10: Handling Web Requests and Responses

Web applications handle incoming requests and return outgoing responses. Pyramid makes working with requests and responses convenient and reliable.

Objectives

  • Learn the background on Pyramid's choices for requests and responses.

  • Grab data out of the request.

  • Change information in the response headers.

Background

Developing for the web means processing web requests. As this is a critical part of a web application, web developers need a robust, mature set of software for web requests and returning web responses.

Pyramid has always fit nicely into the existing world of Python web development (virtual environments, packaging, cookiecutters, first to embrace Python 3, and so on). Pyramid turned to the well-regarded WebOb Python library for request and response handling. In our example above, Pyramid hands hello_world a request that is based on WebOb.

Steps

  1. First we copy the results of the view_classes step:

    cd ..; cp -r view_classes request_response; cd request_response
    $VENV/bin/pip install -e .
    
  2. Simplify the routes in request_response/tutorial/__init__.py:

    1from pyramid.config import Configurator
    2
    3
    4def main(global_config, **settings):
    5    config = Configurator(settings=settings)
    6    config.add_route('home', '/')
    7    config.add_route('plain', '/plain')
    8    config.scan('.views')
    9    return config.make_wsgi_app()
    
  3. We only need one view in request_response/tutorial/views.py:

     1from pyramid.httpexceptions import HTTPFound
     2from pyramid.response import Response
     3from pyramid.view import view_config
     4
     5
     6class TutorialViews:
     7    def __init__(self, request):
     8        self.request = request
     9
    10    @view_config(route_name='home')
    11    def home(self):
    12        return HTTPFound(location='/plain')
    13
    14    @view_config(route_name='plain')
    15    def plain(self):
    16        name = self.request.params.get('name', 'No Name Provided')
    17
    18        body = 'URL %s with name: %s' % (self.request.url, name)
    19        return Response(
    20            content_type='text/plain',
    21            body=body
    22        )
    
  4. Update the tests in request_response/tutorial/tests.py:

     1import unittest
     2
     3from pyramid import testing
     4
     5
     6class TutorialViewTests(unittest.TestCase):
     7    def setUp(self):
     8        self.config = testing.setUp()
     9
    10    def tearDown(self):
    11        testing.tearDown()
    12
    13    def test_home(self):
    14        from .views import TutorialViews
    15
    16        request = testing.DummyRequest()
    17        inst = TutorialViews(request)
    18        response = inst.home()
    19        self.assertEqual(response.status, '302 Found')
    20
    21    def test_plain_without_name(self):
    22        from .views import TutorialViews
    23
    24        request = testing.DummyRequest()
    25        inst = TutorialViews(request)
    26        response = inst.plain()
    27        self.assertIn(b'No Name Provided', response.body)
    28
    29    def test_plain_with_name(self):
    30        from .views import TutorialViews
    31
    32        request = testing.DummyRequest()
    33        request.GET['name'] = 'Jane Doe'
    34        inst = TutorialViews(request)
    35        response = inst.plain()
    36        self.assertIn(b'Jane Doe', response.body)
    37
    38
    39class TutorialFunctionalTests(unittest.TestCase):
    40    def setUp(self):
    41        from tutorial import main
    42
    43        app = main({})
    44        from webtest import TestApp
    45
    46        self.testapp = TestApp(app)
    47
    48    def test_plain_without_name(self):
    49        res = self.testapp.get('/plain', status=200)
    50        self.assertIn(b'No Name Provided', res.body)
    51
    52    def test_plain_with_name(self):
    53        res = self.testapp.get('/plain?name=Jane%20Doe', status=200)
    54        self.assertIn(b'Jane Doe', res.body)
    
  5. Now run the tests:

    $VENV/bin/pytest tutorial/tests.py -q
    .....
    5 passed in 0.30 seconds
    
  6. Run your Pyramid application with:

    $VENV/bin/pserve development.ini --reload
    
  7. Open http://localhost:6543/ in your browser. You will be redirected to http://localhost:6543/plain.

  8. Open http://localhost:6543/plain?name=alice in your browser.

Analysis

In this view class, we have two routes and two views, with the first leading to the second by an HTTP redirect. Pyramid can generate redirects by returning a special object from a view or raising a special exception.

In this Pyramid view, we get the URL being visited from request.url. Also, if you visited http://localhost:6543/plain?name=alice, the name is included in the body of the response:

URL http://localhost:6543/plain?name=alice with name: alice

Finally, we set the response's content type and body, then return the response.

We updated the unit and functional tests to prove that our code does the redirection, but also handles sending and not sending /plain?name.

Extra credit

  1. Could we also raise HTTPFound(location='/plain') instead of returning it? If so, what's the difference?