.. _handlers: ***************** Standard Handlers ***************** .. _hand-pub: Publisher Handler ================= .. index:: pair: publisher; handler The ``publisher`` handler is a good way to avoid writing your own handlers and focus on rapid application development. It was inspired by `Zope `_ ZPublisher. .. _hand-pub-intro: Introduction ------------ To use the handler, you need the following lines in your configuration::: SetHandler mod_python PythonHandler mod_python.publisher This handler allows access to functions and variables within a module via URL's. For example, if you have the following module, called :file:`hello.py`::: """ Publisher example """ def say(req, what="NOTHING"): return "I am saying %s" % what A URL ``http://www.mysite.com/hello.py/say`` would return ``'I am saying NOTHING``. A URL ``http://www.mysite.com/hello.py/say?what=hello`` would return ``'I am saying hello``. .. _hand-pub-alg: The Publishing Algorithm ------------------------ The Publisher handler maps a URI directly to a Python variable or callable object, then, respectively, returns it's string representation or calls it returning the string representation of the return value. .. index:: pair: publisher; traversal .. _hand-pub-alg-trav: Traversal ^^^^^^^^^ The Publisher handler locates and imports the module specified in the URI. The module location is determined from the :attr:`request.filename` attribute. Before importing, the file extension, if any, is discarded. If :attr:`request.filename` is empty, the module name defaults to ``'index'``. Once module is imported, the remaining part of the URI up to the beginning of any query data (a.k.a. :const:`PATH_INFO`) is used to find an object within the module. The Publisher handler *traverses* the path, one element at a time from left to right, mapping the elements to Python object within the module. If no ``path_info`` was given in the URL, the Publisher handler will use the default value of ``'index'``. If the last element is an object inside a module, and the one immediately preceding it is a directory (i.e. no module name is given), then the module name will also default to ``'index'``. The traversal will stop and :const:`HTTP_NOT_FOUND` will be returned to the client if: * Any of the traversed object's names begin with an underscore (``'_'``). Use underscores to protect objects that should not be accessible from the web. * A module is encountered. Published objects cannot be modules for security reasons. If an object in the path could not be found, :const:`HTTP_NOT_FOUND` is returned to the client. For example, given the following configuration::: DocumentRoot /some/dir SetHandler mod_python PythonHandler mod_python.publisher And the following :file:`/some/dir/index.py` file::: def index(req): return "We are in index()" def hello(req): return "We are in hello()" Then: * http://www.somehost/index/index will return ``'We are in index()'`` * http://www.somehost/index/ will return ``'We are in index()'`` * http://www.somehost/index/hello will return ``'We are in hello()'`` * http://www.somehost/hello will return ``'We are in hello()'`` * http://www.somehost/spam will return ``'404 Not Found'`` .. _hand-pub-alg-args: Argument Matching and Invocation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Once the destination object is found, if it is callable and not a class, the Publisher handler will get a list of arguments that the object expects. This list is compared with names of fields from HTML form data submitted by the client via ``POST`` or ``GET``. Values of fields whose names match the names of callable object arguments will be passed as strings. Any fields whose names do not match the names of callable argument objects will be silently dropped, unless the destination callable object has a ``**kwargs`` style argument, in which case fields with unmatched names will be passed in the ``**kwargs`` argument. If the destination is not callable or is a class, then its string representation is returned to the client. .. index:: pair: publisher; authentication .. _hand-pub-alg-auth: Authentication ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The publisher handler provides simple ways to control access to modules and functions. At every traversal step, the Publisher handler checks for presence of ``__auth__`` and ``__access__`` attributes (in this order), as well as ``__auth_realm__`` attribute. If ``__auth__`` is found and it is callable, it will be called with three arguments: the ``request`` object, a string containing the user name and a string containing the password. If the return value of ``__auth__`` is false, then :const:`HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED` is returned to the client (which will usually cause a password dialog box to appear). If :meth:`__auth__` is a dictionary, then the user name will be matched against the key and the password against the value associated with this key. If the key and password do not match, :const:`HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED` is returned. Note that this requires storing passwords as clear text in source code, which is not very secure. ``__auth__`` can also be a constant. In this case, if it is false (i.e. ``None``, ``0``, ``""``, etc.), then :const:`HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED` is returned. If there exists an ``__auth_realm__`` string, it will be sent to the client as Authorization Realm (this is the text that usually appears at the top of the password dialog box). If ``__access__`` is found and it is callable, it will be called with two arguments: the ``request`` object and a string containing the user name. If the return value of ``__access__`` is false, then :const:`HTTP_FORBIDDEN` is returned to the client. If ``__access__`` is a list, then the user name will be matched against the list elements. If the user name is not in the list, :const:`HTTP_FORBIDDEN` is returned. Similarly to ``__auth__``, ``__access__`` can be a constant. In the example below, only user ``'eggs'`` with password ``'spam'`` can access the ``hello`` function::: __auth_realm__ = "Members only" def __auth__(req, user, passwd): if user == "eggs" and passwd == "spam" or \ user == "joe" and passwd == "eoj": return 1 else: return 0 def __access__(req, user): if user == "eggs": return 1 else: return 0 def hello(req): return "hello" Here is the same functionality, but using an alternative technique::: __auth_realm__ = "Members only" __auth__ = {"eggs":"spam", "joe":"eoj"} __access__ = ["eggs"] def hello(req): return "hello" Since functions cannot be assigned attributes, to protect a function, an ``__auth__`` or ``__access__`` function can be defined within the function, e.g.::: def sensitive(req): def __auth__(req, user, password): if user == 'spam' and password == 'eggs': # let them in return 1 else: # no access return 0 # something involving sensitive information return 'sensitive information` Note that this technique will also work if ``__auth__`` or ``__access__`` is a constant, but will not work is they are a dictionary or a list. The ``__auth__`` and ``__access__`` mechanisms exist independently of the standard :ref:`dir-handlers-auh`. It is possible to use, for example, the handler to authenticate, then the ``__access__`` list to verify that the authenticated user is allowed to a particular function. .. note:: In order for mod_python to access ``__auth__``, the module containing it must first be imported. Therefore, any module-level code will get executed during the import even if ``__auth__`` is false. To truly protect a module from being accessed, use other authentication mechanisms, e.g. the Apache ``mod_auth`` or with a mod_python :ref:`dir-handlers-auh`. .. _hand-pub-form: Form Data --------- In the process of matching arguments, the Publisher handler creates an instance of :ref:`pyapi-util-fstor`. A reference to this instance is stored in an attribute \member{form} of the ``request`` object. Since a ``FieldStorage`` can only be instantiated once per request, one must not attempt to instantiate ``FieldStorage`` when using the Publisher handler and should use :attr:`request.form` instead. .. _hand-wsgi: WSGI Handler ============ .. index:: pair: WSGI; handler WSGI handler can run WSGI applications as described in :pep:`333`. Assuming there exists the following minimal WSGI app residing in a file named ``mysite/wsgi.py`` in directory ``/path/to/mysite`` (so that the full path to ``wsgi.py`` is ``/path/to/mysite/mysite/wsgi.py``):: def application(environ, start_response): status = '200 OK' output = 'Hello World!' response_headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain'), ('Content-Length', str(len(output)))] start_response(status, response_headers) return [output] It can be executed using the WSGI handler by adding the following to the Apache configuration:: PythonHandler mod_python.wsgi PythonOption mod_python.wsgi.application mysite.wsgi PythonPath "sys.path+['/path/to/mysite']" The above configuration will import a module named ``mysite.wsgi`` and will look for an ``application`` callable in the module. An alternative name for the callable can be specified by appending it to the module name separated by ``'::'``, e.g.:: PythonOption mod_python.wsgi.application mysite.wsgi::my_application If you would like your application to appear under a base URI, it can be specified by wrapping your configuration in a ```` block. It can also be specified via the ``mod_python.wsgi.base_uri`` option, but the ```` method is recommended, also because it has a side-benefit of informing mod_python to skip the map-to-storage processing phase and thereby improving performance. For example, if you would like the above application to appear under ``'/wsgiapps'``, you could specify:: PythonHandler mod_python.wsgi PythonOption mod_python.wsgi.application mysite.wsgi PythonPath "sys.path+['/path/to/mysite']" With the above configuration, content formerly under ``http://example.com/hello`` becomes available under ``http://example.com/wsgiapps/hello``. If both ```` and ``mod_python.wsgi.base_uri`` exist, then ``mod_python.wsgi.base_uri`` takes precedence. ``mod_python.wsgi.base_uri`` cannot be ``'/'`` or end with a ``'/'``. "Root" (or no base_uri) is a blank string, which is the default. (Note that it is allowed for ```` path to be ``"/"`` or have a trailing slash, it will automatically be removed by mod_python before computing ``PATH_INFO``). .. index:: pair: WSGI; SCRIPT_NAME pair: WSGI; PATH_INFO .. note:: :pep:`333` describes ``SCRIPT_NAME`` and ``PATH_INFO`` environment variables which are core to the specification. Most WSGI-supporting frameworks currently in existence use the value of ``PATH_INFO`` as the request URI. The two variable's name and function originate in CGI (:rfc:`3875`), which describes an environment wherein a script (or any executable's) output could be passed on by the web server as content. A typical CGI script resides somewhere on the filesystem to which the request URI maps. As part of serving the request the server traverses the URI mapping each element to an element of the filesystem path to locate the script. Once the script is found, the portion of the URI used thus far is assigned to the ``SCRIPT_NAME`` variable, while the remainder of the URI gets assigned to ``PATH_INFO``. Because the relationship between Python modules and files on disk is largely tangential, it is not very clear what exactly ``PATH_INFO`` and ``SCRIPT_NAME`` ought to be. Even though Python modules are most often files on disk located somewhere in the Python path, they don't have to be (they could be code objects constructed on-the-fly), and their location in the filesystem has no relationship to the URL structure at all. The mismatch between CGI and WSGI results in an ambiguity which requires that the split between the two variables be explicitely specified, which is why ``mod_python.wsgi.base_uri`` exists. In essence ``mod_python.wsgi.base_uri`` (or the path in surrounding ````) is the ``SCRIPT_NAME`` portion of the URI and defaults to ``''``. An important detail is that ``SCRIPT_NAME`` + ``PATH_INFO`` should result in the original URI (encoding issues aside). Since ``SCRIPT_NAME`` (in its original CGI definition) referrs to an actual file, its name never ends with a slash. The slash, if any, always ends up in ``PATH_INFO``. E.g. ``/path/to/myscrip/foo/bar`` splits into ``/path/to/myscript`` and ``/foo/bar``. If the whole site is served by an app or a script, then ``SCRIPT_NAME`` is a blank string ``''``, not a ``'/'``. .. _hand-psp: PSP Handler =========== .. index:: pair: PSP; handler PSP handler is a handler that processes documents using the ``PSP`` class in ``mod_python.psp`` module. To use it, simply add this to your httpd configuration:: AddHandler mod_python .psp PythonHandler mod_python.psp For more details on the PSP syntax, see Section :ref:`pyapi-psp`. If ``PythonDebug`` server configuration is ``On``, then by appending an underscore (``'_'``) to the end of the url you can get a nice side-by-side listing of original PSP code and resulting Python code generated by the ``psp} module``. This is very useful for debugging. You'll need to adjust your httpd configuration::: AddHandler mod_python .psp .psp_ PythonHandler mod_python.psp PythonDebug On .. note:: Leaving debug on in a production environment will allow remote users to display source code of your PSP pages! .. _hand-cgi: CGI Handler =========== .. index:: pair: CGI; handler CGI handler is a handler that emulates the CGI environment under mod_python. Note that this is not a ``'true'`` CGI environment in that it is emulated at the Python level. ``stdin`` and ``stdout`` are provided by substituting ``sys.stdin`` and ``sys.stdout``, and the environment is replaced by a dictionary. The implication is that any outside programs called from within this environment via ``os.system``, etc. will not see the environment available to the Python program, nor will they be able to read/write from standard input/output with the results expected in a ``'true'`` CGI environment. The handler is provided as a stepping stone for the migration of legacy code away from CGI. It is not recommended that you settle on using this handler as the preferred way to use mod_python for the long term. This is because the CGI environment was not intended for execution within threads (e.g. requires changing of current directory with is inherently not thread-safe, so to overcome this cgihandler maintains a thread lock which forces it to process one request at a time in a multi-threaded server) and therefore can only be implemented in a way that defeats many of the advantages of using mod_python in the first place. To use it, simply add this to your :file:`.htaccess` file::: SetHandler mod_python PythonHandler mod_python.cgihandler As of version 2.7, the cgihandler will properly reload even indirectly imported module. This is done by saving a list of loaded modules (sys.modules) prior to executing a CGI script, and then comparing it with a list of imported modules after the CGI script is done. Modules (except for whose whose __file__ attribute points to the standard Python library location) will be deleted from sys.modules thereby forcing Python to load them again next time the CGI script imports them. If you do not want the above behavior, edit the :file:`cgihandler.py` file and comment out the code delimited by ###. Tests show the cgihandler leaking some memory when processing a lot of file uploads. It is still not clear what causes this. The way to work around this is to set the Apache ``MaxRequestsPerChild`` to a non-zero value.