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ZC Buildout recipe for defining Zope 3 applications

Project description

Recipes for creating Zope 3 instances with distinguishing features:

  • Don’t use a skeleton

  • Separates application and instance definition

  • Don’t support package-includes

  • Support offline instance.

Unfortunately, partial Windows support at this time. It used to work at some point, but it’s alpha, and not officially supported. Volunteers welcome!

Releases

1.0 (2023-03-01)

  • Add support for Python 3.9, 3.10, 3.11.

  • Drop support for Python 2.7, 3.5, 3.6.

  • Drop Windows support due to lack of maintainer interest.

0.20.0 (2021-04-16)

  • Add support for Python 3.8.

  • Fix using the debugger inside a script called by debugzope.py.

0.19.0 (2019-07-12)

  • Fix TypeError: <lambda>() takes no arguments (1 given) on Windows with zdaemon >= 3.0.0.

  • Support Python 3.5 through 3.7.

0.18.0 (2013/02/05)

  • For the offline recipe, check the effective UID instead of the actual UID.

  • Make the tests pass with modern buildouts, including buildout 2.

0.17.0 (2012/02/07)

  • Added “location” value as output of the zopeconf recipe to make it easier to use in place of zc.recipe.deployment:configuration.

0.16.0 (2012/01/15)

  • Added support for using Paste Deployment to specify a WSGI stack over a zope.app-based application.

0.15.0 (2011/12/12)

  • Added zopeconf recipe to produce decently-formatted zope.conf files, without constructing an instance.

0.14.1 (2011/12/08)

  • Fixed ReST on pypi page.

0.14.0 (2011/12/08)

  • Execute $PYTHONSTARTUP in the environment that the user will interact with in zc.zope3recipes.debugzope; this mirrors how $PYTHONSTARTUP is used with an interactive interpreter.

  • Added a recipe for offline instance.

  • Fixed tests to pass with zc.buildout >= v1.5

0.13.0 (2010/11/24)

  • Support inserting additional code into the runzope & debugzope scripts using initialization and debug-initialization.

0.12.0 (2010/11/22)

  • Provide control for generation of the logrotate configuration, include the ability to suppress it when not desired.

0.11.1 (2010/11/12)

  • Added an environment hook to enable logging for debugzope

0.11.0 (2009/10/01)

  • Added support and tests for relative paths buildout option.

  • Changed the dependency requirements to >=1.2.0 for zc.buildout and zc.recipe.egg because relative paths are added in these releases.

  • Added missing release date for the previous release (0.10.0).

0.10.0 (2009/09/16)

Removed support for creating a logrotate script for the access.log because it is not possible to reopen the log with ZDaemons reopen_transacript. Note however that is is possible to declare when and interval in a logfile section to rotate logfiles internally.

0.9.0 (2009/07/21)

Updated tests to work with latest package versions.

0.8.0 (2009/04/03)

Added the “newest=false” option in the SetUp to prevent upgrade during tests

Added support for creating logrotate scripts when using a deployment recipe.

0.7.0 (2008/02/01)

Use the deployment name option (as provided by zc.recipe.deployment 0.6.0 and later) if present when generating instance file names.

You can now specify an instance name option that overrides the part name for generated files.

0.6.1 (2007/12/17)

Fixed bug: The zope.conf site-definition option could not be overridden.

0.6.0 (2007/11/03)

Final release with Windows support.

0.6b1 (2007/08/21)

Windows support was added.

0.5.5 (2007/07/26)

Now debugzope takes the servers key of the application into account.

0.5.3 (2007/07/14)

Created another recipe called ‘application’ that installs Zope 3 solely from eggs. The ‘app’ recipe is just an extension that also supports Zope 3 from checkout or tarball.

0.5.2 (2007/06/21)

Use ZConfig’s schema-free configuration parsing gain support for %import.

0.5.1 (2007/05/22)

Support repeated keys in ZConfig sections.

0.5.0 (2007/03/21)

Support building Zope 3 application solely from eggs.

Detailed Documentation

The Zope 3 recipes allow one to define Zope applications and instances of those applications. A Zope application is a collection of software and software configuration, expressed as ZCML. A Zope instance invokes the application with a specific instance configuration. A single application may have many instances.

Building Zope 3 applications (from eggs)

The ‘application’ recipe can be used to define a Zope application. It is designed to work with with Zope solely from eggs. The app recipe causes a part to be created. The part will contain the scripts runzope and debugzope and the application’s site.zcml. Both of the scripts will require providing a -C option and the path to a zope.conf file when run. The debugzope script can be run with a script name and arguments, in which case it will run the script, rather than starting an interactive session.

The ‘application’ recipe accepts the following options:

site.zcml

The contents of site.zcml.

eggs

The names of one or more eggs, with their dependencies that should be included in the Python path of the generated scripts.

