
  • resource – the name of the resource. To access resources within
    subfolders use forward slashes as separator.
  • mode – resource file opening mode, default is ‘rb’.
open_resource(resource, mode=’rb’)

Opens a resource from the application’s resource folder. To see
how this works, consider the following folder structure:

/myapplication.py
/schema.sql
/static
    /style.css
/templates
    /layout.html
    /index.html

If you want to open the schema.sql file you would do the
following:

with app.open_resource('schema.sql') as f:
    contents = f.read()
    do_something_with(contents)
Parameters:
  • resource – the name of the resource. To access resources within
    subfolders use forward slashes as separator.
  • mode – resource file opening mode, default is ‘rb’.
open_session(request)

Creates or opens a new session. Default implementation stores all
session data in a signed cookie. This requires that the
secret_key is set. Instead of overriding this method
we recommend replacing the session_interface.

Parameters: request – an instance of request_class.
permanent_session_lifetime

A timedelta which is used to set the expiration
date of a permanent session. The default is 31 days which makes a
permanent session survive for roughly one month.

This attribute can also be configured from the config with the
PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME configuration key. Defaults to
timedelta(days=31)

preprocess_request()

Called before the actual request dispatching and will
call every as before_request() decorated function.
If any of these function returns a value it’s handled as
if it was the return value from the view and further
request handling is stopped.

This also triggers the url_value_processor() functions before
the actual before_request() functions are called.

preserve_context_on_exception

Returns the value of the PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION
configuration value in case it’s set, otherwise a sensible default
is returned.

New in version 0.7.

process_response(response)

Can be overridden in order to modify the response object
before it’s sent to the WSGI server. By default this will
call all the after_request() decorated functions.

Changed in version 0.5: As of Flask 0.5 the functions registered for after request
execution are called in reverse order of registration.

Parameters: response – a response_class object.
Returns: a new response object or the same, has to be an
instance of response_class.
propagate_exceptions

Returns the value of the PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS configuration
value in case it’s set, otherwise a sensible default is returned.

New in version 0.7.

register_blueprint(*args, **kwargs)

Registers a blueprint on the application.

New in version 0.7.

register_error_handler(code_or_exception, f)

Alternative error attach function to the errorhandler()
decorator that is more straightforward to use for non decorator
usage.

New in version 0.7.

register_module(module, **options)

Registers a module with this application. The keyword argument
of this function are the same as the ones for the constructor of the
Module class and will override the values of the module if
provided.

Changed in version 0.7: The module system was deprecated in favor for the blueprint
system.

request_class

The class that is used for request objects. See Request
for more information.

alias of Request

request_context(environ)

Creates a RequestContext from the given
environment and binds it to the current context. This must be used in
combination with the with statement because the request is only bound
to the current context for the duration of the with block.

Example usage:

with app.request_context(environ):
    do_something_with(request)

The object returned can also be used without the with statement
which is useful for working in the shell. The example above is
doing exactly the same as this code:

ctx = app.request_context(environ)
ctx.push()
try:
    do_something_with(request)
finally:
    ctx.pop()

Changed in version 0.3: Added support for non-with statement usage and with statement
is now passed the ctx object.

Parameters: environ – a WSGI environment
response_class

The class that is used for response objects. See
Response for more information.

alias of Response

route(rule, **options)

A decorator that is used to register a view function for a
given URL rule. This does the same thing as add_url_rule()
but is intended for decorator usage:

@app.route('/')
def index():
    return 'Hello World'

For more information refer to URL 路由注册.

Parameters:
  • rule – the URL rule as string
  • endpoint – the endpoint for the registered URL rule. Flask
    itself assumes the name of the view function as
    endpoint
  • options – the options to be forwarded to the underlying
    Rule object. A change
    to Werkzeug is handling of method options. methods
    is a list of methods this rule should be limited
    to (GET, POST etc.). By default a rule
    just listens for GET (and implicitly HEAD).
    Starting with Flask 0.6, OPTIONS is implicitly
    added and handled by the standard request handling.
run(host=None, port=None, debug=None, **options)

Runs the application on a local development server. If the
debug flag is set the server will automatically reload
for code changes and show a debugger in case an exception happened.

If you want to run the application in debug mode, but disable the
code execution on the interactive debugger, you can pass
use_evalex=False as parameter. This will keep the debugger’s
traceback screen active, but disable code execution.

Keep in Mind

Flask will suppress any server error with a generic error page
unless it is in debug mode. As such to enable just the
interactive debugger without the code reloading, you have to
invoke run() with debug=True and use_reloader=False.
Setting use_debugger to True without being in debug mode
won’t catch any exceptions because there won’t be any to
catch.

Changed in version 0.10: The default port is now picked from the SERVER_NAME variable.

Parameters:
  • host – the hostname to listen on. Set this to '0.0.0.0' to
    have the server available externally as well. Defaults to
    '127.0.0.1'.
  • port – the port of the webserver. Defaults to 5000 or the
    port defined in the SERVER_NAME config variable if
    present.
  • debug – if given, enable or disable debug mode.
    See debug.
  • options – the options to be forwarded to the underlying
    Werkzeug server. See
    werkzeug.serving.run_simple() for more
    information.
save_session(session, response)

Saves the session if it needs updates. For the default
implementation, check open_session(). Instead of overriding this
method we recommend replacing the session_interface.

Parameters:
secret_key

If a secret key is set, cryptographic components can use this to
sign cookies and other things. Set this to a complex random value
when you want to use the secure cookie for instance.

This attribute can also be configured from the config with the
SECRET_KEY configuration key. Defaults to None.

select_jinja_autoescape(filename)

Returns True if autoescaping should be active for the given
template name.

New in version 0.5.

send_static_file(filename)

Function used internally to send static files from the static
folder to the browser.

New in version 0.5.

The secure cookie uses this for the name of the session cookie.

This attribute can also be configured from the config with the
SESSION_COOKIE_NAME configuration key. Defaults to 'session'

session_interface = <flask.sessions.SecureCookieSessionInterface object at 0x1068148d0>

the session interface to use. By default an instance of
SecureCookieSessionInterface is used here.

New in version 0.8.

should_ignore_error(error)

This is called to figure out if an error should be ignored
or not as far as the teardown system is concerned. If this
function returns True then the teardown handlers will not be
passed the error.

New in version 0.10.

teardown_appcontext(*args, **kwargs)

Registers a function to be called when the application context
ends. These functions are typically also called when the request
context is popped.

Example:

ctx = app.app_context()
ctx.push()
...
ctx.pop()

When ctx.pop() is executed in the above example, the teardown
functions are called just before the app context moves from the
stack of active contexts. This becomes relevant if you are using
such constructs in tests.

Since a request context typically also manages an application
context it would also be called when you pop a request context.

When a teardown function was called because of an exception it will
be passed an error object.

New in version 0.9.

teardown_appcontext_funcs = None

A list of functions that are called when the application context
is destroyed. Since the application context is also torn down
if the request ends this is the place to store code that disconnects
from databases.

New in version 0.9.

teardown_request(*args, **kwargs)

Register a function to be run at the end of each request,
regardless of whether there was an exception or not. These functions
are executed when the request context is popped, even if not an
actual request was performed.

Example:

ctx = app.test_request_context()
ctx.push()
...
ctx.pop()

When ctx.pop() is executed in the above example, the teardown
functions are called just before the request context moves from the
stack of active contexts. This becomes relevant if you are using
such constructs in tests.

Generally teardown functions must take every necessary step to avoid
that they will fail. If they do execute code that might fail they
will have to surround the execution of these code by try/except
statements and log occurring errors.

When a teardown function was called because of a exception it will
be passed an error object.

Debug Note

In debug mode Flask will not tear down a request on an exception
immediately. Instead if will keep it alive so that the interactive
debugger can still access it. This behavior can be controlled
by the PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION configuration variable.

teardown_request_funcs = None

A dictionary with lists of functions that are called after
each request, even if an exception has occurred. The key of the
dictionary is the name of the blueprint this function is active for,
None for all requests. These functions are not allowed to modify
the request, and their return values are ignored. If an exception
occurred while processing the request, it gets passed to each
teardown_request function. To register a function here, use the
teardown_request() decorator.

