| Configuration Handling |
| ====================== |
|
|
| Applications need some kind of configuration. There are different settings |
| you might want to change depending on the application environment like |
| toggling the debug mode, setting the secret key, and other such |
| environment-specific things. |
|
|
| The way Flask is designed usually requires the configuration to be |
| available when the application starts up. You can hard code the |
| configuration in the code, which for many small applications is not |
| actually that bad, but there are better ways. |
|
|
| Independent of how you load your config, there is a config object |
| available which holds the loaded configuration values: |
| The :attr:`~flask.Flask.config` attribute of the :class:`~flask.Flask` |
| object. This is the place where Flask itself puts certain configuration |
| values and also where extensions can put their configuration values. But |
| this is also where you can have your own configuration. |
|
|
|
|
| Configuration Basics |
| -------------------- |
|
|
| The :attr:`~flask.Flask.config` is actually a subclass of a dictionary and |
| can be modified just like any dictionary:: |
| |
| app = Flask(__name__) |
| app.config['TESTING'] = True |
|
|
| Certain configuration values are also forwarded to the |
| :attr:`~flask.Flask` object so you can read and write them from there:: |
|
|
| app.testing = True |
|
|
| To update multiple keys at once you can use the :meth:`dict.update` |
| method:: |
| |
| app.config.update( |
| TESTING=True, |
| SECRET_KEY='192b9bdd22ab9ed4d12e236c78afcb9a393ec15f71bbf5dc987d54727823bcbf' |
| ) |
|
|
|
|
| Environment and Debug Features |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| The :data:`ENV` and :data:`DEBUG` config values are special because they |
| may behave inconsistently if changed after the app has begun setting up. |
| In order to set the environment and debug mode reliably, Flask uses |
| environment variables. |
|
|
| The environment is used to indicate to Flask, extensions, and other |
| programs, like Sentry, what context Flask is running in. It is |
| controlled with the :envvar:`FLASK_ENV` environment variable and |
| defaults to ``production``. |
|
|
| Setting :envvar:`FLASK_ENV` to ``development`` will enable debug mode. |
| ``flask run`` will use the interactive debugger and reloader by default |
| in debug mode. To control this separately from the environment, use the |
| :envvar:`FLASK_DEBUG` flag. |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| Added :envvar:`FLASK_ENV` to control the environment separately |
| from debug mode. The development environment enables debug mode. |
|
|
| To switch Flask to the development environment and enable debug mode, |
| set :envvar:`FLASK_ENV`: |
|
|
| .. tabs:: |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Bash |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| $ export FLASK_ENV=development |
| $ flask run |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Fish |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| $ set -x FLASK_ENV development |
| $ flask run |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: CMD |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| > set FLASK_ENV=development |
| > flask run |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Powershell |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| > $env:FLASK_ENV = "development" |
| > flask run |
|
|
| Using the environment variables as described above is recommended. While |
| it is possible to set :data:`ENV` and :data:`DEBUG` in your config or |
| code, this is strongly discouraged. They can't be read early by the |
| ``flask`` command, and some systems or extensions may have already |
| configured themselves based on a previous value. |
|
|
|
|
| Builtin Configuration Values |
| ---------------------------- |
|
|
| The following configuration values are used internally by Flask: |
|
|
| .. py:data:: ENV |
|
|
| What environment the app is running in. Flask and extensions may |
| enable behaviors based on the environment, such as enabling debug |
| mode. The :attr:`~flask.Flask.env` attribute maps to this config |
| key. This is set by the :envvar:`FLASK_ENV` environment variable and |
| may not behave as expected if set in code. |
|
|
| **Do not enable development when deploying in production.** |
|
|
| Default: ``'production'`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
|
|
| .. py:data:: DEBUG |
|
|
| Whether debug mode is enabled. When using ``flask run`` to start the |
| development server, an interactive debugger will be shown for |
| unhandled exceptions, and the server will be reloaded when code |
| changes. The :attr:`~flask.Flask.debug` attribute maps to this |
| config key. This is enabled when :data:`ENV` is ``'development'`` |