Lets define some (bogus) eggs that we can use in our application:

>>> mkdir('demo1')
>>> write('demo1', 'setup.py',
... '''
... from setuptools import setup
... setup(name = 'demo1')
... ''')
>>> mkdir('demo2')
>>> write('demo2', 'setup.py',
... '''
... from setuptools import setup
... setup(name = 'demo2', install_requires='demo1')
... ''')

We’ll create a buildout.cfg file that defines our application:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())

Now, Let’s run the buildout and see what we get:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

The runzope script runs the Web server:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.twisted.main.main())

Here, unlike the above example the location path is not included in sys.path. Similarly debugzope script is also changed:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.twisted.main))

The initialization setting can be used to provide a bit of additional code that will be included in the runzope and debugzope scripts just before the server’s main function is called:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
... eggs = demo2
... initialization =
...     print("Starting application server.")
... ''')

Now, Let’s run the buildout and see what we get:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

The runzope and debugzope scripts now include the additional code just before server is started:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
print("Starting application server.")
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.twisted.main.main())
>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
print("Starting application server.")
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.twisted.main))

If the additional initialization for debugzope needs to be different from that of runzope, the debug-initialization setting can be used. If set, that is used for debugzope instead of the value of initialization.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
... eggs = demo2
... initialization =
...     print("Starting application server.")
... debug-initialization =
...     print("Starting debugging interaction.")
... ''')

Now, Let’s run the buildout and see what we get:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
print("Starting debugging interaction.")
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.twisted.main))

The runzope script still uses the initialization setting:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
print("Starting application server.")
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.twisted.main.main())

Setting debug-initialization to an empty string suppresses the initialization setting for the debugzope script:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
... eggs = demo2
... initialization =
...     print("Starting application server.")
... debug-initialization =
... ''')

Now, Let’s run the buildout and see what we get:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.twisted.main))

Relative paths

If requested in a buildout configuration, the scripts will be generated with relative paths instead of absolute.

Let’s change a buildout configuration to include relative-paths.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
... relative-paths = true
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

We get runzope script with relative paths.

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import os
<BLANKLINE>
join = os.path.join
base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(os.path.realpath(__file__)))
base = os.path.dirname(base)
base = os.path.dirname(base)
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  join(base, 'demo2'),
  join(base, 'demo1'),
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.twisted.main.main())

Similarly, debugzope script has relative paths.

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import os
<BLANKLINE>
join = os.path.join
base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(os.path.realpath(__file__)))
base = os.path.dirname(base)
base = os.path.dirname(base)
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  join(base, 'demo2'),
  join(base, 'demo1'),
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.twisted.main))

Building Zope 3 Applications (from Zope 3 checkouts/tarballs)

The ‘app’ recipe works much like the ‘application’ recipe. It takes the same configuration options plus the following one:

zope3

The name of a section defining a location option that gives the location of a Zope installation. This can be either a checkout or a distribution. If the location has a lib/python subdirectory, it is treated as a distribution, otherwise, it must have a src subdirectory and will be treated as a checkout. This option defaults to “zope3”. And if location is empty, the application will run solely from eggs.

Let’s look at an example. We’ll make a faux zope installation:

>>> zope3 = tmpdir('zope3')
>>> mkdir(zope3, 'src')

Now we’ll create a buildout.cfg file that defines our application:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())

Note that our site.zcml file is very small. It expect the application zcml to define almost everything. In fact, a site.zcml file will often include just a single include directive. We don’t need to include the surrounding configure element, unless we want a namespace other than the zope namespace. A configure directive will be included for us.

Let’s run the buildout and see what we get:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

A directory is created in the parts directory for our application files. Starting with zc.buildout >= v1.5, and distribute, a “buildout” directory is created in the parts folder. Since the minimum version we support for zc.buildout is lower than v1.5, we use a custom “ls” functional called “ls_optional” to which we pass a list of folders that may be present. These are ignore by the function.

>>> from zc.zope3recipes.tests import ls_optional
>>> ls_optional('parts', ignore=('buildout',))
d  myapp
>>> ls('parts', 'myapp')
-  debugzope
-  runzope
-  site.zcml

We get 3 files, two scripts and a site.zcml file. The site.zcml file is just what we had in the buildout configuration:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'site.zcml')
<configure xmlns='http://namespaces.zope.org/zope'
           xmlns:meta="http://namespaces.zope.org/meta"
           >
<include package="demo2" />
<principal
id="zope.manager"
title="Manager"
login="jim"
password_manager="SHA1"
password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
/>
<grant
role="zope.Manager"
principal="zope.manager"
/>
</configure>

Unfortunately, the leading whitespace is stripped from the configuration file lines. This is a consequence of the way ConfigParser works.

The runzope script runs the Web server:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/zope3/src',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.twisted.main.main())

It includes in it’s path the eggs we specified in the configuration file, along with their dependencies. Note that we haven’t specified a configuration file. When runzope is run, a -C option must be used to provide a configuration file. -X options can also be provided to override configuration file options.

The debugzope script provides access to the object system. When debugzope is run, a -C option must be used to provide a configuration file. -X options can also be provided to override configuration file options. If run without any additional arguments, then an interactive interpreter will be started with databases specified in the configuration file opened and with the variable root set to the application root object. The debugger variable is set to a Zope 3 debugger. If additional arguments are provided, then the first argument should be a script name and the remaining arguments are script arguments. The script will be run with the root and debugger variables available as global variables.

