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A pyramid plugin that describes a pyramid application URL hierarchy via inspection.

Project description

A pyramid plugin that describes a pyramid application URL hierarchy, either by responding to an HTTP request or on the command line, via application inspection and reflection. It has built-in support for plain-text hierachies, reStructuredText, HTML, PDF, JSON, YAML, WADL, and XML, however other custom formats can be added easily.

Exposing an application’s structure via HTTP is useful to dynamically generate an API description (via WADL, JSON, or YAML) or to create documentation directly from source code.

On the command-line it is useful to get visibility into an application’s URL structure and hierarchy so that it can be understood and maintained.

Project Info

TL;DR

Install:

$ pip install pyramid-describe

Command-line example:

$ pdescribe example.ini --format txt
/                       # The application root.
├── contact/            # Contact manager.
   ├── <POST>          # Creates a new 'contact' object.
   └── {CONTACTID}     # RESTful access to a specific contact.
       ├── <DELETE>    # Delete this contact.
       ├── <GET>       # Get this contact's details.
       └── <PUT>       # Update this contact's details.
├── login               # Authenticate against the server.
└── logout              # Remove authentication tokens.

Examples of the above application in all other formats with built-in support are available at: text (pure-ASCII), reStructuredText, HTML, PDF, JSON, YAML, WADL, and XML.

Installation

Install with the usual python mechanism, e.g. here with pip:

$ pip install pyramid-describe

Usage

There are three mechanisms to use pyramid-describe: via standard pyramid inclusion which will add routes to the current application, by explicitly embedding a pyramid_describe.DescribeController instance, or by directly calling the pyramid_describe.Describer object methods.

Pyramid Inclusion

Pyramid-describe can be added via standard pyramid inclusion, either in the INI file or directly in your main function. For example:

def main(global_config, **settings):
  # ...
  config.include('pyramid_describe')

When using pyramid inclusion, pyramid-describe expects to find configuration options in the application settings. See the Options section for a listed of all supported options, with a short example here:

[app:main]

describe.attach                        = /doc
describe.formats                       = html json pdf
describe.format.default.title          = My Application
describe.format.html.default.cssPath   = myapp:static/doc.css
describe.entries.filters               = myapp.describe.entry_docify

Note that multiple describers, each with different configurations, can be added via pyramid inclusion by using the describe.prefixes option.

DescribeController

Pyramid-describe can also be added to your application by embedding a DescribeController object. The DescribeController constructor takes the following parameters:

view:

An instance of pyramid.interfaces.IView, which is the view that should be inspected and reflected.

root:

The root path to the specified URL, so that host-relative URLs can be generated to the views found.

settings:

A dictionary of all the options to apply to this describer. Note that in this case, the options should not have any prefix.

Example:

from pyramid_describe import DescribeController

def main(global_config, **settings):
  # ...
  config.include('pyramid_controllers')

  settings = {
      'formats'                       : ['html', 'json', 'pdf'],
      'format.default.title'          : 'My Application',
      'format.html.default.cssPath'   : 'myapp:static/doc.css',
      'entries.filters'               : 'myapp.describe.entry_docify',
    }

  config.add_controller('MyAppDescriber', '/doc', DescribeController(settings))

Describer

Pyramid-describe can also be added to your application by directly calling the Describer’s functionality. This is an even lower-level approach than, but still quite similar to, embedding the DescribeController; the constructor takes the same settings parameter as the DescribeController, and then a call to the describe method actually generates the output. The describe method takes as parameters a context and a format, and returns a dictionary with the following attributes:

content_type:

The MIME content-type associated with the rendered output.

charset:

The character set that the output is encoded in.

content:

The actual rendering output.