New in version 0.7.

template_context_processors = None

A dictionary with list of functions that are called without argument
to populate the template context. The key of the dictionary is the
name of the blueprint this function is active for, None for all
requests. Each returns a dictionary that the template context is
updated with. To register a function here, use the
context_processor() decorator.

template_filter(*args, **kwargs)

A decorator that is used to register custom template filter.
You can specify a name for the filter, otherwise the function
name will be used. Example:

@app.template_filter()
def reverse(s):
    return s[::-1]
Parameters: name – the optional name of the filter, otherwise the
function name will be used.
template_global(*args, **kwargs)

A decorator that is used to register a custom template global function.
You can specify a name for the global function, otherwise the function
name will be used. Example:

@app.template_global()
def double(n):
    return 2 * n

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the global function, otherwise the
function name will be used.
template_test(*args, **kwargs)

A decorator that is used to register custom template test.
You can specify a name for the test, otherwise the function
name will be used. Example:

@app.template_test()
def is_prime(n):
    if n == 2:
        return True
    for i in range(2, int(math.ceil(math.sqrt(n))) + 1):
        if n % i == 0:
            return False
    return True

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the test, otherwise the
function name will be used.
test_client(use_cookies=True)

Creates a test client for this application. For information
about unit testing head over to 测试 Flask 应用.

Note that if you are testing for assertions or exceptions in your
application code, you must set app.testing = True in order for the
exceptions to propagate to the test client. Otherwise, the exception
will be handled by the application (not visible to the test client) and
the only indication of an AssertionError or other exception will be a
500 status code response to the test client. See the testing
attribute. For example:

app.testing = True
client = app.test_client()

The test client can be used in a with block to defer the closing down
of the context until the end of the with block. This is useful if
you want to access the context locals for testing:

with app.test_client() as c:
    rv = c.get('/?vodka=42')
    assert request.args['vodka'] == '42'

See FlaskClient for more information.

Changed in version 0.4: added support for with block usage for the client.

New in version 0.7: The use_cookies parameter was added as well as the ability
to override the client to be used by setting the
test_client_class attribute.

test_client_class = None

the test client that is used with when test_client is used.

New in version 0.7.

test_request_context(*args, **kwargs)

Creates a WSGI environment from the given values (see
werkzeug.test.EnvironBuilder() for more information, this
function accepts the same arguments).

testing

The testing flag. Set this to True to enable the test mode of
Flask extensions (and in the future probably also Flask itself).
For example this might activate unittest helpers that have an
additional runtime cost which should not be enabled by default.

If this is enabled and PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS is not changed from the
default it’s implicitly enabled.

This attribute can also be configured from the config with the
TESTING configuration key. Defaults to False.

trap_http_exception(e)

Checks if an HTTP exception should be trapped or not. By default
this will return False for all exceptions except for a bad request
key error if TRAP_BAD_REQUEST_ERRORS is set to True. It
also returns True if TRAP_HTTP_EXCEPTIONS is set to True.

This is called for all HTTP exceptions raised by a view function.
If it returns True for any exception the error handler for this
exception is not called and it shows up as regular exception in the
traceback. This is helpful for debugging implicitly raised HTTP
exceptions.

New in version 0.8.

update_template_context(context)

Update the template context with some commonly used variables.
This injects request, session, config and g into the template
context as well as everything template context processors want
to inject. Note that the as of Flask 0.6, the original values
in the context will not be overridden if a context processor
decides to return a value with the same key.

Parameters: context – the context as a dictionary that is updated in place
to add extra variables.
url_build_error_handlers = None

A list of functions that are called when url_for() raises a
BuildError. Each function registered here
is called with error, endpoint and values. If a function
returns None or raises a BuildError the next function is
tried.

New in version 0.9.

url_default_functions = None

A dictionary with lists of functions that can be used as URL value
preprocessors. The key None here is used for application wide
callbacks, otherwise the key is the name of the blueprint.
Each of these functions has the chance to modify the dictionary
of URL values before they are used as the keyword arguments of the
view function. For each function registered this one should also
provide a url_defaults() function that adds the parameters
automatically again that were removed that way.

New in version 0.7.

url_defaults(*args, **kwargs)

Callback function for URL defaults for all view functions of the
application. It’s called with the endpoint and values and should
update the values passed in place.

url_map = None

The Map for this instance. You can use
this to change the routing converters after the class was created
but before any routes are connected. Example:

from werkzeug.routing import BaseConverter

class ListConverter(BaseConverter):
    def to_python(self, value):
        return value.split(',')
    def to_url(self, values):
        return ','.join(BaseConverter.to_url(value)
                        for value in values)

app = Flask(__name__)
app.url_map.converters['list'] = ListConverter
url_rule_class

The rule object to use for URL rules created. This is used by
add_url_rule(). Defaults to werkzeug.routing.Rule.

New in version 0.7.

alias of Rule

url_value_preprocessor(*args, **kwargs)

Registers a function as URL value preprocessor for all view
functions of the application. It’s called before the view functions
are called and can modify the url values provided.

url_value_preprocessors = None

A dictionary with lists of functions that can be used as URL
value processor functions. Whenever a URL is built these functions
are called to modify the dictionary of values in place. The key
None here is used for application wide
callbacks, otherwise the key is the name of the blueprint.
Each of these functions has the chance to modify the dictionary

New in version 0.7.

use_x_sendfile

Enable this if you want to use the X-Sendfile feature. Keep in
mind that the server has to support this. This only affects files
sent with the send_file() method.

New in version 0.2.

This attribute can also be configured from the config with the
USE_X_SENDFILE configuration key. Defaults to False.

view_functions = None

A dictionary of all view functions registered. The keys will
be function names which are also used to generate URLs and
the values are the function objects themselves.
To register a view function, use the route() decorator.

wsgi_app(environ, start_response)

The actual WSGI application. This is not implemented in
__call__ so that middlewares can be applied without losing a
reference to the class. So instead of doing this:

app = MyMiddleware(app)

It’s a better idea to do this instead:

app.wsgi_app = MyMiddleware(app.wsgi_app)

Then you still have the original application object around and
can continue to call methods on it.

Changed in version 0.7: The behavior of the before and after request callbacks was changed
under error conditions and a new callback was added that will
always execute at the end of the request, independent on if an
error occurred or not. See 回调和错误.

Parameters:
  • environ – a WSGI environment
  • start_response – a callable accepting a status code,
    a list of headers and an optional
    exception context to start the response

蓝图对象¶

class flask.Blueprint(name, import_name, static_folder=None, static_url_path=None, template_folder=None, url_prefix=None, subdomain=None, url_defaults=None)

Represents a blueprint. A blueprint is an object that records
functions that will be called with the
BlueprintSetupState later to register functions
or other things on the main application. See 用蓝图实现模块化应用 for more
information.

New in version 0.7.

add_app_template_filter(f, name=None)

Register a custom template filter, available application wide. Like
Flask.add_template_filter() but for a blueprint. Works exactly
like the app_template_filter() decorator.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the filter, otherwise the
function name will be used.
add_app_template_global(f, name=None)

Register a custom template global, available application wide. Like
Flask.add_template_global() but for a blueprint. Works exactly
like the app_template_global() decorator.

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the global, otherwise the
function name will be used.
add_app_template_test(f, name=None)

Register a custom template test, available application wide. Like
Flask.add_template_test() but for a blueprint. Works exactly
like the app_template_test() decorator.

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the test, otherwise the
function name will be used.
add_url_rule(rule, endpoint=None, view_func=None, **options)

Like Flask.add_url_rule() but for a blueprint. The endpoint for
the url_for() function is prefixed with the name of the blueprint.

after_app_request(f)

Like Flask.after_request() but for a blueprint. Such a function
is executed after each request, even if outside of the blueprint.

after_request(f)

Like Flask.after_request() but for a blueprint. This function
is only executed after each request that is handled by a function of
that blueprint.

app_context_processor(f)

Like Flask.context_processor() but for a blueprint. Such a
function is executed each request, even if outside of the blueprint.

app_errorhandler(code)

Like Flask.errorhandler() but for a blueprint. This
handler is used for all requests, even if outside of the blueprint.

app_template_filter(name=None)

Register a custom template filter, available application wide. Like
Flask.template_filter() but for a blueprint.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the filter, otherwise the
function name will be used.
app_template_global(name=None)

Register a custom template global, available application wide. Like
Flask.template_global() but for a blueprint.