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/zope3/src',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.twisted.main))

Note that the runzope shown above uses the default, twisted-based server components. It’s possible to specify which set of server components is used: the “servers” setting can be set to either “zserver” or “twisted”. For the application, this affects the runzope script; we’ll see additional differences when we create instances of the application.

Let’s continue to use the twisted servers, but make the selection explicit:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... servers = twisted
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Updating myapp.

Note that this is recognized as not being a change to the configuration; the messages say that myapp was updated, not uninstalled and then re-installed.

The runzope script generated is identical to what we saw before:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/zope3/src',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.twisted.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.twisted.main.main())

We can also specify the ZServer servers explicitly:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... servers = zserver
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

The part has been re-installed, and the runzope script generated is different now. Note that the main() function is imported from a different package this time:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/zope3/src',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.server.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.server.main.main())

The debugzope script has also been modified to take this into account.

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/sample-buildout/demo2',
  '/sample-buildout/demo1',
  '/zope3/src',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.server.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.server.main))

Relative paths

We can also request relative paths.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
... relative-paths = true
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... servers = zserver
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

The runzope script has relative paths.

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'runzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import os
<BLANKLINE>
join = os.path.join
base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(os.path.realpath(__file__)))
base = os.path.dirname(base)
base = os.path.dirname(base)
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  join(base, 'demo2'),
  join(base, 'demo1'),
  '/zope3/src',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.server.main
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zope.app.server.main.main())

The debugzope script also has relative paths.

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'debugzope')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import os
<BLANKLINE>
join = os.path.join
base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(os.path.realpath(__file__)))
base = os.path.dirname(base)
base = os.path.dirname(base)
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  join(base, 'demo2'),
  join(base, 'demo1'),
  '/zope3/src',
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zope.app.server.main
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.debugzope.debug(main_module=zope.app.server.main))

Legacy Functional Testing Support

Zope 3’s functional testing support is based on zope.testing test layers. There is a default functional test layer that older functional tests use. This layer loads the default configuration for the Zope application server. It exists to provide support for older functional tests that were written before layers were added to the testing infrastructure. The default testing layer has a number of disadvantages:

  • It loads configurations for a large number of packages. This has the potential to introduce testing dependency on all of these packages.

  • It required a ftesting.zcml file and makes assumptions about where that file is. In particular, it assumes a location relative to the current working directory when the test is run.

Newer software and maintained software should use their own functional testing layers that use test-configuration files defined in packages.

To support older packages that use the default layer, a ftesting.zcml option is provided. If it is used, then the contents of the option are written to a ftesting.zcml file in the application. In addition, an ftesting-base.zcml file is written that includes configuration traditionally found in a Zope 3 ftesting-base.zcml excluding reference to package-includes.

If we modify our buildout to include an ftesting.zcml option:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = myapp
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... ftesting.zcml =
...    <meta:provides feature="devmode" />
...    <include file="ftesting-base.zcml" />
...    <includeOverrides package="demo2" />
... eggs = demo2
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.

We’ll get ftesting.zcml files and ftesting-base.zcml files created in the application:

>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'ftesting.zcml')
<configure xmlns='http://namespaces.zope.org/zope'
           xmlns:meta="http://namespaces.zope.org/meta"
           >
<BLANKLINE>
<meta:provides feature="devmode" />
<include file="ftesting-base.zcml" />
<includeOverrides package="demo2" />
</configure>
>>> cat('parts', 'myapp', 'ftesting-base.zcml')
<BLANKLINE>
<configure
   xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
   i18n_domain="zope"
   >
  <include package="zope.app" />
  <include package="zope.app" file="ftesting.zcml" />
  <include package="zope.app.securitypolicy" file="meta.zcml" />
  <include package="zope.app.securitypolicy" />
  <securityPolicy
    component="zope.app.securitypolicy.zopepolicy.ZopeSecurityPolicy" />
  <role id="zope.Anonymous" title="Everybody"
                 description="All users have this role implicitly" />
  <role id="zope.Manager" title="Site Manager" />
  <role id="zope.Member" title="Site Member" />
  <grant permission="zope.View"
                  role="zope.Anonymous" />
  <grant permission="zope.app.dublincore.view"
                  role="zope.Anonymous" />
  <grantAll role="zope.Manager" />
  <include package="zope.app.securitypolicy.tests"
           file="functional.zcml" />
  <unauthenticatedPrincipal
      id="zope.anybody"
      title="Unauthenticated User"
      />
  <unauthenticatedGroup
    id="zope.Anybody"
    title="Unauthenticated Users"
    />
  <authenticatedGroup
    id="zope.Authenticated"
    title="Authenticated Users"
    />
  <everybodyGroup
    id="zope.Everybody"
    title="All Users"
    />
  <principal
      id="zope.mgr"
      title="Manager"
      login="mgr"
      password="mgrpw" />
  <principal
      id="zope.globalmgr"
      title="Manager"
      login="globalmgr"
      password="globalmgrpw" />
  <grant role="zope.Manager" principal="zope.globalmgr" />
</configure>

Defining Zope3 instances

Having defined an application, we can define one or more instances of the application. We do this using the zc.zope3recipes instance recipe. The instance recipe has 2 modes, a development and a production mode. We’ll start with the development mode. In development mode, a part directory will be created for each instance containing the instance’s configuration files. This directory will also contain run-time files created by the instances, such as log files or zdaemon socket files.

