| Working with the Shell |
| ====================== |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.3 |
|
|
| One of the reasons everybody loves Python is the interactive shell. It |
| basically allows you to execute Python commands in real time and |
| immediately get results back. Flask itself does not come with an |
| interactive shell, because it does not require any specific setup upfront, |
| just import your application and start playing around. |
|
|
| There are however some handy helpers to make playing around in the shell a |
| more pleasant experience. The main issue with interactive console |
| sessions is that you're not triggering a request like a browser does which |
| means that :data:`~flask.g`, :data:`~flask.request` and others are not |
| available. But the code you want to test might depend on them, so what |
| can you do? |
|
|
| This is where some helper functions come in handy. Keep in mind however |
| that these functions are not only there for interactive shell usage, but |
| also for unit testing and other situations that require a faked request |
| context. |
|
|
| Generally it's recommended that you read :doc:`reqcontext` first. |
|
|
| Command Line Interface |
| ---------------------- |
|
|
| Starting with Flask 0.11 the recommended way to work with the shell is the |
| ``flask shell`` command which does a lot of this automatically for you. |
| For instance the shell is automatically initialized with a loaded |
| application context. |
|
|
| For more information see :doc:`/cli`. |
|
|
| Creating a Request Context |
| -------------------------- |
|
|
| The easiest way to create a proper request context from the shell is by |
| using the :attr:`~flask.Flask.test_request_context` method which creates |
| us a :class:`~flask.ctx.RequestContext`: |
|
|
| >>> ctx = app.test_request_context() |
|
|
| Normally you would use the ``with`` statement to make this request object |
| active, but in the shell it's easier to use the |
| :meth:`~flask.ctx.RequestContext.push` and |
| :meth:`~flask.ctx.RequestContext.pop` methods by hand: |
|
|
| >>> ctx.push() |
|
|
| From that point onwards you can work with the request object until you |
| call `pop`: |
|
|
| >>> ctx.pop() |
|
|
| Firing Before/After Request |
| --------------------------- |
|
|
| By just creating a request context, you still don't have run the code that |
| is normally run before a request. This might result in your database |
| being unavailable if you are connecting to the database in a |
| before-request callback or the current user not being stored on the |
| :data:`~flask.g` object etc. |
|
|
| This however can easily be done yourself. Just call |
| :meth:`~flask.Flask.preprocess_request`: |
|
|
| >>> ctx = app.test_request_context() |
| >>> ctx.push() |
| >>> app.preprocess_request() |
|
|
| Keep in mind that the :meth:`~flask.Flask.preprocess_request` function |
| might return a response object, in that case just ignore it. |
|
|
| To shutdown a request, you need to trick a bit before the after request |
| functions (triggered by :meth:`~flask.Flask.process_response`) operate on |
| a response object: |
|
|
| >>> app.process_response(app.response_class()) |
| <Response 0 bytes [200 OK]> |
| >>> ctx.pop() |
|
|
| The functions registered as :meth:`~flask.Flask.teardown_request` are |
| automatically called when the context is popped. So this is the perfect |
| place to automatically tear down resources that were needed by the request |
| context (such as database connections). |
|
|
|
|
| Further Improving the Shell Experience |
| -------------------------------------- |
|
|
| If you like the idea of experimenting in a shell, create yourself a module |
| with stuff you want to star import into your interactive session. There |
| you could also define some more helper methods for common things such as |
| initializing the database, dropping tables etc. |
|
|
| Just put them into a module (like `shelltools`) and import from there: |
|
|
| >>> from shelltools import * |
|
|