| and is overridden by the ``FLASK_DEBUG`` environment variable. It |
| may not behave as expected if set in code. |
|
|
| **Do not enable debug mode when deploying in production.** |
|
|
| Default: ``True`` if :data:`ENV` is ``'development'``, or ``False`` |
| otherwise. |
|
|
| .. py:data:: TESTING |
|
|
| Enable testing mode. Exceptions are propagated rather than handled by the |
| the app's error handlers. Extensions may also change their behavior to |
| facilitate easier testing. You should enable this in your own tests. |
|
|
| Default: ``False`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS |
|
|
| Exceptions are re-raised rather than being handled by the app's error |
| handlers. If not set, this is implicitly true if ``TESTING`` or ``DEBUG`` |
| is enabled. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION |
|
|
| Don't pop the request context when an exception occurs. If not set, this |
| is true if ``DEBUG`` is true. This allows debuggers to introspect the |
| request data on errors, and should normally not need to be set directly. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: TRAP_HTTP_EXCEPTIONS |
|
|
| If there is no handler for an ``HTTPException``-type exception, re-raise it |
| to be handled by the interactive debugger instead of returning it as a |
| simple error response. |
|
|
| Default: ``False`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: TRAP_BAD_REQUEST_ERRORS |
|
|
| Trying to access a key that doesn't exist from request dicts like ``args`` |
| and ``form`` will return a 400 Bad Request error page. Enable this to treat |
| the error as an unhandled exception instead so that you get the interactive |
| debugger. This is a more specific version of ``TRAP_HTTP_EXCEPTIONS``. If |
| unset, it is enabled in debug mode. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SECRET_KEY |
|
|
| A secret key that will be used for securely signing the session cookie |
| and can be used for any other security related needs by extensions or your |
| application. It should be a long random ``bytes`` or ``str``. For |
| example, copy the output of this to your config:: |
| |
| $ python -c 'import secrets; print(secrets.token_hex())' |
| '192b9bdd22ab9ed4d12e236c78afcb9a393ec15f71bbf5dc987d54727823bcbf' |
|
|
| **Do not reveal the secret key when posting questions or committing code.** |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_COOKIE_NAME |
|
|
| The name of the session cookie. Can be changed in case you already have a |
| cookie with the same name. |
|
|
| Default: ``'session'`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN |
|
|
| The domain match rule that the session cookie will be valid for. If not |
| set, the cookie will be valid for all subdomains of :data:`SERVER_NAME`. |
| If ``False``, the cookie's domain will not be set. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_COOKIE_PATH |
|
|
| The path that the session cookie will be valid for. If not set, the cookie |
| will be valid underneath ``APPLICATION_ROOT`` or ``/`` if that is not set. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY |
|
|
| Browsers will not allow JavaScript access to cookies marked as "HTTP only" |
| for security. |
|
|
| Default: ``True`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE |
|
|
| Browsers will only send cookies with requests over HTTPS if the cookie is |
| marked "secure". The application must be served over HTTPS for this to make |
| sense. |
|
|
| Default: ``False`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_COOKIE_SAMESITE |
|
|
| Restrict how cookies are sent with requests from external sites. Can |
| be set to ``'Lax'`` (recommended) or ``'Strict'``. |
| See :ref:`security-cookie`. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
|
|
| .. py:data:: PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME |
|
|
| If ``session.permanent`` is true, the cookie's expiration will be set this |
| number of seconds in the future. Can either be a |
| :class:`datetime.timedelta` or an ``int``. |
|
|
| Flask's default cookie implementation validates that the cryptographic |
| signature is not older than this value. |
|
|
| Default: ``timedelta(days=31)`` (``2678400`` seconds) |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SESSION_REFRESH_EACH_REQUEST |
|
|
| Control whether the cookie is sent with every response when |
| ``session.permanent`` is true. Sending the cookie every time (the default) |
| can more reliably keep the session from expiring, but uses more bandwidth. |
| Non-permanent sessions are not affected. |
|
|
| Default: ``True`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: USE_X_SENDFILE |
|
|
| When serving files, set the ``X-Sendfile`` header instead of serving the |
| data with Flask. Some web servers, such as Apache, recognize this and serve |