When defining an instance, we need to specify a zope.conf file. The recipe can do most of the work for us. Let’s look at a a basic example:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())

The application option names an application part. The application part will be used to determine the location of the site.zcml file and the name of the control script to run.

We specified a zope.conf option which contains a start at our final zope.conf file. The recipe will add some bits we leave out. The one thing we really need to have is a database definition. We simply include the zconfig option from the database section, which we provide as a file storage part using the zc.recipe.filestorage recipe. The filestorage recipe will create a directory to hold our database and compute a zconfig option that we can use in our instance section.

Note that we’ve replaced the myapp part with the instance part. The myapp part will be included by virtue of the reference from the instance part.

Let’s run the buildout, and see what we get:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.

We see that the database and myapp parts were included by virtue of being referenced from the instance part.

We get new directories for our database and instance:

>>> ls_optional('parts', ignore=('buildout',))
d  database
d  instance
d  myapp

The instance directory contains zdaemon.conf and zope.conf files:

>>> ls('parts', 'instance')
-  zdaemon.conf
-  zope.conf

Let’s look at the zope.conf file that was generated:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8080
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

This uses the twisted server types, since that’s the default configuration for Zope 3. If we specify use of the ZServer servers, the names of the server types are adjusted appropriately:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... servers = zserver
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling myapp.
Updating database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.

The generated zope.conf file now uses the ZServer server components instead:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8080
  type WSGI-HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

The Twisted-based servers can also be specified explicitly:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... servers = twisted
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling myapp.
Updating database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.

The generated zope.conf file now uses the Twisted server components once more:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8080
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

It includes the database definition that we provided in the zope.conf option. It has a site-definition option that names the site.zcml file from our application directory.

We didn’t specify any server or logging ZConfig sections, so some were generated for us.

Note that, by default, the event-log output goes to standard output. We’ll say more about that when we talk about the zdaemon configuration later.

If we specify a server section ourselves:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
...    <server>
...        type PostmortemDebuggingHTTP
...        address 8080
...    </server>
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.

Then the section (or sections) we provide will be used and new ones won’t be added:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8080
  type PostmortemDebuggingHTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

If we just want to specify alternate ports or addresses, we can use the address option which accepts zero or more address specifications:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081 foo.com:8082
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.
>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8081
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address foo.com:8082
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

We can specify our own accesslog and eventlog configuration. For example, to send the event-log output to a file and suppress the access log:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
...    <eventlog>
...      <logfile>
...        path ${buildout:parts-directory}/instance/event.log
...        formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
...      </logfile>
...    </eventlog>
...    <accesslog>
...    </accesslog>
...
... address = 8081
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.
>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/event.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8081
  type HTTP
</server>

Let’s look at the zdaemon.conf file:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zdaemon.conf')
<runner>
  daemon on
  directory /sample-buildout/parts/instance
  program /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope -C /sample-buildout/parts/instance/zope.conf
  socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/zdaemon.sock
  transcript /sample-buildout/parts/instance/z3.log
</runner>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/z3.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

Here we see a fairly ordinary zdaemon.conf file. The program option refers to the runzope script in our application directory. The socket file, used for communication between the zdaemon command-line script and the zademon manager is placed in the instance directory.

If you want to override any part of the generated zdaemon output, simply provide a zdaemon.conf option in your instance section:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.
>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zdaemon.conf')
<runner>
  daemon off
  directory /sample-buildout/parts/instance
  program /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope -C /sample-buildout/parts/instance/zope.conf
  socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
  transcript /dev/null
</runner>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
</eventlog>

In addition to the configuration files, a control script is generated in the buildout bin directory:

>>> ls('bin')
-  buildout
-  instance
>>> cat('bin', 'instance')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.ctl
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.ctl.main([
        '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope',
        '/sample-buildout/parts/instance/zope.conf',
        '-C', '/sample-buildout/parts/instance/zdaemon.conf',
        ]+sys.argv[1:]
        ))

Some configuration sections can include a key multiple times; the ZEO client section works this way. When a key is given multiple times, all values are included in the resulting configuration in the order in which they’re give in the input:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...         server 127.0.0.1:8002
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... ''' % globals())

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <zeoclient>
    server 127.0.0.1:8001
    server 127.0.0.1:8002
  </zeoclient>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8081
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

Instance names

The instance recipe generates files or directories based on its name, which defaults to the part name. We can specify a different name using the name option. This doesn’t effect which parts directory is used, but it does affect the name of the run script in bin:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... name = server
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...         server 127.0.0.1:8002
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.

