04: Easier Development with debugtoolbar

Error-handling and introspection using the pyramid_debugtoolbar add-on.

Background

As we introduce the basics we also want to show how to be productive in development and debugging. For example, we just discussed template reloading and earlier we showed --reload for application reloading.

pyramid_debugtoolbar is a popular Pyramid add-on which makes several tools available in your browser. Adding it to your project illustrates several points about configuration.

Objectives

  • Install and enable the toolbar to help during development
  • Explain Pyramid add-ons
  • Show how an add-on gets configured into your application

Steps

  1. First we copy the results of the previous step, as well as install the pyramid_debugtoolbar package:

    $ cd ..; cp -r ini debugtoolbar; cd debugtoolbar
    $ $VENV/bin/python setup.py develop
    $ $VENV/bin/easy_install pyramid_debugtoolbar
    
  2. Our debugtoolbar/development.ini gets a configuration entry for pyramid.includes:

    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    [app:main]
    use = egg:tutorial
    pyramid.includes =
        pyramid_debugtoolbar
    
    [server:main]
    use = egg:pyramid#wsgiref
    host = 0.0.0.0
    port = 6543
    
  3. Run the WSGI application with:

    $ $VENV/bin/pserve development.ini --reload
    
  4. Open http://localhost:6543/ in your browser. See the handy toolbar on the right.

Analysis

pyramid_debugtoolbar is a full-fledged Python package, available on PyPI just like thousands of other Python packages. Thus we start by installing the pyramid_debugtoolbar package into our virtual environment using normal Python package installation commands.

The pyramid_debugtoolbar Python package is also a Pyramid add-on, which means we need to include its add-on configuration into our web application. We could do this with imperative configuration in tutorial/__init__.py by using config.include. Pyramid also supports wiring in add-on configuration via our development.ini using pyramid.includes. We use this to load the configuration for the debugtoolbar.

You'll now see an attractive button on the right side of your browser, which you may click to provide introspective access to debugging information in a new browser tab. Even better, if your web application generates an error, you will see a nice traceback on the screen. When you want to disable this toolbar, there's no need to change code: you can remove it from pyramid.includes in the relevant .ini configuration file (thus showing why configuration files are handy.)

Note that the toolbar injects a small amount of HTML/CSS into your app just before the closing </body> tag in order to display itself. If you start to experience otherwise inexplicable client-side weirdness, you can shut it off by commenting out the pyramid_debugtoolbar line in pyramid.includes temporarily.

See also

See also pyramid_debugtoolbar.

Extra Credit

  1. Why don't we add pyramid_debugtoolbar to the list of install_requires dependencies in debugtoolbar/setup.py?

  2. Introduce a bug into your application: Change:

    def hello_world(request):
        return Response('<body><h1>Hello World!</h1></body>')
    

    to:

    def hello_world(request):
        return xResponse('<body><h1>Hello World!</h1></body>')
    

    Save, and visit http://localhost:6543/ again. Notice the nice traceback display. On the lowest line, click the "screen" icon to the right, and try typing the variable names request and Response. What else can you discover?