Skip to main content

httpout allows you to execute your Python script from a web URL, the print() output goes to your browser.

Project description

httpout

Coverage Quality Gate Status

httpout allows you to execute your Python script from a web URL, the print() output goes to your browser.

This is the classic way to deploy your scripts to the web. You just need to put your regular .py files as well as other static files in the document root and each will be routable from the web. No server reload is required!

It provides a native experience for running your script from the web.

How does it work?

httpout will assign every route either like /hello.py or /index.py with the name __main__ and executes it as a module in a thread pool. Monkey patching is done at the module-level by hijacking the __import__.

In the submodules perspective, the __main__ object points to the main module such as /hello.py, rather than pointing to sys.modules['__main__'] or the web server itself.

httpout does not perform a cache mechanism like standard imports or with sys.modules to avoid conflicts with other modules / requests. Because each request must have its own namespace.

To keep it simple, only the main module is cached (as code object). The cache will be valid during HTTP Keep-Alive. So if you just change the script there is no need to reload the server process, just wait until the connection is lost.

Keep in mind this may not work for running complex python scripts, e.g. running other server processes or multithreaded applications as each route is not a real main thread.

httpout

Install

python3 -m pip install --upgrade httpout

Example

# hello.py
import time


print('<pre>Hello...')

time.sleep(1)
print('and')

time.sleep(2)
print('Bye!</pre>')

Put hello.py in the example/ folder, then run the httpout server with:

python3 -m httpout --port 8000 example/

and your hello.py can be accessed at http://localhost:8000/hello.py. If you don't want the .py suffix in the URL, you can instead create a hello/ folder with index.py inside.

Handling forms

This is an overview of how to view request methods and read form data.

# form.py
import sys

from httpout import request, response


method_str = __server__.REQUEST_METHOD
method_bytes = request.method


if method_str != 'POST':
    response.set_status(405, 'Method Not Allowed')
    print('Method Not Allowed')
    sys.exit()


form_data = wait(request.form())

print(method_str, method_bytes, form_data)

It can also be written this way:

# form.py
import sys

from httpout import request, response


method_str = __server__.REQUEST_METHOD
method_bytes = request.method


if method_str != 'POST':
    response.set_status(405, 'Method Not Allowed')
    print('Method Not Allowed')
    sys.exit()


async def main():
    form_data = await request.form()

    print(method_str, method_bytes, form_data)


run(main())

Then you can do:

curl -d foo=bar http://localhost:8000/form.py

Features

httpout is designed to be fun. It's not built for perfectionists. httpout has:

  • A hybrid async and sync, the two worlds can coexist in your script seamlessly; It's not yet time to drop your favorite synchronous library
  • More lightweight than running CGI scripts
  • Your print()s are sent immediately line by line without waiting for the script to finish like a typical CGI
  • No need for a templating engine, just do if-else and print() making your script portable for both CLI and web
  • And more

Builtin objects

No need to import anything to access these, except __main__ which can be imported to honor the semantics.

  • print()
  • run(), runs a coroutine without waiting, it returns a concurrent.futures.Future object
  • wait() , runs a coroutine and wait until done, it returns the result
  • __main__, a reference to your main route, available across your submodule imports
  • __server__, a dict object containing basic HTTP request information and etc.
  • __globals__, a worker/app-level context. to initialize objects at worker start, you can place them in __globals__.py

Security

It's important to note that httpout only focuses on request security; to ensure that path traversal through the URL never happens.

httpout will never validate the script you write, you can still access objects like os, eval(), open(), even traversal out of the document root. So this stage is your responsibility.

FYI, PHP used to have something called Safe Mode, but it was deemed architecturally incorrect, so they removed it.

The PHP safe mode is an attempt to solve the shared-server security problem. It is architecturally incorrect to try to solve this problem at the PHP level, but since the alternatives at the web server and OS levels aren't very realistic, many people, especially ISP's, use safe mode for now.

License

MIT License

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

httpout-0.0.19.tar.gz (13.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

httpout-0.0.19-py3-none-any.whl (12.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file httpout-0.0.19.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: httpout-0.0.19.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 13.3 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.7.9

File hashes

Hashes for httpout-0.0.19.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 734bc2ea94b827a1cd5ff0998ee30a38e22470e1e91f6036618c33147859cc9e
MD5 f01cb7aa1b1f831dfff81d05367c1b43
BLAKE2b-256 83995939b39d6d94425947f2e0211b6c94b2812821e51bbce0c453ce1f49e98e

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file httpout-0.0.19-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: httpout-0.0.19-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 12.6 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.7.9

File hashes

Hashes for httpout-0.0.19-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 03f96e898ecfd3bc03e7e28421f4336325907f2f9a105616cfee3ab0eb0f5f40
MD5 571c3a2433dff48287ebe34733f7170b
BLAKE2b-256 cd9771d1d28f806839d17987c231c402bf6de56b21dfb37d10317d2baa146f0d

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page