import warnings
from pyramid.compat import urlparse
from pyramid.interfaces import (
IRequest,
IRouteRequest,
IRoutesMapper,
PHASE2_CONFIG,
)
from pyramid.exceptions import ConfigurationError
from pyramid.registry import predvalseq
from pyramid.request import route_request_iface
from pyramid.urldispatch import RoutesMapper
from pyramid.config.util import action_method
from pyramid.util import as_sorted_tuple
import pyramid.predicates
class RoutesConfiguratorMixin(object):
@action_method
def add_route(self,
name,
pattern=None,
permission=None,
factory=None,
for_=None,
header=None,
xhr=None,
accept=None,
path_info=None,
request_method=None,
request_param=None,
traverse=None,
custom_predicates=(),
use_global_views=False,
path=None,
pregenerator=None,
static=False,
**predicates):
""" Add a :term:`route configuration` to the current
configuration state, as well as possibly a :term:`view
configuration` to be used to specify a :term:`view callable`
that will be invoked when this route matches. The arguments
to this method are divided into *predicate*, *non-predicate*,
and *view-related* types. :term:`Route predicate` arguments
narrow the circumstances in which a route will be match a
request; non-predicate arguments are informational.
Non-Predicate Arguments
name
The name of the route, e.g. ``myroute``. This attribute is
required. It must be unique among all defined routes in a given
application.
factory
A Python object (often a function or a class) or a :term:`dotted
Python name` which refers to the same object that will generate a
:app:`Pyramid` root resource object when this route matches. For
example, ``mypackage.resources.MyFactory``. If this argument is
not specified, a default root factory will be used. See
:ref:`the_resource_tree` for more information about root factories.
traverse
If you would like to cause the :term:`context` to be
something other than the :term:`root` object when this route
matches, you can spell a traversal pattern as the
``traverse`` argument. This traversal pattern will be used
as the traversal path: traversal will begin at the root
object implied by this route (either the global root, or the
object returned by the ``factory`` associated with this
route).
The syntax of the ``traverse`` argument is the same as it is
for ``pattern``. For example, if the ``pattern`` provided to
``add_route`` is ``articles/{article}/edit``, and the
``traverse`` argument provided to ``add_route`` is
``/{article}``, when a request comes in that causes the route
to match in such a way that the ``article`` match value is
``'1'`` (when the request URI is ``/articles/1/edit``), the
traversal path will be generated as ``/1``. This means that
the root object's ``__getitem__`` will be called with the
name ``'1'`` during the traversal phase. If the ``'1'`` object
exists, it will become the :term:`context` of the request.
:ref:`traversal_chapter` has more information about
traversal.
If the traversal path contains segment marker names which
are not present in the ``pattern`` argument, a runtime error
will occur. The ``traverse`` pattern should not contain
segment markers that do not exist in the ``pattern``
argument.
A similar combining of routing and traversal is available
when a route is matched which contains a ``*traverse``
remainder marker in its pattern (see
:ref:`using_traverse_in_a_route_pattern`). The ``traverse``
argument to add_route allows you to associate route patterns
with an arbitrary traversal path without using a
``*traverse`` remainder marker; instead you can use other
match information.
Note that the ``traverse`` argument to ``add_route`` is
ignored when attached to a route that has a ``*traverse``
remainder marker in its pattern.
pregenerator
This option should be a callable object that implements the
:class:`pyramid.interfaces.IRoutePregenerator` interface. A
:term:`pregenerator` is a callable called by the
:meth:`pyramid.request.Request.route_url` function to augment or
replace the arguments it is passed when generating a URL for the
route. This is a feature not often used directly by applications,
it is meant to be hooked by frameworks that use :app:`Pyramid` as
a base.
use_global_views
When a request matches this route, and view lookup cannot
find a view which has a ``route_name`` predicate argument
that matches the route, try to fall back to using a view
that otherwise matches the context, request, and view name
(but which does not match the route_name predicate).
static
If ``static`` is ``True``, this route will never match an incoming
request; it will only be useful for URL generation. By default,
``static`` is ``False``. See :ref:`static_route_narr`.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
accept
This value represents a match query for one or more mimetypes in the
``Accept`` HTTP request header. If this value is specified, it must
be in one of the following forms: a mimetype match token in the form
``text/plain``, a wildcard mimetype match token in the form
``text/*`` or a match-all wildcard mimetype match token in the form
``*/*``. If any of the forms matches the ``Accept`` header of the
request, or if the ``Accept`` header isn't set at all in the request,
this will match the current route. If this does not match the
``Accept`` header of the request, route matching continues.
Predicate Arguments
pattern
The pattern of the route e.g. ``ideas/{idea}``. This
argument is required. See :ref:`route_pattern_syntax`
for information about the syntax of route patterns. If the
pattern doesn't match the current URL, route matching
continues.