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the global, otherwise the
function name will be used.
app_template_test(name=None)

Register a custom template test, available application wide. Like
Flask.template_test() but for a blueprint.

New in version 0.10.

Parameters: name – the optional name of the test, otherwise the
function name will be used.
app_url_defaults(f)

Same as url_defaults() but application wide.

app_url_value_preprocessor(f)

Same as url_value_preprocessor() but application wide.

before_app_first_request(f)

Like Flask.before_first_request(). Such a function is
executed before the first request to the application.

before_app_request(f)

Like Flask.before_request(). Such a function is executed
before each request, even if outside of a blueprint.

before_request(f)

Like Flask.before_request() but for a blueprint. This function
is only executed before each request that is handled by a function of
that blueprint.

context_processor(f)

Like Flask.context_processor() but for a blueprint. This
function is only executed for requests handled by a blueprint.

endpoint(endpoint)

Like Flask.endpoint() but for a blueprint. This does not
prefix the endpoint with the blueprint name, this has to be done
explicitly by the user of this method. If the endpoint is prefixed
with a . it will be registered to the current blueprint, otherwise
it’s an application independent endpoint.

errorhandler(code_or_exception)

Registers an error handler that becomes active for this blueprint
only. Please be aware that routing does not happen local to a
blueprint so an error handler for 404 usually is not handled by
a blueprint unless it is caused inside a view function. Another
special case is the 500 internal server error which is always looked
up from the application.

Otherwise works as the errorhandler() decorator
of the Flask object.

get_send_file_max_age(filename)

Provides default cache_timeout for the send_file() functions.

By default, this function returns SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT from
the configuration of current_app.

Static file functions such as send_from_directory() use this
function, and send_file() calls this function on
current_app when the given cache_timeout is None. If a
cache_timeout is given in send_file(), that timeout is used;
otherwise, this method is called.

This allows subclasses to change the behavior when sending files based
on the filename. For example, to set the cache timeout for .js files
to 60 seconds:

class MyFlask(flask.Flask):
    def get_send_file_max_age(self, name):
        if name.lower().endswith('.js'):
            return 60
        return flask.Flask.get_send_file_max_age(self, name)

New in version 0.9.

has_static_folder

This is True if the package bound object’s container has a
folder named 'static'.

New in version 0.5.

jinja_loader

The Jinja loader for this package bound object.

New in version 0.5.

make_setup_state(app, options, first_registration=False)

Creates an instance of BlueprintSetupState()
object that is later passed to the register callback functions.
Subclasses can override this to return a subclass of the setup state.

open_resource(resource, mode=’rb’)

Opens a resource from the application’s resource folder. To see
how this works, consider the following folder structure:

/myapplication.py
/schema.sql
/static
    /style.css
/templates
    /layout.html
    /index.html

If you want to open the schema.sql file you would do the
following:

with app.open_resource('schema.sql') as f:
    contents = f.read()
    do_something_with(contents)
Parameters:
  • resource – the name of the resource. To access resources within
    subfolders use forward slashes as separator.
  • mode – resource file opening mode, default is ‘rb’.
record(func)

Registers a function that is called when the blueprint is
registered on the application. This function is called with the
state as argument as returned by the make_setup_state()
method.

record_once(func)

Works like record() but wraps the function in another
function that will ensure the function is only called once. If the
blueprint is registered a second time on the application, the
function passed is not called.

register(app, options, first_registration=False)

Called by Flask.register_blueprint() to register a blueprint
on the application. This can be overridden to customize the register
behavior. Keyword arguments from
register_blueprint() are directly forwarded to this
method in the options dictionary.

route(rule, **options)

Like Flask.route() but for a blueprint. The endpoint for the
url_for() function is prefixed with the name of the blueprint.

send_static_file(filename)

Function used internally to send static files from the static
folder to the browser.

New in version 0.5.

teardown_app_request(f)

Like Flask.teardown_request() but for a blueprint. Such a
function is executed when tearing down each request, even if outside of
the blueprint.

teardown_request(f)

Like Flask.teardown_request() but for a blueprint. This
function is only executed when tearing down requests handled by a
function of that blueprint. Teardown request functions are executed
when the request context is popped, even when no actual request was
performed.

url_defaults(f)

Callback function for URL defaults for this blueprint. It’s called
with the endpoint and values and should update the values passed
in place.

url_value_preprocessor(f)

Registers a function as URL value preprocessor for this
blueprint. It’s called before the view functions are called and
can modify the url values provided.

传入请求数据¶

class flask.Request(environ, populate_request=True, shallow=False)

The request object used by default in Flask. Remembers the
matched endpoint and view arguments.

It is what ends up as request. If you want to replace
the request object used you can subclass this and set
request_class to your subclass.

The request object is a Request subclass and
provides all of the attributes Werkzeug defines plus a few Flask
specific ones.

form

A MultiDict with the parsed form data from POST
or PUT requests. Please keep in mind that file uploads will not
end up here, but instead in the files attribute.

args

A MultiDict with the parsed contents of the query
string. (The part in the URL after the question mark).

values

A CombinedMultiDict with the contents of both
form and args.

cookies

A dict with the contents of all cookies transmitted with
the request.

stream

If the incoming form data was not encoded with a known mimetype
the data is stored unmodified in this stream for consumption. Most
of the time it is a better idea to use data which will give
you that data as a string. The stream only returns the data once.

headers

The incoming request headers as a dictionary like object.

data

Contains the incoming request data as string in case it came with
a mimetype Flask does not handle.

files

A MultiDict with files uploaded as part of a
POST or PUT request. Each file is stored as
FileStorage object. It basically behaves like a
standard file object you know from Python, with the difference that
it also has a save() function that can
store the file on the filesystem.

environ

The underlying WSGI environment.

method

The current request method (POST, GET etc.)

path
script_root
url
base_url
url_root

Provides different ways to look at the current URL. Imagine your
application is listening on the following URL:

http://www.example.com/myapplication

And a user requests the following URL:

http://www.example.com/myapplication/page.html?x=y

In this case the values of the above mentioned attributes would be
the following:

path /page.html
script_root /myapplication
base_url http://www.example.com/myapplication/page.html
url http://www.example.com/myapplication/page.html?x=y
url_root http://www.example.com/myapplication/
is_xhr

True if the request was triggered via a JavaScript
XMLHttpRequest. This only works with libraries that support the
X-Requested-With header and set it to XMLHttpRequest.
Libraries that do that are prototype, jQuery and Mochikit and
probably some more.

blueprint

The name of the current blueprint

endpoint

The endpoint that matched the request. This in combination with
view_args can be used to reconstruct the same or a
modified URL. If an exception happened when matching, this will
be None.

get_json(force=False, silent=False, cache=True)

Parses the incoming JSON request data and returns it. If
parsing fails the on_json_loading_failed() method on the
request object will be invoked. By default this function will
only load the json data if the mimetype is application/json
but this can be overriden by the force parameter.

Parameters:
  • force – if set to True the mimetype is ignored.
  • silent – if set to False this method will fail silently
    and return False.
  • cache – if set to True the parsed JSON data is remembered
    on the request.
json

If the mimetype is application/json this will contain the
parsed JSON data. Otherwise this will be None.

The get_json() method should be used instead.

max_content_length

Read-only view of the MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH config key.

module

The name of the current module if the request was dispatched
to an actual module. This is deprecated functionality, use blueprints
instead.

on_json_loading_failed(e)

Called if decoding of the JSON data failed. The return value of
this method is used by get_json() when an error occurred. The
default implementation just raises a BadRequest exception.

Changed in version 0.10: Removed buggy previous behavior of generating a random JSON
response. If you want that behavior back you can trivially
add it by subclassing.

New in version 0.8.

routing_exception = None

if matching the URL failed, this is the exception that will be
raised / was raised as part of the request handling. This is
usually a NotFound exception or
something similar.

url_rule = None

the internal URL rule that matched the request. This can be
useful to inspect which methods are allowed for the URL from
a before/after handler (request.url_rule.methods) etc.

New in version 0.6.

view_args = None

a dict of view arguments that matched the request. If an exception
happened when matching, this will be None.

class flask.request

To access incoming request data, you can use the global request
object. Flask parses incoming request data for you and gives you
access to it through that global object. Internally Flask makes
sure that you always get the correct data for the active thread if you
are in a multithreaded environment.

