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Command Line Pecan
Any Pecan application can be controlled and inspected from the
command line using the built-in pecan command. The usage examples of pecan in this document
are intended to be invoked from your project's root directory.
Serving a Pecan App For Development
Pecan comes bundled with a lightweight WSGI development server based
on Python's :pywsgiref.simple_server module.
Serving your Pecan app is as simple as invoking the
pecan serve command:
$ pecan serve config.py
Starting server in PID 000.
serving on 0.0.0.0:8080, view at http://127.0.0.1:8080
and then visiting it in your browser.
The server host and port in your
configuration file can be changed as described in server_configuration.
The Interactive Shell
Pecan applications also come with an interactive Python shell which
can be used to execute expressions in an environment very similar to the
one your application runs in. To invoke an interactive shell, use the
pecan shell command:
$ pecan shell config.py
Pecan Interactive Shell
Python 2.7.1 (r271:86832, Jul 31 2011, 19:30:53)
[GCC 4.2.1 (Based on Apple Inc. build 5658)
The following objects are available:
wsgiapp - This project's WSGI App instance
conf - The current configuration
app - webtest.TestApp wrapped around wsgiapp
>>> conf
Config({
'app': Config({
'root': 'myapp.controllers.root.RootController',
'modules': ['myapp'],
'static_root': '/Users/somebody/myapp/public',
'template_path': '/Users/somebody/myapp/project/templates',
'errors': {'404': '/error/404'},
'debug': True
}),
'server': Config({
'host': '0.0.0.0',
'port': '8080'
})
})
>>> app
<webtest.app.TestApp object at 0x101a830>
>>> app.get('/')
<200 OK text/html body='<html>\n ...\n\n'/936>
Press Ctrl-D to exit the interactive shell (or
Ctrl-Z on Windows).
Using an Alternative Shell
pecan shell has optional support for the IPython and bpython alternative shells,
each of which can be specified with the --shell flag (or
its abbreviated alias, -s), e.g.,
$ pecan shell --shell=ipython config.py
$ pecan shell -s bpython config.py
Configuration from an environment variable
In all the examples shown, you will see that the pecan commands accepted a
file path to the configuration file. An alternative to this is to
specify the configuration file in an environment variable (PECAN_CONFIG).
This is completely optional; if a file path is passed in explicitly, Pecan will honor that before looking for an environment variable.
For example, to serve a Pecan application, a variable could be exported and subsequently be re-used when no path is passed in.
$ export PECAN_CONFIG=/path/to/app/config.py
$ pecan serve
Starting server in PID 000.
serving on 0.0.0.0:8080, view at http://127.0.0.1:8080
Note that the path needs to reference a valid pecan configuration file, otherwise the command will error out with a message indicating that the path is invalid (for example, if a directory is passed in).
If PECAN_CONFIG
is not set and no configuration is passed in, the command will error out
because it will not be able to locate a configuration file.
Extending
pecan with Custom Commands
While the commands packaged with Pecan are useful, the real utility
of its command line toolset lies in its extensibility. It's convenient
to be able to write a Python script that can work "in a Pecan
environment" with access to things like your application's parsed
configuration file or a simulated instance of your application itself
(like the one provided in the pecan shell command).
Writing a Custom Pecan Command
As an example, let's create a command that can be used to issue a simulated HTTP GET to your application and print the result. Its invocation from the command line might look something like this:
$ pecan wget config.py /path/to/some/resource
Let's say you have a distribution with a package in it named
myapp, and that within this package is a
wget.py module:
# myapp/myapp/wget.py
import pecan
from webtest import TestApp
class GetCommand(pecan.commands.BaseCommand):
'''
Issues a (simulated) HTTP GET and returns the request body.
'''
arguments = pecan.commands.BaseCommand.arguments + ({
'name': 'path',
'help': 'the URI path of the resource to request'
},)
def run(self, args):
super(GetCommand, self).run(args)
app = TestApp(self.load_app())
print app.get(args.path).body
Let's analyze this piece-by-piece.
Overriding the run
Method
First, we're subclassing ~pecan.commands.base.BaseCommand and extending the
~pecan.commands.base.BaseCommandParent.run method
to:
- Load a Pecan application -
~pecan.core.load_app - Wrap it in a fake WGSI environment -
~webtest.app.TestApp - Issue an HTTP GET request against it -
~webtest.app.TestApp.get
Defining Custom Arguments
The arguments class
attribute is used to define command line arguments specific to your
custom command. You'll notice in this example that we're adding
to the arguments list provided by ~pecan.commands.base.BaseCommand (which already
provides an argument for the config_file), rather than
overriding it entirely.
The format of the arguments class attribute is a tuple of dictionaries, with
each dictionary representing an argument definition in the same format
accepted by Python's :pyargparse module (more specifically, ~argparse.ArgumentParser.add_argument). By providing
a list of arguments in this format, the pecan command can include your custom commands in
the help and usage output it provides.
$ pecan -h
usage: pecan [-h] command ...
positional arguments:
command
wget Issues a (simulated) HTTP GET and returns the request body
serve Open an interactive shell with the Pecan app loaded
...
$ pecan wget -h
usage: pecan wget [-h] config_file path
$ pecan wget config.py /path/to/some/resource
Additionally, you'll notice that the first line of the docstring from
GetCommand --
Issues a (simulated) HTTP GET and returns the request body
-- is automatically used to describe the wget command in the output for
$ pecan -h. Following this convention allows you to easily
integrate a summary for your command into the Pecan command line
tool.
Registering a Custom Command
Now that you've written your custom command, you’ll need to tell your
distribution’s setup.py about its existence and reinstall.
Within your distribution’s setup.py file, you'll find a
call to ~setuptools.setup.
# myapp/setup.py
...
setup(
name='myapp',
version='0.1',
author='Joe Somebody',
...
)
Assuming it doesn't exist already, we'll add the
entry_points argument to the ~setuptools.setup call, and define a
[pecan.command] definition for your custom command:
# myapp/setup.py
...
setup(
name='myapp',
version='0.1',
author='Joe Somebody',
...
entry_points="""
[pecan.command]
wget = myapp.wget:GetCommand
"""
)
Once you've done this, reinstall your project in development to register the new entry point.
$ python setup.py develop
Then give it a try.
$ pecan wget config.py /path/to/some/resource