.. note::
For backwards compatibility purposes (as of :app:`Pyramid` 1.0), a
``path`` keyword argument passed to this function will be used to
represent the pattern value if the ``pattern`` argument is
``None``. If both ``path`` and ``pattern`` are passed, ``pattern``
wins.
xhr
This value should be either ``True`` or ``False``. If this
value is specified and is ``True``, the :term:`request` must
possess an ``HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH`` (aka
``X-Requested-With``) header for this route to match. This
is useful for detecting AJAX requests issued from jQuery,
Prototype and other Javascript libraries. If this predicate
returns ``False``, route matching continues.
request_method
A string representing an HTTP method name, e.g. ``GET``, ``POST``,
``HEAD``, ``DELETE``, ``PUT`` or a tuple of elements containing
HTTP method names. If this argument is not specified, this route
will match if the request has *any* request method. If this
predicate returns ``False``, route matching continues.
.. versionchanged:: 1.2
The ability to pass a tuple of items as ``request_method``.
Previous versions allowed only a string.
path_info
This value represents a regular expression pattern that will
be tested against the ``PATH_INFO`` WSGI environment
variable. If the regex matches, this predicate will return
``True``. If this predicate returns ``False``, route
matching continues.
request_param
This value can be any string. A view declaration with this
argument ensures that the associated route will only match
when the request has a key in the ``request.params``
dictionary (an HTTP ``GET`` or ``POST`` variable) that has a
name which matches the supplied value. If the value
supplied as the argument has a ``=`` sign in it,
e.g. ``request_param="foo=123"``, then the key
(``foo``) must both exist in the ``request.params`` dictionary, and
the value must match the right hand side of the expression (``123``)
for the route to "match" the current request. If this predicate
returns ``False``, route matching continues.
header
This argument represents an HTTP header name or a header
name/value pair. If the argument contains a ``:`` (colon),
it will be considered a name/value pair
(e.g. ``User-Agent:Mozilla/.*`` or ``Host:localhost``). If
the value contains a colon, the value portion should be a
regular expression. If the value does not contain a colon,
the entire value will be considered to be the header name
(e.g. ``If-Modified-Since``). If the value evaluates to a
header name only without a value, the header specified by
the name must be present in the request for this predicate
to be true. If the value evaluates to a header name/value
pair, the header specified by the name must be present in
the request *and* the regular expression specified as the
value must match the header value. Whether or not the value
represents a header name or a header name/value pair, the
case of the header name is not significant. If this
predicate returns ``False``, route matching continues.
effective_principals
If specified, this value should be a :term:`principal` identifier or
a sequence of principal identifiers. If the
:attr:`pyramid.request.Request.effective_principals` property
indicates that every principal named in the argument list is present
in the current request, this predicate will return True; otherwise it
will return False. For example:
``effective_principals=pyramid.security.Authenticated`` or
``effective_principals=('fred', 'group:admins')``.
.. versionadded:: 1.4a4
custom_predicates
.. deprecated:: 1.5
This value should be a sequence of references to custom
predicate callables. Use custom predicates when no set of
predefined predicates does what you need. Custom predicates
can be combined with predefined predicates as necessary.
Each custom predicate callable should accept two arguments:
``info`` and ``request`` and should return either ``True``
or ``False`` after doing arbitrary evaluation of the info
and/or the request. If all custom and non-custom predicate
callables return ``True`` the associated route will be
considered viable for a given request. If any predicate
callable returns ``False``, route matching continues. Note
that the value ``info`` passed to a custom route predicate
is a dictionary containing matching information; see
:ref:`custom_route_predicates` for more information about
``info``.