This is a proxy. See 代理注意事项 for more information.

The request object is an instance of a Request
subclass and provides all of the attributes Werkzeug defines. This
just shows a quick overview of the most important ones.

响应对象¶

class flask.Response(response=None, status=None, headers=None, mimetype=None, content_type=None, direct_passthrough=False)

The response object that is used by default in Flask. Works like the
response object from Werkzeug but is set to have an HTML mimetype by
default. Quite often you don’t have to create this object yourself because
make_response() will take care of that for you.

If you want to replace the response object used you can subclass this and
set response_class to your subclass.

headers

A Headers object representing the response headers.

status

A string with a response status.

status_code

The response status as integer.

data

A descriptor that calls get_data() and set_data(). This
should not be used and will eventually get deprecated.

mimetype

The mimetype (content type without charset etc.)

Sets a cookie. The parameters are the same as in the cookie Morsel
object in the Python standard library but it accepts unicode data, too.

Parameters:
  • key – the key (name) of the cookie to be set.
  • value – the value of the cookie.
  • max_age – should be a number of seconds, or None (default) if
    the cookie should last only as long as the client’s
    browser session.
  • expires – should be a datetime object or UNIX timestamp.
  • domain – if you want to set a cross-domain cookie. For example,
    domain=".example.com" will set a cookie that is
    readable by the domain www.example.com,
    foo.example.com etc. Otherwise, a cookie will only
    be readable by the domain that set it.
  • path – limits the cookie to a given path, per default it will
    span the whole domain.

会话¶

If you have the Flask.secret_key set you can use sessions in Flask
applications. A session basically makes it possible to remember
information from one request to another. The way Flask does this is by
using a signed cookie. So the user can look at the session contents, but
not modify it unless they know the secret key, so make sure to set that
to something complex and unguessable.

To access the current session you can use the session object:

class flask.session

The session object works pretty much like an ordinary dict, with the
difference that it keeps track on modifications.

This is a proxy. See 代理注意事项 for more information.

The following attributes are interesting:

new

True if the session is new, False otherwise.

modified

True if the session object detected a modification. Be advised
that modifications on mutable structures are not picked up
automatically, in that situation you have to explicitly set the
attribute to True yourself. Here an example:

# this change is not picked up because a mutable object (here
# a list) is changed.
session['objects'].append(42)
# so mark it as modified yourself
session.modified = True
permanent

If set to True the session lives for
permanent_session_lifetime seconds. The
default is 31 days. If set to False (which is the default) the
session will be deleted when the user closes the browser.

会话接口¶

New in version 0.8.

The session interface provides a simple way to replace the session
implementation that Flask is using.

class flask.sessions.SessionInterface

The basic interface you have to implement in order to replace the
default session interface which uses werkzeug’s securecookie
implementation. The only methods you have to implement are
open_session() and save_session(), the others have
useful defaults which you don’t need to change.

The session object returned by the open_session() method has to
provide a dictionary like interface plus the properties and methods
from the SessionMixin. We recommend just subclassing a dict
and adding that mixin:

class Session(dict, SessionMixin):
    pass

If open_session() returns None Flask will call into
make_null_session() to create a session that acts as replacement
if the session support cannot work because some requirement is not
fulfilled. The default NullSession class that is created
will complain that the secret key was not set.

To replace the session interface on an application all you have to do
is to assign flask.Flask.session_interface:

app = Flask(__name__)
app.session_interface = MySessionInterface()

New in version 0.8.

Helpful helper method that returns the cookie domain that should
be used for the session cookie if session cookies are used.

Returns True if the session cookie should be httponly. This
currently just returns the value of the SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY
config var.

Returns the path for which the cookie should be valid. The
default implementation uses the value from the SESSION_COOKIE_PATH“
config var if it’s set, and falls back to APPLICATION_ROOT or
uses / if it’s None.

Returns True if the cookie should be secure. This currently
just returns the value of the SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE setting.

get_expiration_time(app, session)

A helper method that returns an expiration date for the session
or None if the session is linked to the browser session. The
default implementation returns now + the permanent session
lifetime configured on the application.

is_null_session(obj)

Checks if a given object is a null session. Null sessions are
not asked to be saved.

This checks if the object is an instance of null_session_class
by default.

make_null_session(app)

Creates a null session which acts as a replacement object if the
real session support could not be loaded due to a configuration
error. This mainly aids the user experience because the job of the
null session is to still support lookup without complaining but
modifications are answered with a helpful error message of what
failed.

This creates an instance of null_session_class by default.

null_session_class

make_null_session() will look here for the class that should
be created when a null session is requested. Likewise the
is_null_session() method will perform a typecheck against
this type.

alias of NullSession

open_session(app, request)

This method has to be implemented and must either return None
in case the loading failed because of a configuration error or an
instance of a session object which implements a dictionary like
interface + the methods and attributes on SessionMixin.

pickle_based = False

A flag that indicates if the session interface is pickle based.
This can be used by flask extensions to make a decision in regards
to how to deal with the session object.

New in version 0.10.

save_session(app, session, response)

This is called for actual sessions returned by open_session()
at the end of the request. This is still called during a request
context so if you absolutely need access to the request you can do
that.

class flask.sessions.SecureCookieSessionInterface

The default session interface that stores sessions in signed cookies
through the itsdangerous module.

static digest_method()

the hash function to use for the signature. The default is sha1

key_derivation = ‘hmac’

the name of the itsdangerous supported key derivation. The default
is hmac.

salt = ‘cookie-session’

the salt that should be applied on top of the secret key for the
signing of cookie based sessions.

serializer = <flask.sessions.TaggedJSONSerializer object at 0x106814490>

A python serializer for the payload. The default is a compact
JSON derived serializer with support for some extra Python types
such as datetime objects or tuples.

session_class

alias of SecureCookieSession

class flask.sessions.SecureCookieSession(initial=None)

Baseclass for sessions based on signed cookies.

class flask.sessions.NullSession(initial=None)

Class used to generate nicer error messages if sessions are not
available. Will still allow read-only access to the empty session
but fail on setting.

class flask.sessions.SessionMixin

Expands a basic dictionary with an accessors that are expected
by Flask extensions and users for the session.

modified = True

for some backends this will always be True, but some backends will
default this to false and detect changes in the dictionary for as
long as changes do not happen on mutable structures in the session.
The default mixin implementation just hardcodes True in.

new = False

some session backends can tell you if a session is new, but that is
not necessarily guaranteed. Use with caution. The default mixin
implementation just hardcodes False in.

permanent

this reflects the '_permanent' key in the dict.

flask.sessions.session_json_serializer = <flask.sessions.TaggedJSONSerializer object at 0x106814490>

A customized JSON serializer that supports a few extra types that
we take for granted when serializing (tuples, markup objects, datetime).

This object provides dumping and loading methods similar to simplejson
but it also tags certain builtin Python objects that commonly appear in
sessions. Currently the following extended values are supported in
the JSON it dumps:

Notice

The PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME config key can also be an integer
starting with Flask 0.8. Either catch this down yourself or use
the permanent_session_lifetime attribute on the
app which converts the result to an integer automatically.

测试客户端¶

class flask.testing.FlaskClient(application, response_wrapper=None, use_cookies=True, allow_subdomain_redirects=False)

Works like a regular Werkzeug test client but has some knowledge about
how Flask works to defer the cleanup of the request context stack to the
end of a with body when used in a with statement. For general information
about how to use this class refer to werkzeug.test.Client.

Basic usage is outlined in the 测试 Flask 应用 chapter.

session_transaction(*args, **kwds)

When used in combination with a with statement this opens a
session transaction. This can be used to modify the session that
the test client uses. Once the with block is left the session is
stored back.

with client.session_transaction() as session:
session[‘value’] = 42

Internally this is implemented by going through a temporary test
request context and since session handling could depend on
request variables this function accepts the same arguments as
test_request_context() which are directly
passed through.

应用全局变量¶

To share data that is valid for one request only from one function to
another, a global variable is not good enough because it would break in
threaded environments. Flask provides you with a special object that
ensures it is only valid for the active request and that will return
different values for each request. In a nutshell: it does the right
thing, like it does for request and session.

flask.g

Just store on this whatever you want. For example a database
connection or the user that is currently logged in.