Specifying an alternate site definition

Ideally, ZCML is used to configure the software used by an application and zope.conf is used to provide instance-specific configuration. For historical reasons, there are ZCML directives that provide process configuration. A good example of this is the smtpMailer directive provided by the zope.sendmail package. We can override the site-definition option in the zope.conf file to specify an alternate zcml file. Here, we’ll update out instance configuration to use an alternate site definition:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...     site-definition ${buildout:directory}/site.zcml
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...         server 127.0.0.1:8002
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.
>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <zeoclient>
    server 127.0.0.1:8001
    server 127.0.0.1:8002
  </zeoclient>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8081
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/instance/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

(Note that, in practice, you’ll often use the zc.recipe.deployment:configuration recipe, http://pypi.python.org/pypi/zc.recipe.deployment#configuration-files, to define a site.zcml file using the buildout.)

Log files

The log file settings deserver some explanation. The Zope event log only captures output from logging calls. In particular, it doesn’t capture startup errors written to standard error. The zdaemon transcript log is very useful for capturing this output. Without it, error written to standard error are lost when running as a daemon. The default Zope 3 configuration in the past was to write the Zope access and event log output to both files and standard output and to define a transcript log. This had the effect that the transcript duplicated the contents of the event log and access logs, in addition to capturing other output. This was space inefficient.

This recipe’s approach is to combine the zope and zdaemon event-log information as well as Zope error output into a single log file. We do this by directing Zope’s event log to standard output, where it is useful when running Zope in foreground mode and where it can be captured by the zdaemon transcript log.

Unix Deployments

The instance recipe provides support for Unix deployments, as provided by the zc.recipe.deployment recipe. A deployment part defines a number of options used by the instance recipe:

etc-directory

The name of the directory where configuration files should be placed. This defaults to /etc/NAME, where NAME is the deployment name.

log-directory

The name of the directory where application instances should write their log files. This defaults to /var/log/NAME, where NAME is the deployment name.

run-directory

The name of the directory where application instances should put their run-time files such as pid files and inter-process communication socket files. This defaults to /var/run/NAME, where NAME is the deployment name.

rc-directory

The name of the directory where run-control scripts should be installed.

logrotate-directory

The name of the directory where logrotate configuration files should be installed.

user

The name of a user that processes should run as.

The deployment recipe has to be run as root for various reasons, but we can create a faux deployment by providing a section with the needed data. Let’s update our configuration to use a deployment. We’ll first create a faux installation root:

>>> root = tmpdir('root')
>>> mkdir(root, 'etc')
>>> mkdir(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run')
>>> mkdir(root, 'etc', 'init.d')
>>> mkdir(root, 'etc', 'logrotate.d')
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081
... deployment = myapp-deployment
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
...
... [myapp-deployment]
... name = myapp-run
... etc-directory = %(root)s/etc/myapp-run
... rc-directory = %(root)s/etc/init.d
... logrotate-directory = %(root)s/etc/logrotate.d
... log-directory = %(root)s/var/log/myapp-run
... run-directory = %(root)s/var/run/myapp-run
... user = zope
... ''' % globals())

Here we’ve added a deployment section, myapp-deployment, and added a deployment option to our instance part telling the instance recipe to use the deployment. If we rerun the buildout:

>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Installing database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance'.

The installer files will move. We’ll no-longer have the instance part:

>>> ls_optional('parts', ignore=('buildout',))
d  database
d  myapp

or the control script:

>>> ls('bin')
-  buildout

Rather, we’ll get our configuration files in the /etc/myapp-run directory:

>>> ls(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run')
-  instance-zdaemon.conf
-  instance-zope.conf

Note that the instance name was added as a prefix to the file names, since we’ll typically have additional instances in the deployment.

The control script is in the init.d directory:

>>> ls(root, 'etc', 'init.d')
-  myapp-run-instance

Note that the deployment name is added as a prefix of the control script name.

The logrotate file is in the logrotate.d directory:

>>> ls(root, 'etc', 'logrotate.d')
-  myapp-run-instance

The configuration files have changed to reflect the deployment locations:

>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run', 'instance-zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8081
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /root/var/log/myapp-run/instance-access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>
>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run', 'instance-zdaemon.conf')
<runner>
  daemon on
  directory /root/var/run/myapp-run
  program /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope -C /root/etc/myapp-run/instance-zope.conf
  socket-name /root/var/run/myapp-run/instance-zdaemon.sock
  transcript /root/var/log/myapp-run/instance-z3.log
  user zope
</runner>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path /root/var/log/myapp-run/instance-z3.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>
>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'logrotate.d', 'myapp-run-instance')
/root/var/log/myapp-run/instance-z3.log {
  rotate 5
  weekly
  postrotate
    /root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance reopen_transcript
  endscript
}

