A simple Python library for creating web servers and APIs using sockets, supporting openapi and swagger.
Project description
socketwrench
A webserver based on socket.socket
with no dependencies other than the standard library.
Provides a lightweight quickstart to make an API which supports OpenAPI, Swagger, and more.
Quickstart
Install
pip install socketwrench
Serve a class
from socketwrench import serve
class MyServer:
def hello(self):
return "world"
if __name__ == '__main__':
serve(MyServer)
# OR
# m = MyServer()
# serve(m)
# OR
# serve("my_module.MyServer")
- Go to http://localhost:8080/hello and see the response "world".
- Now go to http://localhost:8080/swagger to see the Swagger UI.
- OR go to http://localhost:8080/api to see a custom api playground.
Features
OpenAPI & Swagger
- Go to http://localhost:8080/swagger (after running
serve
) to see the Swagger UI. - Go to http://localhost:8080/openapi.json (after running
serve
) to see the autogenerated OpenAPI spec which Swagger uses.
Autofilled Parameters
Any of the following parameter names or typehints will get autofilled with the corresponding request data:
available_types = {
"request": Request, # full request object, contains all the other components
"query": Query, # query string
"body": Body, # request body bytes
"headers": Headers, # request headers dict[str, str]
"route": Route, # route string (without query string)
"full_path": FullPath, # full path string (with query string)
"method": Method, # request method str (GET, POST, etc.)
"file": File, # file bytes (essentially the same as body)
"client_addr": ClientAddr, # client ip address string (also contains host and port attributes)
}
Decorators
from socketwrench import route, methods, get, post, put, patch, delete, private
These decorators do not modify the functions they decorate, they simply tag
the function by adding attributes to the functions.
func.__dict__[key] = value
. This allows the setting function-specific preferences such as which methods to allow.
@tag
simply modifies the function's __dict__
to add the specified attributes.
@tag(do_not_serve=False, methods=["GET", "POST"], error_mode="traceback")
def my_function():
pass
The following decorators set the available_methods
attribute of the function to the specified methods and tells the server to override its default behavior for the function.
@methods("GET", "POST", "DELETE")
: equivalent to@tag(available_methods=["GET", "POST", "DELETE"])
@get
,@post
,@put
,@patch
,@delete
,@private
: self-explanatory
Route Decorator
@route("/a/{c}")
tells the server to use /a/{c} as the route for the function instead of using the function's name as it normally does. This also allows for capturing path parameters.
@get
@post
@route("/a/{c}", error_mode="traceback")
def a(self, b, c=5):
print(f"calling a with {b=}, {c=}")
return f"captured {b=}, {c=}"
Error Modes
"hide"
orErrorModes.HIDE
: returnsb"Internal Server Error"
in the response body when an error occurs.type
orErrorModes.TYPE
: returns the error type only in the response body when an error occurs."short"
orErrorModes.SHORT
: returns the python error message but no traceback in the response body when an error occurs."traceback"
orErrorModes.TRACEBACK
orErrorModes.LONG
orErrorModes.TB
: returns the full traceback in the response body when an error occurs.
favicon.ico
No need to use our favicon! pass a str | Path
.ico
filepath to favicon
argument to use your own favicon. Alternatively, tag @route('/favicon.ico')
on a function returning the path.
fallback handler
Add a custom function to handle any requests that don't match any other routes.
Planned Features
- Implement nesting / recursion to serve deeper routes and/or multiple classes
- Enforce OpenAPI spec with better error responses
- Serve static folders
- Make a better playground for testing endpoints
- Make a client-side python proxy object to make API requests from python
- Test on ESP32 and other microcontrollers
- Ideas? Let me know!
Other Usage Modes
Serve a module
Using commandline, just specify a filepath or file import path to a module.
# my_module.py
def hello():
return "world"
python -m socketwrench my_module
NOTE: this mode is experimental and less tested than the other modes.
Serve a single function on all routes
from socketwrench import serve
def print_request(request):
s = "<h>You made the following request:</h><br/>"
s += f"<b>Method:</b> {request.method}<br/>"
s += f"<b>Route:</b> {request.path.route()}<br/>"
s += f"<b>Headers:</b><br/> {str(request.headers).replace('\n', '<br>')}<br/>"
s += f"<b>Query:</b> {request.path.query_args()}<br/>"
s += f"<b>Body:</b> {request.body}<br/>"
return s
if __name__ == '__main__':
serve(print_request)
(mostly) Full Feature Sample
import logging
from pathlib import Path
from socketwrench.tags import private, post, put, patch, delete, route, methods
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
class Sample:
def hello(self):
"""A simple hello world function."""
return "world"
@methods("GET", "POST") # do to the label, this will be accessible by both GET and POST requests
def hello2(self, method):
"""A simple hello world function."""
return "world"
def _unserved(self):
"""This function will not be served."""
return "this will not be served"
@private
def unserved(self):
"""This function will not be served."""
return "this will not be served"
@post
def post(self, name):
"""This function will only be served by POST requests."""
return f"hello {name}"
@put
def put(self, name):
"""This function will only be served by PUT requests."""
return f"hello {name}"
@patch
def patch(self, name):
"""This function will only be served by PATCH requests."""
return f"hello {name}"
@delete
def delete(self, name):
"""This function will only be served by DELETE requests."""
return f"hello {name}"
def echo(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Echos back any query or body parameters."""
if not args and not kwargs:
return
if args:
if len(args) == 1:
return args[0]
return args
elif kwargs:
return kwargs
return args, kwargs
def string(self) -> str:
"""Returns a string response."""
return "this is a string"
def html(self) -> str:
"""Returns an HTML response."""
return "<h1>hello world</h1><br><p>this is a paragraph</p>"
def json(self) -> dict:
"""Returns a JSON response."""
return {"x": 6, "y": 7}
def file(self) -> Path:
"""Returns sample.py as a file response."""
return Path(__file__)
def add(self, x: int, y: int):
"""Adds two numbers together."""
return x + y
def client_addr(self, client_addr):
"""Returns the client address."""
return client_addr
def headers(self, headers) -> dict:
"""Returns the request headers."""
return headers
def query(self, query, *args, **kwargs) -> str:
"""Returns the query string."""
return query
def body(self, body) -> bytes:
"""Returns the request body."""
return body
def method(self, method) -> str:
"""Returns the method."""
return method
def get_route(self, route) -> str:
"""Returns the route."""
return route
def request(self, request) -> dict:
"""Returns the request object."""
return request
def everything(self, request, client_addr, headers, query, body, method, route, full_path):
d = {
"request": request,
"client_addr": client_addr,
"headers": headers,
"query": query,
"body": body,
"method": method,
"route": route,
"full_path": full_path,
}
for k, v in d.items():
print(k, v)
return d
@route("/a/{c}", error_mode="traceback")
def a(self, b, c=5):
print(f"calling a with {b=}, {c=}")
return f"captured {b=}, {c=}"
if __name__ == '__main__':
from socketwrench import serve
s = Sample()
serve(s)
# OR
# serve(Sample)
# OR
# serve("socketwrench.samples.sample.Sample")
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