Starting with Flask 0.10 this is stored on the application context and
no longer on the request context which means it becomes available if
only the application context is bound and not yet a request. This
is especially useful when combined with the faking-resources
pattern for testing.

Additionally as of 0.10 you can use the get() method to
get an attribute or None (or the second argument) if it’s not set.
These two usages are now equivalent:

user = getattr(flask.g, 'user', None)
user = flask.g.get('user', None)

It’s now also possible to use the in operator on it to see if an
attribute is defined and it yields all keys on iteration.

This is a proxy. See 代理注意事项 for more information.

有用的函数和类¶

flask.current_app

Points to the application handling the request. This is useful for
extensions that want to support multiple applications running side
by side. This is powered by the application context and not by the
request context, so you can change the value of this proxy by
using the app_context() method.

This is a proxy. See 代理注意事项 for more information.

flask.has_request_context()

If you have code that wants to test if a request context is there or
not this function can be used. For instance, you may want to take advantage
of request information if the request object is available, but fail
silently if it is unavailable.

class User(db.Model):

    def __init__(self, username, remote_addr=None):
        self.username = username
        if remote_addr is None and has_request_context():
            remote_addr = request.remote_addr
        self.remote_addr = remote_addr

Alternatively you can also just test any of the context bound objects
(such as request or g for truthness):

class User(db.Model):

    def __init__(self, username, remote_addr=None):
        self.username = username
        if remote_addr is None and request:
            remote_addr = request.remote_addr
        self.remote_addr = remote_addr

New in version 0.7.

flask.copy_current_request_context(f)

A helper function that decorates a function to retain the current
request context. This is useful when working with greenlets. The moment
the function is decorated a copy of the request context is created and
then pushed when the function is called.

Example:

import gevent
from flask import copy_current_request_context

@app.route('/')
def index():
    @copy_current_request_context
    def do_some_work():
        # do some work here, it can access flask.request like you
        # would otherwise in the view function.
        ...
    gevent.spawn(do_some_work)
    return 'Regular response'

New in version 0.10.

flask.has_app_context()

Works like has_request_context() but for the application
context. You can also just do a boolean check on the
current_app object instead.

New in version 0.9.

flask.url_for(endpoint, **values)

Generates a URL to the given endpoint with the method provided.

Variable arguments that are unknown to the target endpoint are appended
to the generated URL as query arguments. If the value of a query argument
is None, the whole pair is skipped. In case blueprints are active
you can shortcut references to the same blueprint by prefixing the
local endpoint with a dot (.).

This will reference the index function local to the current blueprint:

url_for('.index')

For more information, head over to the Quickstart.

To integrate applications, Flask has a hook to intercept URL build
errors through Flask.build_error_handler. The url_for function
results in a BuildError when the current app does
not have a URL for the given endpoint and values. When it does, the
current_app calls its build_error_handler if
it is not None, which can return a string to use as the result of
url_for (instead of url_for‘s default to raise the
BuildError exception) or re-raise the exception.
An example:

def external_url_handler(error, endpoint, **values):
    "Looks up an external URL when `url_for` cannot build a URL."
    # This is an example of hooking the build_error_handler.
    # Here, lookup_url is some utility function you've built
    # which looks up the endpoint in some external URL registry.
    url = lookup_url(endpoint, **values)
    if url is None:
        # External lookup did not have a URL.
        # Re-raise the BuildError, in context of original traceback.
        exc_type, exc_value, tb = sys.exc_info()
        if exc_value is error:
            raise exc_type, exc_value, tb
        else:
            raise error
    # url_for will use this result, instead of raising BuildError.
    return url

app.build_error_handler = external_url_handler

Here, error is the instance of BuildError, and
endpoint and **values are the arguments passed into url_for. Note
that this is for building URLs outside the current application, and not for
handling 404 NotFound errors.

New in version 0.10: The _scheme parameter was added.

New in version 0.9: The _anchor and _method parameters were added.

New in version 0.9: Calls Flask.handle_build_error() on
BuildError.

Parameters:
  • endpoint – the endpoint of the URL (name of the function)
  • values – the variable arguments of the URL rule
  • _external – if set to True, an absolute URL is generated. Server
    address can be changed via SERVER_NAME configuration variable which
    defaults to localhost.
  • _scheme – a string specifying the desired URL scheme. The _external
    parameter must be set to True or a ValueError is raised.
  • _anchor – if provided this is added as anchor to the URL.
  • _method – if provided this explicitly specifies an HTTP method.
flask.abort(code)

Raises an HTTPException for the given
status code. For example to abort request handling with a page not
found exception, you would call abort(404).

Parameters: code – the HTTP error code.
flask.redirect(location, code=302, Response=None)

Returns a response object (a WSGI application) that, if called,
redirects the client to the target location. Supported codes are 301,
302, 303, 305, and 307. 300 is not supported because it’s not a real
redirect and 304 because it’s the answer for a request with a request
with defined If-Modified-Since headers.

New in version 0.6: The location can now be a unicode string that is encoded using
the iri_to_uri() function.

New in version 0.10: The class used for the Response object can now be passed in.

Parameters:
  • location – the location the response should redirect to.
  • code – the redirect status code. defaults to 302.
  • Response (class) – a Response class to use when instantiating a
    response. The default is werkzeug.wrappers.Response if
    unspecified.
flask.make_response(*args)

Sometimes it is necessary to set additional headers in a view. Because
views do not have to return response objects but can return a value that
is converted into a response object by Flask itself, it becomes tricky to
add headers to it. This function can be called instead of using a return
and you will get a response object which you can use to attach headers.

If view looked like this and you want to add a new header:

def index():
    return render_template('index.html', foo=42)

You can now do something like this:

def index():
    response = make_response(render_template('index.html', foo=42))
    response.headers['X-Parachutes'] = 'parachutes are cool'
    return response

This function accepts the very same arguments you can return from a
view function. This for example creates a response with a 404 error
code:

response = make_response(render_template('not_found.html'), 404)

The other use case of this function is to force the return value of a
view function into a response which is helpful with view
decorators:

response = make_response(view_function())
response.headers['X-Parachutes'] = 'parachutes are cool'

Internally this function does the following things:

New in version 0.6.

flask.after_this_request(f)

Executes a function after this request. This is useful to modify
response objects. The function is passed the response object and has
to return the same or a new one.

Example:

@app.route('/')
def index():
    @after_this_request
    def add_header(response):
        response.headers['X-Foo'] = 'Parachute'
        return response
    return 'Hello World!'

This is more useful if a function other than the view function wants to
modify a response. For instance think of a decorator that wants to add
some headers without converting the return value into a response object.

New in version 0.9.

flask.send_file(filename_or_fp, mimetype=None, as_attachment=False, attachment_filename=None, add_etags=True, cache_timeout=None, conditional=False)

Sends the contents of a file to the client. This will use the
most efficient method available and configured. By default it will
try to use the WSGI server’s file_wrapper support. Alternatively
you can set the application’s use_x_sendfile attribute
to True to directly emit an X-Sendfile header. This however
requires support of the underlying webserver for X-Sendfile.

By default it will try to guess the mimetype for you, but you can
also explicitly provide one. For extra security you probably want
to send certain files as attachment (HTML for instance). The mimetype
guessing requires a filename or an attachment_filename to be
provided.

Please never pass filenames to this function from user sources without
checking them first. Something like this is usually sufficient to
avoid security problems:

if '..' in filename or filename.startswith('/'):
    abort(404)

New in version 0.2.

New in version 0.5: The add_etags, cache_timeout and conditional parameters were
added. The default behavior is now to attach etags.

Changed in version 0.7: mimetype guessing and etag support for file objects was
deprecated because it was unreliable. Pass a filename if you are
able to, otherwise attach an etag yourself. This functionality
will be removed in Flask 1.0

Changed in version 0.9: cache_timeout pulls its default from application config, when None.