| the data more efficiently. This only makes sense when using such a server. |
|
|
| Default: ``False`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT |
|
|
| When serving files, set the cache control max age to this number of |
| seconds. Can be a :class:`datetime.timedelta` or an ``int``. |
| Override this value on a per-file basis using |
| :meth:`~flask.Flask.get_send_file_max_age` on the application or |
| blueprint. |
|
|
| If ``None``, ``send_file`` tells the browser to use conditional |
| requests will be used instead of a timed cache, which is usually |
| preferable. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: SERVER_NAME |
|
|
| Inform the application what host and port it is bound to. Required |
| for subdomain route matching support. |
|
|
| If set, will be used for the session cookie domain if |
| :data:`SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN` is not set. Modern web browsers will |
| not allow setting cookies for domains without a dot. To use a domain |
| locally, add any names that should route to the app to your |
| ``hosts`` file. :: |
| |
| 127.0.0.1 localhost.dev |
|
|
| If set, ``url_for`` can generate external URLs with only an application |
| context instead of a request context. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: APPLICATION_ROOT |
|
|
| Inform the application what path it is mounted under by the application / |
| web server. This is used for generating URLs outside the context of a |
| request (inside a request, the dispatcher is responsible for setting |
| ``SCRIPT_NAME`` instead; see :doc:`/patterns/appdispatch` |
| for examples of dispatch configuration). |
|
|
| Will be used for the session cookie path if ``SESSION_COOKIE_PATH`` is not |
| set. |
|
|
| Default: ``'/'`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME |
|
|
| Use this scheme for generating external URLs when not in a request context. |
|
|
| Default: ``'http'`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH |
|
|
| Don't read more than this many bytes from the incoming request data. If not |
| set and the request does not specify a ``CONTENT_LENGTH``, no data will be |
| read for security. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: JSON_AS_ASCII |
|
|
| Serialize objects to ASCII-encoded JSON. If this is disabled, the |
| JSON returned from ``jsonify`` will contain Unicode characters. This |
| has security implications when rendering the JSON into JavaScript in |
| templates, and should typically remain enabled. |
|
|
| Default: ``True`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: JSON_SORT_KEYS |
|
|
| Sort the keys of JSON objects alphabetically. This is useful for caching |
| because it ensures the data is serialized the same way no matter what |
| Python's hash seed is. While not recommended, you can disable this for a |
| possible performance improvement at the cost of caching. |
|
|
| Default: ``True`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: JSONIFY_PRETTYPRINT_REGULAR |
|
|
| ``jsonify`` responses will be output with newlines, spaces, and indentation |
| for easier reading by humans. Always enabled in debug mode. |
|
|
| Default: ``False`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: JSONIFY_MIMETYPE |
|
|
| The mimetype of ``jsonify`` responses. |
|
|
| Default: ``'application/json'`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD |
|
|
| Reload templates when they are changed. If not set, it will be enabled in |
| debug mode. |
|
|
| Default: ``None`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: EXPLAIN_TEMPLATE_LOADING |
|
|
| Log debugging information tracing how a template file was loaded. This can |
| be useful to figure out why a template was not loaded or the wrong file |
| appears to be loaded. |
|
|
| Default: ``False`` |
|
|
| .. py:data:: MAX_COOKIE_SIZE |
|
|
| Warn if cookie headers are larger than this many bytes. Defaults to |
| ``4093``. Larger cookies may be silently ignored by browsers. Set to |
| ``0`` to disable the warning. |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.4 |
| ``LOGGER_NAME`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| ``SERVER_NAME`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
| ``MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| ``PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS``, ``PRESERVE_CONTEXT_ON_EXCEPTION`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.8 |
| ``TRAP_BAD_REQUEST_ERRORS``, ``TRAP_HTTP_EXCEPTIONS``, |
| ``APPLICATION_ROOT``, ``SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN``, |
| ``SESSION_COOKIE_PATH``, ``SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY``, |
| ``SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| ``PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.10 |