Example:

from pyramid_describe import Describer

def my_describer(request):

  settings = {
      'formats'                       : ['html', 'json', 'pdf'],
      'format.default.title'          : 'My Application',
      'format.html.default.cssPath'   : 'myapp:static/doc.css',
      'entries.filters'               : 'myapp.describe.entry_docify',
    }

  describer = Describer(settings=settings)
  context   = dict(request=request)
  result    = describer.describe(context=context, format='pdf')

  request.response.content_type = result['content_type']
  request.response.charset      = result['charset']
  request.response.body         = result['content']

  return request.response

Options

The configuration of pyramid-describe is done by setting any of the following options. Note that if specified in the application settings (i.e. the INI file), then they must be prefixed with (by default) describe.. Otherwise, when passing a dictionary of settings to the constructors, the prefix is left off. The following options exist:

  • describe.prefixes : list(str), default: ‘describe’

    Defines the prefix or the list of prefixes that pyramid-describe settings will be searched for in the configuration. For each prefix, a separate DescribeController will be created and attached to the application router. The following example attaches two controllers at /desc-one and /desc-two:

    [app:main]
    describe.prefixes = describe-one describe-two
    describe-one.attach  = /desc-one
    # other `describe-one` options...
    describe-two.attach  = /desc-two
    # other `describe-two` options...
  • describe.class : resolve-spec, default: pyramid_describe.DescribeController

    Sets the global default Controller class that will be instantiated for each of the stanzas defined in describe.prefixes. Note that this option can be overriden on a per-stanza basis.

  • {PREFIX}.class : resolve-spec, default: describe.class

    Sets the Controller class that will be instantiated for this PREFIX stanza, overriding describe.class.

  • {PREFIX}.attach : str, default: /describe

    Specifies the path to attach the controller to the current application’s router. Note that this uses the add_controller directive, and ensures that pyramid-controllers has already been added via an explicit call to config.include(). This path will serve the default format: to request alternate formats, use “PATH/FILENAME.EXT” (where FILENAME is controlled by the {PREFIX}.filename configuration and EXT specifies the format) or use the “format=EXT” query-string. Examples using the default settings:

    http://localhost:8080/describe/application.txt
    http://localhost:8080/describe/application.json
    http://localhost:8080/describe?format=json
  • {PREFIX}.fullname : str, default: ‘application’

    Sets the filename (excluding the extension) that the output will be served at using the DescribeController. The extension provided by the request will determine which format to serve, and must be listed in the formats option. If the format is not listed, a 404 is returned. Typically, this is set to the application’s name and might also include the application version.

  • {PREFIX}.basename : str, default: null

    Similar to the fullname option, this option sets a filename base component that will either redirect to the current fullname or actually serve the content based on the base-redirect option. This allows there to be a persistent known location that can be used if the filename option is dynamic or changes with revisions.

  • {PREFIX}.index-redirect : { bool, int, str }, default: true

    Controls what happens when a request comes to the index location of the DescribeController, i.e. the value of the attach option. The following values are accepted:

    falsy

    Responds with the actual content using the default format.

    truthy

    Redirects with a 302 to the basename if set, otherwise to the fullname, using the default format’s extension.

    int

    Same as if truthy, but uses the specified response code (e.g. 301 instead of 302).

    str

    Responds with a redirect using the specified string as the Location header. By default, issues a 302 unless the string is prefixed with the code and a space, e.g. 301 /path/to/filename. If the location is not absolute, it will be evaluated relative to the current URL.

  • {PREFIX}.base-redirect : { bool, int, str }, default: true

    If basename is set, then this controls how the response is handled – see the index-redirect option for accepted values, with the adjustment that the default redirect location is the fullname.

  • {PREFIX}.inspect : str, default: /

    Specifies the top-level URL to start the application inspection at.

    TODO: this does not work.

    WARNING: this does not work.

    SERIOUSLY: this does not work, it only adds the specified path as a URL prefix… doh!

  • {PREFIX}.include : list(regex-spec), default: null

    The include option lists encapsulated regular expressions that an endpoint must match at least one of in order to be included in the output. This option can be used with the exclude option, in which case endpoints are first matched for inclusion, then matched for exclusion (i.e. the order is “allow,deny” in apache terminology).

    Encapsulated regular expressions are expressed in the syntax “/EXPR/FLAGS”, where the “/” can be replaced by any character otherwise not found in the rest of the expression. The flags can be any combination of the following characters:

    • i: Case-insensitive matching.

    • l: Use locale-dependent processing (for w, W, etc.).

    • m: Multi-line mode, i.e. “^” and “$” match individual lines.

    • s: The “.” matches newlines as well.

    • u: Use the unicode properties db (for w, W, etc.).

    • x: Allow verbose regular expressions.

