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A familiar HTTP Service Framework for Python.

Project description

Responder

A familiar HTTP Service Framework for Python, powered by Starlette.

import responder

api = responder.API()

@api.route("/{greeting}")
async def greet_world(req, resp, *, greeting):
    resp.text = f"{greeting}, world!"

if __name__ == "__main__":
    api.run()
$ pip install responder

That's it. Supports Python 3.11+.

The Basics

  • resp.text sends back text. resp.html sends back HTML. resp.content sends back bytes.
  • resp.media sends back JSON (or YAML, with content negotiation).
  • resp.file("path.pdf") serves a file with automatic content-type detection.
  • File(...) uploads use streamed UploadFile objects; await file.save(path) writes them to disk.
  • req.headers is case-insensitive. req.params gives you query parameters.
  • Both sync and async views work — the async is optional.

Highlights

# Type-safe route parameters
@api.route("/users/{user_id:int}")
async def get_user(req, resp, *, user_id):
    resp.media = {"id": user_id}

# HTTP method filtering
@api.route("/items", methods=["POST"])
async def create_item(req, resp):
    data = await req.media()
    resp.media = {"created": data}

# Route-local hooks
def require_json(req, resp):
    if not req.is_json:
        resp.status_code = 415
        resp.media = {"error": "JSON required"}

@api.post("/events", before=require_json)
async def events(req, resp):
    resp.media = await req.media()

# Local dependencies
from responder import Depends

def current_user(req):
    return req.headers.get("X-User")

@api.get("/me")
def me(req, resp, *, user=Depends(current_user)):
    resp.media = {"user": user}

# Side-effect dependencies
@api.get("/ready", dependencies=[Depends(current_user)])
def ready(req, resp):
    resp.media = {"ready": True}

# Route-level auth with OpenAPI security
from responder.ext.auth import BearerAuth

auth = BearerAuth(tokens=["s3cret"])

@api.get("/private", auth=auth)
def private(req, resp, *, user):
    resp.media = {"user": user}

# App-level auth with public route opt-out
secured_api = responder.API(auth=auth)

@secured_api.get("/health", auth=None)
def health(req, resp):
    resp.media = {"ok": True}

# Optional auth accepts anonymous requests but still rejects bad credentials
optional_auth = auth.optional()

@api.get("/maybe", auth=optional_auth)
def maybe(req, resp, *, user):
    resp.media = {"user": user}

# Class-based views
@api.route("/things/{id}")
class ThingResource:
    def on_get(self, req, resp, *, id):
        resp.media = {"id": id}
    def on_post(self, req, resp, *, id):
        resp.text = "created"

# Before-request hooks (auth, rate limiting, etc.)
@api.route(before_request=True)
def check_auth(req, resp):
    if not req.headers.get("Authorization"):
        resp.status_code = 401
        resp.media = {"error": "unauthorized"}

# Custom error handling
@api.exception_handler(ValueError)
async def handle_error(req, resp, exc):
    resp.status_code = 400
    resp.media = {"error": str(exc)}

# Problem-details enrichment
def problem_handler(payload, request, exc):
    payload["type"] = f"https://example.com/problems/{payload['status']}"
    payload["instance"] = request.url.path

api = responder.API(problem_handler=problem_handler, request_id=True)

# Lifespan events
from contextlib import asynccontextmanager

@asynccontextmanager
async def lifespan(app):
    print("starting up")
    yield
    print("shutting down")

api = responder.API(lifespan=lifespan)

# GraphQL
import graphene
api.graphql("/graphql", schema=graphene.Schema(query=Query))

# WebSockets
@api.route("/ws", websocket=True)
async def websocket(ws):
    await ws.accept()
    while True:
        name = await ws.receive_text()
        await ws.send_text(f"Hello {name}!")

# Mount WSGI/ASGI apps
from flask import Flask
flask_app = Flask(__name__)
api.mount("/flask", flask_app)

# Background tasks
@api.route("/work")
def do_work(req, resp):
    @api.background.task
    def process():
        import time; time.sleep(10)
    process()
    resp.media = {"status": "processing"}

Built-in OpenAPI docs, cookie-based sessions, gzip compression, static file serving, Jinja2 templates, and a production uvicorn server. Install responder[server] to add Granian for production ASGI serving.

Route convertors: str, int, float, uuid, path.

Framework errors use RFC 9457-style application/problem+json responses by default; pass problem_details=False to keep the legacy error format. Pass problem_handler= to enrich those payloads; request IDs are included when request_id=True or structured logging is enabled. OpenAPI documents the shared ProblemDetails schema, and generated clients expose it as APIError.problem.

Documentation

https://responder.kennethreitz.org

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