| ``JSON_AS_ASCII``, ``JSON_SORT_KEYS``, ``JSONIFY_PRETTYPRINT_REGULAR`` |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.11 |
| ``SESSION_REFRESH_EACH_REQUEST``, ``TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD``, |
| ``LOGGER_HANDLER_POLICY``, ``EXPLAIN_TEMPLATE_LOADING`` |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| ``LOGGER_NAME`` and ``LOGGER_HANDLER_POLICY`` were removed. See |
| :doc:`/logging` for information about configuration. |
|
|
| Added :data:`ENV` to reflect the :envvar:`FLASK_ENV` environment |
| variable. |
|
|
| Added :data:`SESSION_COOKIE_SAMESITE` to control the session |
| cookie's ``SameSite`` option. |
|
|
| Added :data:`MAX_COOKIE_SIZE` to control a warning from Werkzeug. |
|
|
|
|
| Configuring from Python Files |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| Configuration becomes more useful if you can store it in a separate file, |
| ideally located outside the actual application package. This makes |
| packaging and distributing your application possible via various package |
| handling tools (:doc:`/patterns/distribute`) and finally modifying the |
| configuration file afterwards. |
|
|
| So a common pattern is this:: |
| |
| app = Flask(__name__) |
| app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_settings') |
| app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS') |
|
|
| This first loads the configuration from the |
| `yourapplication.default_settings` module and then overrides the values |
| with the contents of the file the :envvar:`YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS` |
| environment variable points to. This environment variable can be set |
| in the shell before starting the server: |
|
|
| .. tabs:: |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Bash |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| $ export YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS=/path/to/settings.cfg |
| $ flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Fish |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| $ set -x YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS /path/to/settings.cfg |
| $ flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: CMD |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| > set YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS=\path\to\settings.cfg |
| > flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Powershell |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| > $env:YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS = "\path\to\settings.cfg" |
| > flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| The configuration files themselves are actual Python files. Only values |
| in uppercase are actually stored in the config object later on. So make |
| sure to use uppercase letters for your config keys. |
|
|
| Here is an example of a configuration file:: |
| |
| # Example configuration |
| SECRET_KEY = '192b9bdd22ab9ed4d12e236c78afcb9a393ec15f71bbf5dc987d54727823bcbf' |
|
|
| Make sure to load the configuration very early on, so that extensions have |
| the ability to access the configuration when starting up. There are other |
| methods on the config object as well to load from individual files. For a |
| complete reference, read the :class:`~flask.Config` object's |
| documentation. |
|
|
|
|
| Configuring from Data Files |
| --------------------------- |
|
|
| It is also possible to load configuration from a file in a format of |
| your choice using :meth:`~flask.Config.from_file`. For example to load |
| from a TOML file: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
|
|
| import toml |
| app.config.from_file("config.toml", load=toml.load) |
|
|
| Or from a JSON file: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
|
|
| import json |
| app.config.from_file("config.json", load=json.load) |
|
|
|
|
| Configuring from Environment Variables |
| -------------------------------------- |
|
|
| In addition to pointing to configuration files using environment variables, you |
| may find it useful (or necessary) to control your configuration values directly |
| from the environment. |
|
|
| Environment variables can be set in the shell before starting the server: |
|
|
| .. tabs:: |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Bash |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| $ export SECRET_KEY="5f352379324c22463451387a0aec5d2f" |
| $ export MAIL_ENABLED=false |
| $ flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Fish |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| $ set -x SECRET_KEY "5f352379324c22463451387a0aec5d2f" |
| $ set -x MAIL_ENABLED false |
| $ flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: CMD |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| > set SECRET_KEY="5f352379324c22463451387a0aec5d2f" |
| > set MAIL_ENABLED=false |
| > flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| .. group-tab:: Powershell |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| > $env:SECRET_KEY = "5f352379324c22463451387a0aec5d2f" |
| > $env:MAIL_ENABLED = "false" |
| > flask run |
| * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ |
|
|
| While this approach is straightforward to use, it is important to remember that |
| environment variables are strings -- they are not automatically deserialized |
| into Python types. |
|
|
| Here is an example of a configuration file that uses environment variables:: |
| |
| import os |
|
|
| _mail_enabled = os.environ.get("MAIL_ENABLED", default="true") |
| MAIL_ENABLED = _mail_enabled.lower() in {"1", "t", "true"} |
|
|
| SECRET_KEY = os.environ.get("SECRET_KEY") |
|
|
| if not SECRET_KEY: |
| raise ValueError("No SECRET_KEY set for Flask application") |
|
|
|
|
| Notice that any value besides an empty string will be interpreted as a boolean |
| ``True`` value in Python, which requires care if an environment explicitly sets |
| values intended to be ``False``. |
|
|
| Make sure to load the configuration very early on, so that extensions have the |
| ability to access the configuration when starting up. There are other methods |
| on the config object as well to load from individual files. For a complete |
| reference, read the :class:`~flask.Config` class documentation. |
|
|
|
|
| Configuration Best Practices |
| ---------------------------- |
|
|
| The downside with the approach mentioned earlier is that it makes testing |
| a little harder. There is no single 100% solution for this problem in |
| general, but there are a couple of things you can keep in mind to improve |
| that experience: |
|
|
| 1. Create your application in a function and register blueprints on it. |
| That way you can create multiple instances of your application with |
| different configurations attached which makes unit testing a lot |
| easier. You can use this to pass in configuration as needed. |
|
|
| 2. Do not write code that needs the configuration at import time. If you |
| limit yourself to request-only accesses to the configuration you can |
| reconfigure the object later on as needed. |
|
|
| .. _config-dev-prod: |
|
|
| Development / Production |
| ------------------------ |
|
|
| Most applications need more than one configuration. There should be at |
| least separate configurations for the production server and the one used |
| during development. The easiest way to handle this is to use a default |
| configuration that is always loaded and part of the version control, and a |
| separate configuration that overrides the values as necessary as mentioned |
| in the example above:: |
| |
| app = Flask(__name__) |
| app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_settings') |
| app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS') |
|
|
| Then you just have to add a separate :file:`config.py` file and export |
| ``YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS=/path/to/config.py`` and you are done. However |
| there are alternative ways as well. For example you could use imports or |
| subclassing. |
|
|
| What is very popular in the Django world is to make the import explicit in |
| the config file by adding ``from yourapplication.default_settings |
| import *`` to the top of the file and then overriding the changes by hand. |
| You could also inspect an environment variable like |
| ``YOURAPPLICATION_MODE`` and set that to `production`, `development` etc |
| and import different hard-coded files based on that. |
|
|
| An interesting pattern is also to use classes and inheritance for |
| configuration:: |
| |
| class Config(object): |
| TESTING = False |
|
|
| class ProductionConfig(Config): |
| DATABASE_URI = 'mysql://user@localhost/foo' |
|
|
| class DevelopmentConfig(Config): |
| DATABASE_URI = "sqlite:////tmp/foo.db" |
|
|
| class TestingConfig(Config): |
| DATABASE_URI = 'sqlite:///:memory:' |
| TESTING = True |
|
|
| To enable such a config you just have to call into |
| :meth:`~flask.Config.from_object`:: |
|
|
| app.config.from_object('configmodule.ProductionConfig') |
|
|
| Note that :meth:`~flask.Config.from_object` does not instantiate the class |
| object. If you need to instantiate the class, such as to access a property, |
| then you must do so before calling :meth:`~flask.Config.from_object`:: |
|
|
| from configmodule import ProductionConfig |
| app.config.from_object(ProductionConfig()) |
|
|
| # Alternatively, import via string: |
| from werkzeug.utils import import_string |
| cfg = import_string('configmodule.ProductionConfig')() |
| app.config.from_object(cfg) |
|
|
| Instantiating the configuration object allows you to use ``@property`` in |
| your configuration classes:: |
| |
| class Config(object): |