    Example:

    describe.include = :^/api/:i :^/foo(/.*)?$:
    describe.exclude = :.*/private(/.*)?$:i
  • {PREFIX}.exclude : list(regex-spec), default: null

    The inverse of the include option – see include for details.

  • {PREFIX}.entries.filters : list(resolve-spec), default: null

    This option specifies a callable (or string in python dot syntax) or list of thereof that filter and modify the entries before they are rendered to the requested format. Each entry that is selected for inclusion for rendering is first passed through each filter and replaced by the return value from the call. This is done for each filter consecutively. If any filter returns None, the entry is removed from the selection list.

    These filters are intended to allow two primary features:

    • Access control: a filter can inspect the entry and the requesting user and determine if the entry should be made visible. If not, it should return None.

    • Custom documentation parsing: a filter can parse the entry’s doc attribute (which gets auto-populated with the entry’s python documentation string), and extract other information such as expected parameters, return values, and exceptions thrown. Typically, this is done with something like numpydoc.

    Filters are passed two parameters: an entry object (see pyramid_describe.entry.Entry for detailed attributes) and an options dictionary. The latter has many interesting attributes, including a reference to the current request.

    TODO: add documentation about entry and options.

    Note that there is a separate filters option that is used to filter the entire output document, which is format-specific. See the formatting options for details.

  • {PREFIX}.formats : list(str), default: [‘html’, ‘txt’, ‘pdf’, ‘rst’, ‘json’, ‘yaml’, ‘wadl’, ‘xml’]

    Specifies the list of formats that can be generated. The default list includes all supported built-in formats, but this can be extended by adding a format to this list and then specifying a template to render the format. For example:

    # declare support for HTML, JSON and SWF
    describe.formats = html json swf
    
    # HTML and JSON are built-in, but SWF needs a custom template
    describe.format.swf.renderer = mypackage:templates/describe-swf.mako

    Note that the “pdf” and “yaml” formats require that optional python package dependencies be installed (respectively pdfkit and PyYAML), and that pdfkit furthermore requires that the wkhtmltopdf program be available.

  • {PREFIX}.format.default : str, default: first format listed in {PREFIX}.formats

    Set the default format if not specified in the request.

  • {PREFIX}.format.{FORMAT}.renderer : asset-spec, default: ‘pyramid_describe:template/{FORMAT}.mako’

    Override the default renderer for the specified format using a pyramid-style asset specification. The default is to use the pyramid-describe template with the exception of the structured data formats (JSON, YAML, XML, and WADL), which do not use a template.

    Specifying a renderer pre-empts all other rendering fallback mechanisms.

    See Format Cascading for details on how the {FORMAT} string is evaluated.

  • {PREFIX}.format.request : { bool, list(str) }, default: false

    Specifies which options, if any, can be controlled by request parameters. The setting can either be a boolean (“true”, “false”, etc), or a list of options. If truthy, all options can be specified. If falsy, no options can be specified. Otherwise it is interpreted as a space-separated list of options that can be specified.

    Note that this setting can be overridden on a per-format basis by the format.{FORMAT}.request setting.

  • {PREFIX}.format.{FORMAT}.request : { bool, list(str) }, default: none

    The per-format version of format.request. Note that this completely overrides the format.request setting for the given format, it does not extend it.

    See Format Cascading for details on how the {FORMAT} string is evaluated.

  • {PREFIX}.format.default.{OPTION}

    Set a default rendering option for all formats. Note that this can be overridden by request parameters (see the format.request option). See the Format Options section for a list of all supported options.

  • {PREFIX}.format.override.{OPTION}

    Set a rendering option for all formats that overrides any request parameters. See the Format Options section for a list of all supported options.

  • {PREFIX}.format.{FORMAT}.default.{OPTION}

    Set a default rendering option for the specified format, which overrides any default value set for all formats. Note that this can be overridden by request parameters (see the format.request option). See the Format Options section for a list of all supported options.

    See Format Cascading for details on how the {FORMAT} string is evaluated.

  • {PREFIX}.format.{FORMAT}.override.{OPTION}

    Set a rendering option for the specified format that overrides any request parameters and any generic format override options. See the Format Options section for a list of all supported options.

    See Format Cascading for details on how the {FORMAT} string is evaluated.