predicates
Pass a key/value pair here to use a third-party predicate
registered via
:meth:`pyramid.config.Configurator.add_route_predicate`. More than
one key/value pair can be used at the same time. See
:ref:`view_and_route_predicates` for more information about
third-party predicates.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
if custom_predicates:
warnings.warn(
('The "custom_predicates" argument to Configurator.add_route '
'is deprecated as of Pyramid 1.5. Use '
'"config.add_route_predicate" and use the registered '
'route predicate as a predicate argument to add_route '
'instead. See "Adding A Third Party View, Route, or '
'Subscriber Predicate" in the "Hooks" chapter of the '
'documentation for more information.'),
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=3
)
# these are route predicates; if they do not match, the next route
# in the routelist will be tried
if request_method is not None:
request_method = as_sorted_tuple(request_method)
factory = self.maybe_dotted(factory)
if pattern is None:
pattern = path
if pattern is None:
raise ConfigurationError('"pattern" argument may not be None')
# check for an external route; an external route is one which is
# is a full url (e.g. 'http://example.com/{id}')
parsed = urlparse.urlparse(pattern)
external_url = pattern
if parsed.hostname:
pattern = parsed.path
original_pregenerator = pregenerator
def external_url_pregenerator(request, elements, kw):
if '_app_url' in kw:
raise ValueError(
'You cannot generate a path to an external route '
'pattern via request.route_path nor pass an _app_url '
'to request.route_url when generating a URL for an '
'external route pattern (pattern was "%s") ' %
(pattern,)
)
if '_scheme' in kw:
scheme = kw['_scheme']
elif parsed.scheme:
scheme = parsed.scheme
else:
scheme = request.scheme
kw['_app_url'] = '{0}://{1}'.format(scheme, parsed.netloc)
if original_pregenerator:
elements, kw = original_pregenerator(
request, elements, kw)
return elements, kw
pregenerator = external_url_pregenerator
static = True
elif self.route_prefix:
pattern = self.route_prefix.rstrip('/') + '/' + pattern.lstrip('/')
mapper = self.get_routes_mapper()
introspectables = []
intr = self.introspectable('routes',
name,
'%s (pattern: %r)' % (name, pattern),
'route')
intr['name'] = name
intr['pattern'] = pattern
intr['factory'] = factory
intr['xhr'] = xhr
intr['request_methods'] = request_method
intr['path_info'] = path_info
intr['request_param'] = request_param
intr['header'] = header
intr['accept'] = accept
intr['traverse'] = traverse
intr['custom_predicates'] = custom_predicates
intr['pregenerator'] = pregenerator
intr['static'] = static
intr['use_global_views'] = use_global_views
if static is True:
intr['external_url'] = external_url
introspectables.append(intr)
if factory:
factory_intr = self.introspectable('root factories',
name,
self.object_description(factory),
'root factory')
factory_intr['factory'] = factory
factory_intr['route_name'] = name
factory_intr.relate('routes', name)
introspectables.append(factory_intr)
def register_route_request_iface():
request_iface = self.registry.queryUtility(IRouteRequest, name=name)
if request_iface is None:
if use_global_views:
bases = (IRequest,)
else:
bases = ()
request_iface = route_request_iface(name, bases)
self.registry.registerUtility(
request_iface, IRouteRequest, name=name)
def register_connect():
pvals = predicates.copy()
pvals.update(
dict(
xhr=xhr,
request_method=request_method,
path_info=path_info,
request_param=request_param,
header=header,
accept=accept,
traverse=traverse,
custom=predvalseq(custom_predicates),
)
)
predlist = self.get_predlist('route')
_, preds, _ = predlist.make(self, **pvals)
route = mapper.connect(
name, pattern, factory, predicates=preds,
pregenerator=pregenerator, static=static
)
intr['object'] = route
return route
# We have to connect routes in the order they were provided;
# we can't use a phase to do that, because when the actions are
# sorted, actions in the same phase lose relative ordering
self.action(('route-connect', name), register_connect)
# But IRouteRequest interfaces must be registered before we begin to
# process view registrations (in phase 3)
self.action(('route', name), register_route_request_iface,
order=PHASE2_CONFIG, introspectables=introspectables)
@action_method
def add_route_predicate(self, name, factory, weighs_more_than=None,
weighs_less_than=None):
""" Adds a route predicate factory. The view predicate can later be
named as a keyword argument to
:meth:`pyramid.config.Configurator.add_route`.
``name`` should be the name of the predicate. It must be a valid
Python identifier (it will be used as a keyword argument to
``add_route``).
``factory`` should be a :term:`predicate factory` or :term:`dotted
Python name` which refers to a predicate factory.
See :ref:`view_and_route_predicates` for more information.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
self._add_predicate(
'route',
name,
factory,
weighs_more_than=weighs_more_than,
weighs_less_than=weighs_less_than
)
def add_default_route_predicates(self):
p = pyramid.predicates
for (name, factory) in (
('xhr', p.XHRPredicate),
('request_method', p.RequestMethodPredicate),
('path_info', p.PathInfoPredicate),
('request_param', p.RequestParamPredicate),
('header', p.HeaderPredicate),
('accept', p.AcceptPredicate),
('effective_principals', p.EffectivePrincipalsPredicate),
('custom', p.CustomPredicate),
('traverse', p.TraversePredicate),
):
self.add_route_predicate(name, factory)
def get_routes_mapper(self):
""" Return the :term:`routes mapper` object associated with
this configurator's :term:`registry`."""
mapper = self.registry.queryUtility(IRoutesMapper)
if mapper is None:
mapper = RoutesMapper()
self.registry.registerUtility(mapper, IRoutesMapper)
return mapper