easy server-setup
Many web services offer simple ways to set up a WSGI webserver.
The built-in WSGI server in Python is, however, not very easy to use.
PyWSGIRef provides a simple way to set up a WSGI server with minimal code.
Also, a problem with many of those web services is that they aren't able to make web requests
and it's very slow to read files once the server is running.
PyWSGIRef solves this problem by providing a simple way to load PyHTML files from the web or from the local filesystem
before the server is running.
PyHTML files are HTML files that can contain {}-s for Python formatting or
(upcoming) code blocks or shortened HTML, which can be used to create dynamic HTML content.
PyWSGIRef also provides a simple way to decode these.
You can install PyWSGIRef via pip using
py -m pip install PyWSGIRefimport os
os.system('py -m pip install PyWSGIRef')from PyWSGIRef import *
# Create a WSGI application object
def simple_app(path: str) -> str:
return f"Hello, you visited {path}!"
application = makeApplicationObject(simple_app)
# Create a WSGI server
server = setUpServer(application, port=8000)
server.serve_forever()The makeWSGIApp function requires a callable that takes a single argument (the path) and returns a string response.
The makeWSGIServer function creates a WSGI server that listens on the specified port (default is 8000)
and calls the application object with the environ.
You may also specify advanced options in makeWSGIApp:
- you can set the
advancedparameter toTrue, so that your application method also gets an FieldStorage type object - you can set the
setAdvancedHeadersparameter toTrue, so that the application method is also able to set status codes and types in the response headers,
which is only possible if theadvancedparameter is set toTrue
Example:
from PyWSGIRef import *
# Create a WSGI application object with advanced options
def advanced_app(path: str, form: FieldStorage) -> str, str, str:
# You can access form data here
name = str(form.getvalue('name'))
if path == "/hello":
return f"Hello, {name}, you visited {path}!", "text/html", "200 OK"
else:
return "Page not found", "text/html", "404 Not Found"
application = makeApplicationObject(advanced_app, advanced=True, setAdvancedHeaders=True)
# Create a WSGI server
server = setUpServer(application, port=8000)
server.serve_forever()You can also use your own application object instead of the one created by makeWSGIApp.
PyWSGIRef also provides a simple way to load PyHTML files:
from PyWSGIRef import *
# load from file
html = loadFromFile('index.pyhtml')
# load from web
html = loadFromWeb('https://example.com/index.pyhtml')This is useful for serving dynamic HTML content in your WSGI application.
The funcs are callable unless you set up a server.
PyWSGIRef also provides a simple way to use templates in your WSGI application:
from PyWSGIRef import *
# add template to template dictionary
# -> saves as PyHTML object
addSchablone("index", loadedPyHTMLFile)
# load template from dictionary
# get HTML code from PyHTML object
html = SCHABLONEN["index"].decoded()
# use Python formatting
serverPageContent = html.format("Hello, World!")Note that you may only use the addSchablone function before you set up a server.
PyWSGIRef comes with some default HTML templates that you can use in your WSGI application.
You can access them via the PyWSGIRef.defaults:
from PyWSGIRef import *
# load default HTML template
addSchablone("hello", HELLO_WORLD)
addSchablone("error", ERROR)You may produce a simple WSGI server by using either:
from PyWSGIRef import main
main()or (from a commandline)
py -m PyWSGIRef(more coming soon...)
PyWSGIRef provides a simple way to shorten a common HTML beginning phrase in PyHTML:
from PyWSGIRef import PyHTML
# Shorten HTML beginning phrase
pyhtml_ = """<{{evalPyHTML}}>
<title>My Page</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello, World!</h1>
</body>
</html>"""
pyhtml = PyHTML(pyhtml_)
html = pyhtml.decoded(), which is actually automatically done by PyWSGIRef.
The <{{evalPyHTML}}> phrase at the beginning of the document includes a Doctype announcement,
a html and head block and some common meta phrases as utf-8 encoding or device-width scaling.
PyWSGIRef also provides a simple way to end PyHTML files:
just use the <{{evalPyHTML}}> phrase at the end of the document and
PyWSGIRef will automatically add the closing html and body tags.
You can also add PyWSGIRef's own, featured modern stylesheet using:
<{{evalPyHTML-modernStyling: true}}> inside the head block of your PyHTML file.
You may add your own static resources like CSS or JavaScript files using the <{{evalPyHTML-include: ... :include-}}> phrase.
Different static resources can be included by separating them with a comma.
You may include CSS, JS, JSON and ICO files.
With the <{{evalPyHTML-script: alert('Hello, World!'); :script-}}> phrase,
you can add a script block anywhere inside your PyHTML file.
Using pretty much the same syntax, you can also add a style block using
<{{evalPyHTML-style: body { background-color: lightblue; } :style-}}>.
You can shut down your server by calling the shutdown method on the server object:
from PyWSGIRef import *
# ...
# Create a WSGI server
server = setUpServer(application, port=8000)
# Shut down the server
server.shutdown()Use the following to get information about your release and the author of the module:
from PyWSGIRef import about
about()Join the BETA group to get new features even earlier!
Note that BETA features may not be tested when using them.
from PyWSGIRef import BETA
#enable beta mode
BETA.enable()Currently to be tested are:
- PyHTML python script blocks
- PyHTML python if clause blocks
- application object running time measuring
- application object counter of access
Thanks a lot for helping improving PyWSGIRef!