If we provide an alternate instance name, that will be reflected in the generated files:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... name = server
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081
... deployment = myapp-deployment
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
...
... [myapp-deployment]
... name = myapp-run
... etc-directory = %(root)s/etc/myapp-run
... rc-directory = %(root)s/etc/init.d
... logrotate-directory = %(root)s/etc/logrotate.d
... log-directory = %(root)s/var/log/myapp-run
... run-directory = %(root)s/var/run/myapp-run
... user = zope
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-server'.
>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run', 'server-zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8081
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /root/var/log/myapp-run/server-access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>
>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run', 'server-zdaemon.conf')
<runner>
  daemon on
  directory /root/var/run/myapp-run
  program /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope -C /root/etc/myapp-run/server-zope.conf
  socket-name /root/var/run/myapp-run/server-zdaemon.sock
  transcript /root/var/log/myapp-run/server-z3.log
  user zope
</runner>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path /root/var/log/myapp-run/server-z3.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

Controlling logrotate configuration

Some applications control their own log rotation policies. In these cases, we don’t want the logrotate configuration to be generated.

Setting the logrotate.conf setting affects the configuration. Setting it explicitly controls the content of the logrotate file for the instance; setting it to an empty string causes it not to be generated at all.

Let’s take a look at setting the content to a non-empty value directly:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081
... deployment = myapp-deployment
... logrotate.conf =
...       /root/var/log/myapp-run/instance-z3.log {
...         rotate 10
...         daily
...         postrotate
...           /root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance reopen_transcript
...         endscript
...       }
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
...
... [myapp-deployment]
... name = myapp-run
... etc-directory = %(root)s/etc/myapp-run
... rc-directory = %(root)s/etc/init.d
... logrotate-directory = %(root)s/etc/logrotate.d
... log-directory = %(root)s/var/log/myapp-run
... run-directory = %(root)s/var/run/myapp-run
... user = zope
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling myapp.
Updating database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance'.
>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'logrotate.d', 'myapp-run-instance')
/root/var/log/myapp-run/instance-z3.log {
  rotate 10
  daily
  postrotate
    /root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance reopen_transcript
  endscript
}

If we set logrotate.conf to an empty string, the file is not generated:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081
... deployment = myapp-deployment
... logrotate.conf =
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
...
... [myapp-deployment]
... name = myapp-run
... etc-directory = %(root)s/etc/myapp-run
... rc-directory = %(root)s/etc/init.d
... logrotate-directory = %(root)s/etc/logrotate.d
... log-directory = %(root)s/var/log/myapp-run
... run-directory = %(root)s/var/run/myapp-run
... user = zope
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Updating database.
Updating myapp.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance'.
>>> ls(root, 'etc', 'logrotate.d')

Defining multiple similar instances

Often you want to define multiple instances that differ only by one or two options (e.g. an address). The extends option lets you name a section from which default options should be loaded. Any options in the source section not defined in the extending section are added to the extending section.

Let’s update our buildout to add a new instance:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance instance2
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
... address = 8081
... deployment = myapp-deployment
...
... [instance2]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... extends = instance
... address = 8082
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
...
... [myapp-deployment]
... name = myapp-run
... etc-directory = %(root)s/etc/myapp-run
... rc-directory = %(root)s/etc/init.d
... logrotate-directory = %(root)s/etc/logrotate.d
... log-directory = %(root)s/var/log/myapp-run
... run-directory = %(root)s/var/run/myapp-run
... user = zope
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling myapp.
Updating database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance'.
Installing instance2.
Generated script '/root/etc/init.d/myapp-run-instance2'.

Now, we have the new instance configuration files:

>>> ls(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run')
-  instance-zdaemon.conf
-  instance-zope.conf
-  instance2-zdaemon.conf
-  instance2-zope.conf
>>> cat(root, 'etc', 'myapp-run', 'instance2-zope.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <filestorage>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/database/Data.fs
  </filestorage>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8082
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /root/var/log/myapp-run/instance2-access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

Relative paths

Relative paths will be used in the control script if they are requested in a buildout configuration.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
... relative-paths = true
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = ${database:zconfig}
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling instance2.
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling myapp.
Updating database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/instance'.

Both sys.path and arguments to the ctl are using relative paths now.

>>> cat('bin', 'instance')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import os
<BLANKLINE>
join = os.path.join
base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(os.path.realpath(__file__)))
base = os.path.dirname(base)
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
  '/site-packages',
  ]
<BLANKLINE>
import zc.zope3recipes.ctl
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zc.zope3recipes.ctl.main([
        join(base, 'parts/myapp/debugzope'),
        join(base, 'parts/instance/zope.conf'),
        '-C', join(base, 'parts/instance/zdaemon.conf'),
        ]+sys.argv[1:]
        ))

zope.conf recipe

The zope.conf recipe handles filling in the implied bits of a zope.conf file that the instance recipe performs, without creating the rest of an instance.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1
... parts = some.conf
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo1" />
... eggs = demo1
...
... [some.conf]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:zopeconf
... application = myapp
... text =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
...
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Uninstalling instance.
Uninstalling myapp.
Uninstalling database.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing some.conf.
>>> cat('parts', 'some.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <zeoclient>
    server 127.0.0.1:8001
  </zeoclient>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8080
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/some-access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

