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Extremely Stupid Simple, Blazing Fast, Get Out of your way immediately Microframework for building Python Web Applications.

Project description

Routerling

A new born baby router on it's way to being a web development platform. Routerling is a router multiplexer built with 1 goal in mind.

  • Make it stupid simple to build high performance web applications

How?

Following the unix philosophy of be the master of one thing and one thing only - Routerling has only ONE API you need to learn - Router. The API is also deliberately made consistent across the 3 different supported languages [Golang, Python, Typescript/JavaScript]. See Similarities

 

Python

from routerling import Context, HttpRequest, ResponseWriter, Router
from logging import log

def get_customer_orders(r: HttpRequest, w: ReponseWriter, c: Context):
    w.headers = "go-go-gadget", ""
    w.body = '{customer: {customer_id}, orders: []}'.format(r.params.get('id'))

def change_headers(r: HttpRequest, w: ResponseWriter, c: Context):
    w.headers = "go-go-gadget", "i was included after..."

def create_customer(r: HttpRequest, w: ResponseWriter, c: Context):
    print(r.body)
    w.status = 201
    w.body = '{id: 13}'


# register functions to routes
router.BEFORE('/*', lambda req, res, state: print('will run before all routes are handled'))
router.AFTER('/v1/customers/*', change_headers)
router.GET('/v1/customers/:id/orders', get_customer_orders)
router.GET('/v1/customers/:id', lambda req, res, state: log(2, state.abcxyz_variable))
router.POST('/v1/customers', create_customer)

Serve your application

uvicorn app:router

 

Request Object

  • request.body

    Body/payload of request if it exists. You can use any XML, JSON, CSV etc. library you prefer to parse r.body as you like.

    # r.body: str
    body: str = r.body
    
  • request.headers header = r.headers.get('header-name')

    All headers sent with the request.

    # r.headers: dict
    header = r.headers.get('content-type')
    
  • request.params param = r.params.get('param-name')

    Dictionary containing parts of the url that matched your route parameters i.e. /customers/:id/orders will return {'id': 45} for url /customers/45/orders.

    identifier = r.params.get('id')
    

 

Response Object

  • response.abort

    Signals to routerling that you want to abort a request and ignore all GET, POST, PUT etc. handlers including all AFTER or BEFORE hooks from executing. The payload given to abort is used as the response body. Only calling w.abort() will not end function execution. You have to explicitly return from the request handler after using w.abort().

    w.abort('This is the body/payload i want to abort with')
    return
    
    # or
    
    return w.abort('This is the body/payload i want to abort with')  #abort registers then returns None
    
  • response.body

    Used to set payload/body to be sent back to the client. Returning data from a handler function does not do anything and is not used by routerling. To send something back to the client use w.body.

    w.body = b'my body'
    
  • response.headers

    Used to set headers to be sent back to the client.

    w.headers = "Content-Type", "application/json"
    w.headers = ["Authorization", "Bearer myToken"]
    

 

Context Object

  • context.keep

    Used to store values across different request handlers for any given request lifecylce i.e. from the time a client browser hits your server (request start) to the time a response is sent back to client (request end).

     

    Sample Use Case

    Imagine you want to use the amazing jsonschema library to validate json request payloads received on every POST, PATCH, or PUT request from your users. One way to achieve this is to decorate your request handlers and abort the request if the json payload does not match your schema validation constraints.

    The code snippet below shows a sample implementation for such a use case for reference.

    from http import HttpStatus as status
    from json import dumps, loads  # consider using ujson in production apps
    
    from jsonschema import validate, draft7_format_checker
    from jsonschema.exceptions import ValidationError
    
    def expects(schema):
        def proxy(func):
            @wraps(func)
            async def delegate(r: HttpRequest, w: ResponseWriter, c: Context):
                body = loads(r.body)
                try: validate(instance=body, schema=schema, format_checker=draft7_format_checker)
                except ValidationError as exc:
                    w.status = status.NOT_ACCEPTABLE
                    w.headers = 'content-type', 'application/json'
                    return w.abort(dumps({'message': exc.message}))
    
                # Here we call Context.keep('key', value) to store values across handlers for the request lifecycle
                # -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                for k,v in body.items(): c.keep(k, v)
                return await func(r, w, c)
            return delegate
        return proxy
    
    
    @expects({
        'type': 'object',
        'properties': {
            'username': {'type': 'string'}
            'password': {'type': 'string', 'minLength': 8}
        }
    })
    async def handler(r: HttpRequest, w: ResponseWriter, c: Context):
        print(c.username, " you can do this because the @expects :func: calls c.keep('username', value)")
        print(c.password, " ^^^ same for this")
        w.body = dumps({'username': username, 'password': password})
    
  • context._application

    Retrieves the root Routerling app instance (root router instance), after all you are an adult when it comes to coding ;-)

    Newly introduced in routerling version 0.2.3

 

 

Socket Connections

Implementation & Documentation coming soon

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