Parameters:
  • filename_or_fp – the filename of the file to send. This is
    relative to the root_path if a
    relative path is specified.
    Alternatively a file object might be provided
    in which case X-Sendfile might not work and
    fall back to the traditional method. Make sure
    that the file pointer is positioned at the start
    of data to send before calling send_file().
  • mimetype – the mimetype of the file if provided, otherwise
    auto detection happens.
  • as_attachment – set to True if you want to send this file with
    a Content-Disposition: attachment header.
  • attachment_filename – the filename for the attachment if it
    differs from the file’s filename.
  • add_etags – set to False to disable attaching of etags.
  • conditional – set to True to enable conditional responses.
  • cache_timeout – the timeout in seconds for the headers. When None
    (default), this value is set by
    get_send_file_max_age() of
    current_app.
flask.send_from_directory(directory, filename, **options)

Send a file from a given directory with send_file(). This
is a secure way to quickly expose static files from an upload folder
or something similar.

Example usage:

@app.route('/uploads/<path:filename>')
def download_file(filename):
    return send_from_directory(app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'],
                               filename, as_attachment=True)

Sending files and Performance

It is strongly recommended to activate either X-Sendfile support in
your webserver or (if no authentication happens) to tell the webserver
to serve files for the given path on its own without calling into the
web application for improved performance.

New in version 0.5.

Parameters:
  • directory – the directory where all the files are stored.
  • filename – the filename relative to that directory to
    download.
  • options – optional keyword arguments that are directly
    forwarded to send_file().
flask.safe_join(directory, filename)

Safely join directory and filename.

Example usage:

@app.route('/wiki/<path:filename>')
def wiki_page(filename):
    filename = safe_join(app.config['WIKI_FOLDER'], filename)
    with open(filename, 'rb') as fd:
        content = fd.read() # Read and process the file content...
Parameters:
  • directory – the base directory.
  • filename – the untrusted filename relative to that directory.
Raises:

NotFound if the resulting path
would fall out of directory.

flask.escape(s) → markup

Convert the characters &, <, >, ‘, and ” in string s to HTML-safe
sequences. Use this if you need to display text that might contain
such characters in HTML. Marks return value as markup string.

class flask.Markup

Marks a string as being safe for inclusion in HTML/XML output without
needing to be escaped. This implements the __html__ interface a couple
of frameworks and web applications use. Markup is a direct
subclass of unicode and provides all the methods of unicode just that
it escapes arguments passed and always returns Markup.

The escape function returns markup objects so that double escaping can’t
happen.

The constructor of the Markup class can be used for three
different things: When passed an unicode object it’s assumed to be safe,
when passed an object with an HTML representation (has an __html__
method) that representation is used, otherwise the object passed is
converted into a unicode string and then assumed to be safe:

>>> Markup("Hello <em>World</em>!")
Markup(u'Hello <em>World</em>!')
>>> class Foo(object):
...  def __html__(self):
...   return '<a href="#">foo</a>'
...
>>> Markup(Foo())
Markup(u'<a href="#">foo</a>')

If you want object passed being always treated as unsafe you can use the
escape() classmethod to create a Markup object:

>>> Markup.escape("Hello <em>World</em>!")
Markup(u'Hello &lt;em&gt;World&lt;/em&gt;!')

Operations on a markup string are markup aware which means that all
arguments are passed through the escape() function:

>>> em = Markup("<em>%s</em>")
>>> em % "foo & bar"
Markup(u'<em>foo &amp; bar</em>')
>>> strong = Markup("<strong>%(text)s</strong>")
>>> strong % {'text': '<blink>hacker here</blink>'}
Markup(u'<strong>&lt;blink&gt;hacker here&lt;/blink&gt;</strong>')
>>> Markup("<em>Hello</em> ") + "<foo>"
Markup(u'<em>Hello</em> &lt;foo&gt;')
classmethod escape(s)

Escape the string. Works like escape() with the difference
that for subclasses of Markup this function would return the
correct subclass.

striptags()

Unescape markup into an text_type string and strip all tags. This
also resolves known HTML4 and XHTML entities. Whitespace is
normalized to one:

>>> Markup("Main &raquo;  <em>About</em>").striptags()
u'Main \xbb About'
unescape()

Unescape markup again into an text_type string. This also resolves
known HTML4 and XHTML entities:

>>> Markup("Main &raquo; <em>About</em>").unescape()
u'Main \xbb <em>About</em>'

消息闪现¶

flask.flash(message, category=’message’)

Flashes a message to the next request. In order to remove the
flashed message from the session and to display it to the user,
the template has to call get_flashed_messages().

Changed in version 0.3: category parameter added.

Parameters:
  • message – the message to be flashed.
  • category – the category for the message. The following values
    are recommended: 'message' for any kind of message,
    'error' for errors, 'info' for information
    messages and 'warning' for warnings. However any
    kind of string can be used as category.
flask.get_flashed_messages(with_categories=False, category_filter=[])

Pulls all flashed messages from the session and returns them.
Further calls in the same request to the function will return
the same messages. By default just the messages are returned,
but when with_categories is set to True, the return value will
be a list of tuples in the form (category, message) instead.

Filter the flashed messages to one or more categories by providing those
categories in category_filter. This allows rendering categories in
separate html blocks. The with_categories and category_filter
arguments are distinct:

  • with_categories controls whether categories are returned with message
    text (True gives a tuple, where False gives just the message text).
  • category_filter filters the messages down to only those matching the
    provided categories.

See 消息闪现 for examples.

Changed in version 0.3: with_categories parameter added.

Changed in version 0.9: category_filter parameter added.

Parameters:
  • with_categories – set to True to also receive categories.
  • category_filter – whitelist of categories to limit return values

JSON 支持¶

Flask uses simplejson for the JSON implementation. Since simplejson
is provided both by the standard library as well as extension Flask will
try simplejson first and then fall back to the stdlib json module. On top
of that it will delegate access to the current application’s JSOn encoders
and decoders for easier customization.

So for starters instead of doing:

try:
    import simplejson as json
except ImportError:
    import json

You can instead just do this:

from flask import json

For usage examples, read the json documentation in the standard
lirbary. The following extensions are by default applied to the stdlib’s
JSON module:

  1. datetime objects are serialized as RFC 822 strings.
  2. Any object with an __html__ method (like Markup)
    will ahve that method called and then the return value is serialized
    as string.

The htmlsafe_dumps() function of this json module is also available
as filter called |tojson in Jinja2. Note that inside script
tags no escaping must take place, so make sure to disable escaping
with |safe if you intend to use it inside script tags unless
you are using Flask 0.10 which implies that:

<script type=text/javascript>
    doSomethingWith({{ user.username|tojson|safe }});
</script>
flask.json.jsonify(*args, **kwargs)

Creates a Response with the JSON representation of
the given arguments with an application/json mimetype. The arguments
to this function are the same as to the dict constructor.

Example usage:

from flask import jsonify

@app.route('/_get_current_user')
def get_current_user():
    return jsonify(username=g.user.username,
                   email=g.user.email,
                   id=g.user.id)

This will send a JSON response like this to the browser:

{
    "username": "admin",
    "email": "admin@localhost",
    "id": 42
}

For security reasons only objects are supported toplevel. For more
information about this, have a look at JSON 安全.

This function’s response will be pretty printed if it was not requested
with X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest to simplify debugging unless
the JSONIFY_PRETTYPRINT_REGULAR config parameter is set to false.

New in version 0.2.

flask.json.dumps(obj, **kwargs)

Serialize obj to a JSON formatted str by using the application’s
configured encoder (json_encoder) if there is an
application on the stack.

This function can return unicode strings or ascii-only bytestrings by
default which coerce into unicode strings automatically. That behavior by
default is controlled by the JSON_AS_ASCII configuration variable
and can be overriden by the simplejson ensure_ascii parameter.

flask.json.dump(obj, fp, **kwargs)

Like dumps() but writes into a file object.

flask.json.loads(s, **kwargs)

Unserialize a JSON object from a string s by using the application’s
configured decoder (json_decoder) if there is an
application on the stack.

flask.json.load(fp, **kwargs)

Like loads() but reads from a file object.

class flask.json.JSONEncoder(skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True, allow_nan=True, sort_keys=False, indent=None, separators=None, encoding=’utf-8′, default=None)

The default Flask JSON encoder. This one extends the default simplejson
encoder by also supporting datetime objects, UUID as well as
Markup objects which are serialized as RFC 822 datetime strings (same
as the HTTP date format). In order to support more data types override the
default() method.

default(o)

Implement this method in a subclass such that it returns a
serializable object for o, or calls the base implementation (to
raise a TypeError).