We can specify the location of the access log directly in the part:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1
... parts = some.conf
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo1" />
... eggs = demo1
...
... [some.conf]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:zopeconf
... application = myapp
... access-log = ${buildout:directory}/access.log
... text =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
...
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/tmp/tmp2eRRw1buildoutSetUp/_TEST_/sample-buildout/demo1'
Uninstalling some.conf.
Updating myapp.
Installing some.conf.
>>> cat('parts', 'some.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <zeoclient>
    server 127.0.0.1:8001
  </zeoclient>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 8080
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

The address of the server can be set using the “address” setting:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1
... parts = some.conf
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo1" />
... eggs = demo1
...
... [some.conf]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:zopeconf
... address = 4242
... application = myapp
... text =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
...
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/tmp/tmp2eRRw1buildoutSetUp/_TEST_/sample-buildout/demo1'
Uninstalling some.conf.
Updating myapp.
Installing some.conf.
>>> cat('parts', 'some.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
<BLANKLINE>
<zodb>
  <zeoclient>
    server 127.0.0.1:8001
  </zeoclient>
</zodb>
<BLANKLINE>
<server>
  address 4242
  type HTTP
</server>
<BLANKLINE>
<accesslog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/some-access.log
  </logfile>
</accesslog>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    formatter zope.exceptions.log.Formatter
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

The location of the file is made available as the “location” setting. This parallels the zc.recipe.deployment:configuration recipe, making this a possible replacement for that recipe where appropriate.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1
... parts = another.conf
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... site.zcml = <include package="demo1" />
... eggs = demo1
...
... [some.conf]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:zopeconf
... application = myapp
... text =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
...
... [another.conf]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:zopeconf
... application = myapp
... text =
...     ${some.conf:text}
...     <product-config reference>
...       config ${some.conf:location}
...     </product-config>
...
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/tmp/tmp2eRRw1buildoutSetUp/_TEST_/sample-buildout/demo1'
Uninstalling some.conf.
Updating myapp.
Installing some.conf.
Installing another.conf.
>>> cat('parts', 'another.conf')
site-definition /sample-buildout/parts/myapp/site.zcml
...
<product-config reference>
  config /sample-buildout/parts/some.conf
</product-config>
...

Offline recipe

The offline recipe creates a script that in some ways is a syntactic sugar for “bin/instance debug” or “bin/instance run <script>”. With the offline script, all you do is “bin/offline” or “bin/offline </script>”. This script doesn’t create additional folders like the Instance recipe; it expects two options: “application” and “zope.conf” that must be sections for a Zope3 application and a configuration file (that supports a “location” option) to exist.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance offline
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... name = server
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...         server 127.0.0.1:8002
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... [offline.conf]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [offline]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:offline
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = offline.conf
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling another.conf.
Uninstalling some.conf.
Uninstalling myapp.
Installing myapp.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/runzope'.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'.
Installing instance.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.
Installing offline.
>>> cat('bin', 'offline')
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import os
import sys
import logging
<BLANKLINE>
argv = list(sys.argv)
env = {}
restart = False
<BLANKLINE>
if None:
    import pwd
    if pwd.getpwnam(None).pw_uid != os.geteuid():
        restart = True
        argv[:0] = ["sudo", "-u", None]
        # print("switching to user %s" % None)
    del pwd
<BLANKLINE>
for k in env:
    if os.environ.get(k) != env[k]:
        os.environ[k] = env[k]
        restart = True
    del k
<BLANKLINE>
if restart:
    # print("restarting")
    os.execvpe(argv[0], argv, dict(os.environ))
<BLANKLINE>
del argv
del env
del restart
<BLANKLINE>
sys.argv[1:1] = [
    "-C",
    '/zope3',
<BLANKLINE>
]
<BLANKLINE>
debugzope = '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'
globals()["__file__"] = debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
zeo_logger = logging.getLogger('ZEO.zrpc')
zeo_logger.addHandler(logging.StreamHandler())
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
# print("starting debugzope...")
with open(debugzope) as f:
    exec(f.read())

initialization option

The recipe also accepts an “initialization” option:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance offline
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... name = server
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...         server 127.0.0.1:8002
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... [offline.conf]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [offline]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:offline
... initialization =
...     os.environ['ZC_DEBUG_LOGGING'] = 'on'
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = offline.conf
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling offline.
Updating myapp.
Updating instance.
Installing offline.
>>> cat('bin', 'offline')
<BLANKLINE>
import os
import sys
import logging
<BLANKLINE>
argv = list(sys.argv)
env = {}
restart = False
<BLANKLINE>
if None:
    import pwd
    if pwd.getpwnam(None).pw_uid != os.geteuid():
        restart = True
        argv[:0] = ["sudo", "-u", None]
        # print("switching to user %s" % None)
    del pwd
<BLANKLINE>
for k in env:
    if os.environ.get(k) != env[k]:
        os.environ[k] = env[k]
        restart = True
    del k
<BLANKLINE>
if restart:
    # print("restarting")
    os.execvpe(argv[0], argv, dict(os.environ))
<BLANKLINE>
del argv
del env
del restart
<BLANKLINE>
sys.argv[1:1] = [
    "-C",
    '/zope3',
<BLANKLINE>
]
<BLANKLINE>
debugzope = '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'
globals()["__file__"] = debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
zeo_logger = logging.getLogger('ZEO.zrpc')
zeo_logger.addHandler(logging.StreamHandler())
<BLANKLINE>
os.environ['ZC_DEBUG_LOGGING'] = 'on'
<BLANKLINE>
# print("starting debugzope...")
with open(debugzope) as f:
    exec(f.read())

