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Configures Flask applications in a canonical way. Also auto-configures Heroku. Aims to standardize configuration.

Project description

Supports: Python 2.7+ and Python 3.3+

Allows you to configure an application using pre-set methods.

from flask.ext.appconfig import AppConfig

def create_app(configfile=None):
    app = Flask('myapp')
    AppConfig(app, configfile)
    return app

The application returned by create_app will, in order:

  1. Load default settings from a module called myapp.default_config, if it exists. (method described in http://flask.pocoo.org/docs/config/#configuring-from-files )

  2. Load settings from a configuration file whose name is given in the environment variable MYAPP_CONFIG (see link from 1.).

  3. Load json or string values directly from environment variables that start with a prefix of MYAPP_, i.e. setting MYAPP_SQLALCHEMY_ECHO=true will cause the setting of SQLALCHEMY_ECHO to be True.

Any of these behaviors can be altered or disabled by passing the appropriate options to the constructor or init_app().

Heroku support

Flask-AppConfig supports configuring a number of services through HerokuConfig:

from flask.ext.appconfig import HerokuConfig

def create_app(configfile=None):
    app = Flask('myapp')
    HerokuConfig(app, configfile)
    return app

Works like the example above, but environment variables set by various Heroku addons will be parsed as json and converted to configuration variables accordingly. Forexample, when enabling Mailgun, the configuration of Flask-Mail will be automatically be set correctly.

Using “ENV-only”

If you only want to use the environment-parsing functions of Flask-AppConfig, the appropriate functions are exposed:

from flask_appconfig.heroku import from_heroku_envvars
from flask_appconfig.env import from_envvars

# from environment variables. note that you need to set the prefix, as
# no auto-detection can be done without an app object
from_envvars(app.config, prefix=app.name.upper() + '_')

# also possible: parse heroku configuration values
# any dict-like object will do as the first parameter
from_heroku_envvars(app.config)

Installation

Via PyPI:

$ pip install flask-appconfig

Requires Python 2.7.

flaskdev utility

If you want to get started quickly without thinking a lot about writing a run script, the flaskdev utility supports the create_app/factory pattern:

$ flaskdev myapp

This will import a module myapp, and call myapp.run(debug=True).

Other options can come in handy as well:

$ flaskdev -S -p 8000 myapp

Runs the app on port 8080, with SSL enabled.

Thoughts on Configuration

There is a lot of ways to configure a Flask application and often times, less-than-optimal ones are chosen in a hurry.

This extension aims to do three things:

  1. Set a “standard” of doing configuration that is flexible and in-line with the official docs and (what I consider) good practices.

  2. Make it as convenient as possible to provide these configuration methods in an application.

  3. Auto-configure on Heroku as much as possible without sacrificing 1. and 2.

12factor.net seems to capture a good amount of good thoughts on the issue and Flask-Appconfig should aid you in writing an application that follows the principles laid out there.

Providing defaults

Defaults should be included and overridable, without altering the file containing the defaults.

Separate code and configuration

It should be possible to install the app to a read-only (possibly system-wide) location, without having to store configuration files (or, even worse, configuration modules) inside its folders.

Environment variables and instance folders make this possible. As an added benefit, configuration does not need to be stored alongside the code in version control.

No code necessary for most deployments using the factory-method pattern

When deploying with gunicorn, passing myapp:create_app() suffices to create an app instance, no boilerplate code to create the WSGI app should be necessary.

Multiple instances

Running multiple apps inside the same interpreter should also be possible. While this is slightly more complicated and may occasionally violate the “no-code” guideline above, it’s still straightforward by using configuration file parameters.

Development

Flask-AppConfig is under “conceptional development”. The API or semantics may change in the future.

Send pull requests for more Heroku-apps to be supported. Send feedback via mail.

Changelog

Backwards-incompatible changes, as they were introduced:

0.4

  • Environment variables are no longer prefixed with FLASK_ by default, but rather use APPNAME_ (with APPNAME being the applications name in uppercase).

  • MYAPP_SETTINGS became MYAPP_CONFIG, default_settings became default_config.

Project details


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