| """Base config, uses staging database server.""" |
| TESTING = False |
| DB_SERVER = '192.168.1.56' |
|
|
| @property |
| def DATABASE_URI(self): # Note: all caps |
| return f"mysql://user@{self.DB_SERVER}/foo" |
|
|
| class ProductionConfig(Config): |
| """Uses production database server.""" |
| DB_SERVER = '192.168.19.32' |
|
|
| class DevelopmentConfig(Config): |
| DB_SERVER = 'localhost' |
|
|
| class TestingConfig(Config): |
| DB_SERVER = 'localhost' |
| DATABASE_URI = 'sqlite:///:memory:' |
|
|
| There are many different ways and it's up to you how you want to manage |
| your configuration files. However here a list of good recommendations: |
|
|
| - Keep a default configuration in version control. Either populate the |
| config with this default configuration or import it in your own |
| configuration files before overriding values. |
| - Use an environment variable to switch between the configurations. |
| This can be done from outside the Python interpreter and makes |
| development and deployment much easier because you can quickly and |
| easily switch between different configs without having to touch the |
| code at all. If you are working often on different projects you can |
| even create your own script for sourcing that activates a virtualenv |
| and exports the development configuration for you. |
| - Use a tool like `fabric`_ in production to push code and |
| configurations separately to the production server(s). For some |
| details about how to do that, head over to the |
| :doc:`/patterns/fabric` pattern. |
|
|
| .. _fabric: https://www.fabfile.org/ |
|
|
|
|
| .. _instance-folders: |
|
|
| Instance Folders |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.8 |
|
|
| Flask 0.8 introduces instance folders. Flask for a long time made it |
| possible to refer to paths relative to the application's folder directly |
| (via :attr:`Flask.root_path`). This was also how many developers loaded |
| configurations stored next to the application. Unfortunately however this |
| only works well if applications are not packages in which case the root |
| path refers to the contents of the package. |
|
|
| With Flask 0.8 a new attribute was introduced: |
| :attr:`Flask.instance_path`. It refers to a new concept called the |
| “instance folder”. The instance folder is designed to not be under |
| version control and be deployment specific. It's the perfect place to |
| drop things that either change at runtime or configuration files. |
|
|
| You can either explicitly provide the path of the instance folder when |
| creating the Flask application or you can let Flask autodetect the |
| instance folder. For explicit configuration use the `instance_path` |
| parameter:: |
| |
| app = Flask(__name__, instance_path='/path/to/instance/folder') |
|
|
| Please keep in mind that this path *must* be absolute when provided. |
|
|
| If the `instance_path` parameter is not provided the following default |
| locations are used: |
|
|
| - Uninstalled module:: |
|
|
| /myapp.py |
| /instance |
|
|
| - Uninstalled package:: |
|
|
| /myapp |
| /__init__.py |
| /instance |
|
|
| - Installed module or package:: |
|
|
| $PREFIX/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages/myapp |
| $PREFIX/var/myapp-instance |
|
|
| ``$PREFIX`` is the prefix of your Python installation. This can be |
| ``/usr`` or the path to your virtualenv. You can print the value of |
| ``sys.prefix`` to see what the prefix is set to. |
|
|
| Since the config object provided loading of configuration files from |
| relative filenames we made it possible to change the loading via filenames |
| to be relative to the instance path if wanted. The behavior of relative |
| paths in config files can be flipped between “relative to the application |
| root” (the default) to “relative to instance folder” via the |
| `instance_relative_config` switch to the application constructor:: |
| |
| app = Flask(__name__, instance_relative_config=True) |
|
|
| Here is a full example of how to configure Flask to preload the config |
| from a module and then override the config from a file in the instance |
| folder if it exists:: |
| |
| app = Flask(__name__, instance_relative_config=True) |
| app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_settings') |
| app.config.from_pyfile('application.cfg', silent=True) |
|
|
| The path to the instance folder can be found via the |
| :attr:`Flask.instance_path`. Flask also provides a shortcut to open a |
| file from the instance folder with :meth:`Flask.open_instance_resource`. |
|
|
| Example usage for both:: |
| |
| filename = os.path.join(app.instance_path, 'application.cfg') |
| with open(filename) as f: |
| config = f.read() |
|
|
| # or via open_instance_resource: |
| with app.open_instance_resource('application.cfg') as f: |
| config = f.read() |
|
|