Format Cascading

Some formats are rendered based on the output of other renderers. For example, PDF’s are generated from HTML, and HTML is in turn generated from reStructuredText. Because options may need to be different for the the various formats based on the ultimate output, there is the ability to specify “cascaded” formats by joining them with a “+” in the settings. The cascaded options can either be explicitly overriden or explicitly reverted to their system-wide default by setting them to the special value pyramid_describe:DEFAULT.

Therefore, options for format “rst” apply to the reStructuredText rendering, regardless of ultimate output. Options for format “rst+html” apply to reStructuredText rendering, but only if the next renderer is “html”. These can be chained to any depth, for example options for format “rst+html+pdf” apply to reStructuredText rendering, but only if the next renderer is “html” followed by “pdf”. Note that one cannot skip a renderer in a rendering pipeline, e.g. in the previous case, you cannot short-hand the format as “rst+pdf”.

For example, the following configuration will apply a different CSS to the HTML rendering based on whether the output is going to be HTML, PDF, or SWF:

# the following sets the `cssPath` option for *any* HTML rendering:
describe.format.html.default.cssPath = mypkg:style/rst2html.css

# this now overrides the `cssPath` option during rendering of the
# HTML, but only in the context of a PDF rendering:
describe.format.html+pdf.default.cssPath = mypkg:style/rst2pdf.css

# when generating SWFs, this tells the describer to revert to using
# the system default value of `cssPath`:
describe.format.html+swf.default.cssPath = pyramid_describe:DEFAULT

Format Options

  • showUnderscore : bool, default: false

  • showUndoc : bool, default: true

  • showLegend : bool, default: true

  • showBranches : bool, default: false

  • pruneIndex : bool, default: true

  • showRest : bool, default: true

  • showImpl : bool, default: false

  • showInfo : bool, default: true

  • showName : bool, default: true

  • showDecorated : bool, default: true

  • showExtra : bool, default: true

  • showMethods : bool, default: true

  • showIds : bool, default: true

  • showDynamic : bool, default: true

  • showGenerator : bool, default: true

  • showGenVersion : bool, default: true

  • showLocation : bool, default: true

  • ascii : bool, default: false

  • maxdepth : int, default: 1024

  • width : int, default: 79

  • maxDocColumn : int, default: null

  • minDocLength : int, default: 20

  • cssEmbed : bool, default: true

  • cssPath : { asset-spec, resolve-spec, list({ asset-spec, resolve-spec }) }, default: ‘pyramid_describe:template/rst2html.css’

  • rstMax : bool, default: false

  • rstPdfkit : bool, default: true

  • stubFormat : str, default: ‘{{{}}}’

  • dynamicFormat : str, default: ‘{}/?’

  • restFormat : str, default: ‘<{}>’

  • showOutline : bool, default: true

  • pageGrayscale : bool, default: false

  • pageSize : str, default: ‘A4’

  • pageOrientation : str, default: ‘Portrait’

  • pageMarginTop : str, default: ‘10mm’

  • pageMarginRight : str, default: ‘10mm’

  • pageMarginBottom : str, default: ‘10mm’

  • pageMarginLeft : str, default: ‘10mm’

  • restVerbs : list(str), default: pyramid_controllers.restcontroller.HTTP_METHODS

    Sets the list of known HTTP methods. This is used during inspection to determine whether a given exposed method on a RestController can be accessed via an HTTP method.

  • filters : list(resolve-spec), default: null

    Unlike the top-level entries.filters setting which filters individual entries as they get selected for rendering, the format-specific filters option is called on the entire data object before final rendering, and is very format-specific in what is made available.

    For the structured-data formats (JSON, YAML, XML, and WADL), the filters are provided the data object created by Describer.structure_render. Each filter is expected to return that object (enhanced in some way), or a new object to replace it.

    For HTML, the filters are provided the result of calling docutils.core.publish_parts during the transformation of rST to HTML. The following “parts” are then joined to form the downstream content, in order:

    • head_prefix

    • head

    • stylesheet

    • body_prefix

    • body_pre_docinfo

    • docinfo

    • body

    • body_suffix

    For PDF, rendering is accomplished from entries to rST to HTML to PDF. Therefore, the filtering occurs during the rST to HTML transformation.

    TODO: add documentation about data and options.

  • encoding : str, default: ‘UTF-8’

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