For example, to support arbitrary iterators, you could implement
default like this:

def default(self, o):
    try:
        iterable = iter(o)
    except TypeError:
        pass
    else:
        return list(iterable)
    return JSONEncoder.default(self, o)
class flask.json.JSONDecoder(encoding=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None, parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, strict=True, object_pairs_hook=None)

The default JSON decoder. This one does not change the behavior from
the default simplejson encoder. Consult the json documentation
for more information. This decoder is not only used for the load
functions of this module but also Request.

渲染模版¶

flask.render_template(template_name_or_list, **context)

Renders a template from the template folder with the given
context.

Parameters:
  • template_name_or_list – the name of the template to be
    rendered, or an iterable with template names
    the first one existing will be rendered
  • context – the variables that should be available in the
    context of the template.
flask.render_template_string(source, **context)

Renders a template from the given template source string
with the given context.

Parameters:
  • source – the sourcecode of the template to be
    rendered
  • context – the variables that should be available in the
    context of the template.
flask.get_template_attribute(template_name, attribute)

Loads a macro (or variable) a template exports. This can be used to
invoke a macro from within Python code. If you for example have a
template named _cider.html with the following contents:

{% macro hello(name) %}Hello {{ name }}!{% endmacro %}

You can access this from Python code like this:

hello = get_template_attribute('_cider.html', 'hello')
return hello('World')

New in version 0.2.

Parameters:
  • template_name – the name of the template
  • attribute – the name of the variable of macro to access

配置¶

class flask.Config(root_path, defaults=None)

Works exactly like a dict but provides ways to fill it from files
or special dictionaries. There are two common patterns to populate the
config.

Either you can fill the config from a config file:

app.config.from_pyfile('yourconfig.cfg')

Or alternatively you can define the configuration options in the
module that calls from_object() or provide an import path to
a module that should be loaded. It is also possible to tell it to
use the same module and with that provide the configuration values
just before the call:

DEBUG = True
SECRET_KEY = 'development key'
app.config.from_object(__name__)

In both cases (loading from any Python file or loading from modules),
only uppercase keys are added to the config. This makes it possible to use
lowercase values in the config file for temporary values that are not added
to the config or to define the config keys in the same file that implements
the application.

Probably the most interesting way to load configurations is from an
environment variable pointing to a file:

app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS')

In this case before launching the application you have to set this
environment variable to the file you want to use. On Linux and OS X
use the export statement:

export YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS='/path/to/config/file'

On windows use set instead.

Parameters:
  • root_path – path to which files are read relative from. When the
    config object is created by the application, this is
    the application’s root_path.
  • defaults – an optional dictionary of default values
from_envvar(variable_name, silent=False)

Loads a configuration from an environment variable pointing to
a configuration file. This is basically just a shortcut with nicer
error messages for this line of code:

app.config.from_pyfile(os.environ['YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS'])
Parameters:
  • variable_name – name of the environment variable
  • silent – set to True if you want silent failure for missing
    files.
Returns:

bool. True if able to load config, False otherwise.

from_object(obj)

Updates the values from the given object. An object can be of one
of the following two types:

  • a string: in this case the object with that name will be imported
  • an actual object reference: that object is used directly

Objects are usually either modules or classes.

Just the uppercase variables in that object are stored in the config.
Example usage:

app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_config')
from yourapplication import default_config
app.config.from_object(default_config)

You should not use this function to load the actual configuration but
rather configuration defaults. The actual config should be loaded
with from_pyfile() and ideally from a location not within the
package because the package might be installed system wide.

Parameters: obj – an import name or object
from_pyfile(filename, silent=False)

Updates the values in the config from a Python file. This function
behaves as if the file was imported as module with the
from_object() function.

Parameters:
  • filename – the filename of the config. This can either be an
    absolute filename or a filename relative to the
    root path.
  • silent – set to True if you want silent failure for missing
    files.

New in version 0.7: silent parameter.

扩展¶

flask.ext

This module acts as redirect import module to Flask extensions. It was
added in 0.8 as the canonical way to import Flask extensions and makes
it possible for us to have more flexibility in how we distribute
extensions.

If you want to use an extension named “Flask-Foo” you would import it
from ext as follows:

from flask.ext import foo

New in version 0.8.

流辅助函数¶

flask.stream_with_context(generator_or_function)

Request contexts disappear when the response is started on the server.
This is done for efficiency reasons and to make it less likely to encounter
memory leaks with badly written WSGI middlewares. The downside is that if
you are using streamed responses, the generator cannot access request bound
information any more.

This function however can help you keep the context around for longer:

from flask import stream_with_context, request, Response

@app.route('/stream')
def streamed_response():
    @stream_with_context
    def generate():
        yield 'Hello '
        yield request.args['name']
        yield '!'
    return Response(generate())

Alternatively it can also be used around a specific generator:

from flask import stream_with_context, request, Response

@app.route('/stream')
def streamed_response():
    def generate():
        yield 'Hello '
        yield request.args['name']
        yield '!'
    return Response(stream_with_context(generate()))

New in version 0.9.

有用的内部函数¶

class flask.ctx.RequestContext(app, environ, request=None)

The request context contains all request relevant information. It is
created at the beginning of the request and pushed to the
_request_ctx_stack and removed at the end of it. It will create the
URL adapter and request object for the WSGI environment provided.

Do not attempt to use this class directly, instead use
test_request_context() and
request_context() to create this object.

When the request context is popped, it will evaluate all the
functions registered on the application for teardown execution
(teardown_request()).

The request context is automatically popped at the end of the request
for you. In debug mode the request context is kept around if
exceptions happen so that interactive debuggers have a chance to
introspect the data. With 0.4 this can also be forced for requests
that did not fail and outside of DEBUG mode. By setting
'flask._preserve_context' to True on the WSGI environment the
context will not pop itself at the end of the request. This is used by
the test_client() for example to implement the
deferred cleanup functionality.

You might find this helpful for unittests where you need the
information from the context local around for a little longer. Make
sure to properly pop() the stack yourself in
that situation, otherwise your unittests will leak memory.

copy()

Creates a copy of this request context with the same request object.
This can be used to move a request context to a different greenlet.
Because the actual request object is the same this cannot be used to
move a request context to a different thread unless access to the
request object is locked.

New in version 0.10.

match_request()

Can be overridden by a subclass to hook into the matching
of the request.

pop(exc=None)

Pops the request context and unbinds it by doing that. This will
also trigger the execution of functions registered by the
teardown_request() decorator.

Changed in version 0.9: Added the exc argument.

push()

Binds the request context to the current context.

flask._request_ctx_stack

The internal LocalStack that is used to implement
all the context local objects used in Flask. This is a documented
instance and can be used by extensions and application code but the
use is discouraged in general.

The following attributes are always present on each layer of the
stack:

app
the active Flask application.
url_adapter
the URL adapter that was used to match the request.
request
the current request object.
session
the active session object.
g
an object with all the attributes of the flask.g object.
flashes
an internal cache for the flashed messages.

Example usage:

from flask import _request_ctx_stack

def get_session():
    ctx = _request_ctx_stack.top
    if ctx is not None:
        return ctx.session
class flask.ctx.AppContext(app)

The application context binds an application object implicitly
to the current thread or greenlet, similar to how the
RequestContext binds request information. The application
context is also implicitly created if a request context is created
but the application is not on top of the individual application
context.

pop(exc=None)

Pops the app context.

push()

Binds the app context to the current context.

flask._app_ctx_stack

Works similar to the request context but only binds the application.
This is mainly there for extensions to store data.

New in version 0.9.

class flask.blueprints.BlueprintSetupState(blueprint, app, options, first_registration)

Temporary holder object for registering a blueprint with the
application. An instance of this class is created by the
make_setup_state() method and later passed
to all register callback functions.

add_url_rule(rule, endpoint=None, view_func=None, **options)

A helper method to register a rule (and optionally a view function)
to the application. The endpoint is automatically prefixed with the
blueprint’s name.

app = None

a reference to the current application

blueprint = None

a reference to the blueprint that created this setup state.

first_registration = None

as blueprints can be registered multiple times with the
application and not everything wants to be registered
multiple times on it, this attribute can be used to figure
out if the blueprint was registered in the past already.

options = None

a dictionary with all options that were passed to the
register_blueprint() method.

subdomain = None

The subdomain that the blueprint should be active for, None
otherwise.

url_defaults = None

A dictionary with URL defaults that is added to each and every
URL that was defined with the blueprint.

url_prefix = None

The prefix that should be used for all URLs defined on the
blueprint.