script option

as well as a “script” option.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance run-foo
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:app
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... name = server
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...     <zodb>
...       <zeoclient>
...         server 127.0.0.1:8001
...         server 127.0.0.1:8002
...       </zeoclient>
...     </zodb>
... address = 8081
... zdaemon.conf =
...     <runner>
...       daemon off
...       socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/instance/sock
...       transcript /dev/null
...     </runner>
...     <eventlog>
...     </eventlog>
...
... [offline.conf]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [run-foo]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:offline
... initialization =
...     os.environ['ZC_DEBUG_LOGGING'] = 'on'
... application = myapp
... zope.conf = offline.conf
... script = %(zope3)s/foo.py
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())
>>> print(system(join('bin', 'buildout')))
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo1'
Develop: '/sample-buildout/demo2'
Uninstalling offline.
Updating myapp.
Updating instance.
Installing run-foo.
>>> cat('bin', 'run-foo')
<BLANKLINE>
import os
import sys
import logging
<BLANKLINE>
argv = list(sys.argv)
env = {}
restart = False
<BLANKLINE>
if None:
    import pwd
    if pwd.getpwnam(None).pw_uid != os.geteuid():
        restart = True
        argv[:0] = ["sudo", "-u", None]
        # print("switching to user %s" % None)
    del pwd
<BLANKLINE>
for k in env:
    if os.environ.get(k) != env[k]:
        os.environ[k] = env[k]
        restart = True
    del k
<BLANKLINE>
if restart:
    # print("restarting")
    os.execvpe(argv[0], argv, dict(os.environ))
<BLANKLINE>
del argv
del env
del restart
<BLANKLINE>
sys.argv[1:1] = [
    "-C",
    '/zope3',
    '/zope3/foo.py'
]
<BLANKLINE>
debugzope = '/sample-buildout/parts/myapp/debugzope'
globals()["__file__"] = debugzope
<BLANKLINE>
zeo_logger = logging.getLogger('ZEO.zrpc')
zeo_logger.addHandler(logging.StreamHandler())
<BLANKLINE>
os.environ['ZC_DEBUG_LOGGING'] = 'on'
<BLANKLINE>
# print("starting debugzope...")
with open(debugzope) as f:
    exec(f.read())

Paste-deployment support

You can use paste-deployment to control WSGI servers and middleware. You indicate this by specifying paste in the servers option:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... servers = paste
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...    threads 1
...    ${database:zconfig}
...
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())

When we run the buildout, we’ll get a paste-based runzope script and paste-based instance start scripts.

We also get a paste.ini file in the instance directory, which defines the application and server and is used when running paste:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'paste.ini')
[app:main]
use = egg:zope.app.wsgi
config_file = /sample-buildout/parts/instance/zope.conf
filter-with = translogger
<BLANKLINE>
[filter:translogger]
use = egg:Paste#translogger
setup_console_handler = False
logger_name = accesslog
<BLANKLINE>
[server:main]
use = egg:zope.server
host =
port = 8080
threads = 1

Note that the threads setting made in zope.conf was moved to paste.ini

Note too that past:translogger was used to provide an access log.

If you don’t want to use zope.server, or if you want to control the server configuration yourself, you can provide a paste.init option:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... develop = demo1 demo2
... parts = instance
...
... [zope3]
... location = %(zope3)s
...
... [myapp]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:application
... servers = paste
... site.zcml = <include package="demo2" />
...             <principal
...                 id="zope.manager"
...                 title="Manager"
...                 login="jim"
...                 password_manager="SHA1"
...                 password="40bd001563085fc35165329ea1ff5c5ecbdbbeef"
...                 />
...             <grant
...                 role="zope.Manager"
...                 principal="zope.manager"
...                 />
... eggs = demo2
...
... [instance]
... recipe = zc.zope3recipes:instance
... application = myapp
... zope.conf =
...    threads 1
...    ${database:zconfig}
... paste.ini = test and not working :)
...
...
... [database]
... recipe = zc.recipe.filestorage
... ''' % globals())

In this example, we gave useless text in the paste.ini option and we got a nonsense paste.ini file:

>>> cat('parts', 'instance', 'paste.ini')
[app:main]
use = egg:zope.app.wsgi
config_file = /sample-buildout/parts/instance/zope.conf
<BLANKLINE>
test and not working :)

This illustrates that the recipe doesn’t care what you provide. It uses it with the application definition instead of supplying zope.server and paste.translogger definition.

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