信号¶

New in version 0.6.

flask.signals_available

True if the signalling system is available. This is the case
when blinker is installed.

flask.template_rendered

This signal is sent when a template was successfully rendered. The
signal is invoked with the instance of the template as template
and the context as dictionary (named context).

flask.request_started

This signal is sent before any request processing started but when the
request context was set up. Because the request context is already
bound, the subscriber can access the request with the standard global
proxies such as request.

flask.request_finished

This signal is sent right before the response is sent to the client.
It is passed the response to be sent named response.

flask.got_request_exception

This signal is sent when an exception happens during request processing.
It is sent before the standard exception handling kicks in and even
in debug mode, where no exception handling happens. The exception
itself is passed to the subscriber as exception.

flask.request_tearing_down

This signal is sent when the application is tearing down the request.
This is always called, even if an error happened. An exc keyword
argument is passed with the exception that caused the teardown.

Changed in version 0.9: The exc parameter was added.

flask.appcontext_tearing_down

This signal is sent when the application is tearing down the
application context. This is always called, even if an error happened.
An exc keyword argument is passed with the exception that caused the
teardown. The sender is the application.

flask.appcontext_pushed

This signal is sent when an application context is pushed. The sender
is the application.

New in version 0.10.

flask.appcontext_popped

This signal is sent when an application context is popped. The sender
is the application. This usually falls in line with the
appcontext_tearing_down signal.

New in version 0.10.

flask.message_flashed

This signal is sent when the application is flashing a message. The
messages is sent as message keyword argument and the category as
category.

New in version 0.10.

class flask.signals.Namespace

An alias for blinker.base.Namespace if blinker is available,
otherwise a dummy class that creates fake signals. This class is
available for Flask extensions that want to provide the same fallback
system as Flask itself.

signal(name, doc=None)

Creates a new signal for this namespace if blinker is available,
otherwise returns a fake signal that has a send method that will
do nothing but will fail with a RuntimeError for all other
operations, including connecting.

基于类的视图¶

New in version 0.7.

class flask.views.View

Alternative way to use view functions. A subclass has to implement
dispatch_request() which is called with the view arguments from
the URL routing system. If methods is provided the methods
do not have to be passed to the add_url_rule()
method explicitly:

class MyView(View):
    methods = ['GET']

    def dispatch_request(self, name):
        return 'Hello %s!' % name

app.add_url_rule('/hello/<name>', view_func=MyView.as_view('myview'))

When you want to decorate a pluggable view you will have to either do that
when the view function is created (by wrapping the return value of
as_view()) or you can use the decorators attribute:

class SecretView(View):
    methods = ['GET']
    decorators = [superuser_required]

    def dispatch_request(self):
        ...

The decorators stored in the decorators list are applied one after another
when the view function is created. Note that you can not use the class
based decorators since those would decorate the view class and not the
generated view function!

classmethod as_view(name, *class_args, **class_kwargs)

Converts the class into an actual view function that can be used
with the routing system. Internally this generates a function on the
fly which will instantiate the View on each request and call
the dispatch_request() method on it.

The arguments passed to as_view() are forwarded to the
constructor of the class.

decorators = []

The canonical way to decorate class-based views is to decorate the
return value of as_view(). However since this moves parts of the
logic from the class declaration to the place where it’s hooked
into the routing system.

You can place one or more decorators in this list and whenever the
view function is created the result is automatically decorated.

New in version 0.8.

dispatch_request()

Subclasses have to override this method to implement the
actual view function code. This method is called with all
the arguments from the URL rule.

methods = None

A for which methods this pluggable view can handle.

class flask.views.MethodView

Like a regular class-based view but that dispatches requests to
particular methods. For instance if you implement a method called
get() it means you will response to 'GET' requests and
the dispatch_request() implementation will automatically
forward your request to that. Also options is set for you
automatically:

class CounterAPI(MethodView):

    def get(self):
        return session.get('counter', 0)

    def post(self):
        session['counter'] = session.get('counter', 0) + 1
        return 'OK'

app.add_url_rule('/counter', view_func=CounterAPI.as_view('counter'))

URL 路由注册¶

Generally there are three ways to define rules for the routing system:

  1. You can use the flask.Flask.route() decorator.
  2. You can use the flask.Flask.add_url_rule() function.
  3. You can directly access the underlying Werkzeug routing system
    which is exposed as flask.Flask.url_map.

Variable parts in the route can be specified with angular brackets
(/user/<username>). By default a variable part in the URL accepts any
string without a slash however a different converter can be specified as
well by using <converter:name>.

Variable parts are passed to the view function as keyword arguments.

The following converters are available:

string accepts any text without a slash (the default)
int accepts integers
float like int but for floating point values
path like the default but also accepts slashes

Here are some examples:

@app.route('/')
def index():
    pass

@app.route('/<username>')
def show_user(username):
    pass

@app.route('/post/<int:post_id>')
def show_post(post_id):
    pass

An important detail to keep in mind is how Flask deals with trailing
slashes. The idea is to keep each URL unique so the following rules
apply:

  1. If a rule ends with a slash and is requested without a slash by the
    user, the user is automatically redirected to the same page with a
    trailing slash attached.
  2. If a rule does not end with a trailing slash and the user requests the
    page with a trailing slash, a 404 not found is raised.

This is consistent with how web servers deal with static files. This
also makes it possible to use relative link targets safely.

You can also define multiple rules for the same function. They have to be
unique however. Defaults can also be specified. Here for example is a
definition for a URL that accepts an optional page:

@app.route('/users/', defaults={'page': 1})
@app.route('/users/page/<int:page>')
def show_users(page):
    pass

This specifies that /users/ will be the URL for page one and
/users/page/N will be the URL for page N.

Here are the parameters that route() and
add_url_rule() accept. The only difference is that
with the route parameter the view function is defined with the decorator
instead of the view_func parameter.

rule the URL rule as string
endpoint the endpoint for the registered URL rule. Flask itself
assumes that the name of the view function is the name
of the endpoint if not explicitly stated.
view_func the function to call when serving a request to the
provided endpoint. If this is not provided one can
specify the function later by storing it in the
view_functions dictionary with the
endpoint as key.
defaults A dictionary with defaults for this rule. See the
example above for how defaults work.
subdomain specifies the rule for the subdomain in case subdomain
matching is in use. If not specified the default
subdomain is assumed.
**options the options to be forwarded to the underlying
Rule object. A change to
Werkzeug is handling of method options. methods is a list
of methods this rule should be limited to (GET, POST
etc.). By default a rule just listens for GET (and
implicitly HEAD). Starting with Flask 0.6, OPTIONS is
implicitly added and handled by the standard request
handling. They have to be specified as keyword arguments.

视图函数选项¶

For internal usage the view functions can have some attributes attached to
customize behavior the view function would normally not have control over.
The following attributes can be provided optionally to either override
some defaults to add_url_rule() or general behavior:

  • __name__: The name of a function is by default used as endpoint. If
    endpoint is provided explicitly this value is used. Additionally this
    will be prefixed with the name of the blueprint by default which
    cannot be customized from the function itself.
  • methods: If methods are not provided when the URL rule is added,
    Flask will look on the view function object itself is an methods
    attribute exists. If it does, it will pull the information for the
    methods from there.
  • provide_automatic_options: if this attribute is set Flask will
    either force enable or disable the automatic implementation of the
    HTTP OPTIONS response. This can be useful when working with
    decorators that want to customize the OPTIONS response on a per-view
    basis.
  • required_methods: if this attribute is set, Flask will always add
    these methods when registering a URL rule even if the methods were
    explicitly overriden in the route() call.

Full example:

def index():
    if request.method == 'OPTIONS':
        # custom options handling here
        ...
    return 'Hello World!'
index.provide_automatic_options = False
index.methods = ['GET', 'OPTIONS']

app.add_url_rule('/', index)

New in version 0.8: The provide_automatic_options functionality was added.

The provide_automatic_options functionality was added.

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