mirror of https://github.com/pallets/flask.git
572 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
572 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. currentmodule:: flask
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Command Line Interface
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======================
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Installing Flask installs the ``flask`` script, a `Click`_ command line
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interface, in your virtualenv. Executed from the terminal, this script gives
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access to built-in, extension, and application-defined commands. The ``--help``
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option will give more information about any commands and options.
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.. _Click: https://click.palletsprojects.com/
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Application Discovery
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---------------------
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The ``flask`` command is installed by Flask, not your application; it must be
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told where to find your application in order to use it. The ``--app``
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option is used to specify how to load the application.
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While ``--app`` supports a variety of options for specifying your
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application, most use cases should be simple. Here are the typical values:
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(nothing)
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The name "app" or "wsgi" is imported (as a ".py" file, or package),
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automatically detecting an app (``app`` or ``application``) or
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factory (``create_app`` or ``make_app``).
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``--app hello``
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The given name is imported, automatically detecting an app (``app``
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or ``application``) or factory (``create_app`` or ``make_app``).
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----
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``--app`` has three parts: an optional path that sets the current working
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directory, a Python file or dotted import path, and an optional variable
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name of the instance or factory. If the name is a factory, it can optionally
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be followed by arguments in parentheses. The following values demonstrate these
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parts:
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``--app src/hello``
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Sets the current working directory to ``src`` then imports ``hello``.
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``--app hello.web``
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Imports the path ``hello.web``.
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``--app hello:app2``
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Uses the ``app2`` Flask instance in ``hello``.
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``--app 'hello:create_app("dev")'``
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The ``create_app`` factory in ``hello`` is called with the string ``'dev'``
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as the argument.
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If ``--app`` is not set, the command will try to import "app" or
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"wsgi" (as a ".py" file, or package) and try to detect an application
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instance or factory.
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Within the given import, the command looks for an application instance named
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``app`` or ``application``, then any application instance. If no instance is
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found, the command looks for a factory function named ``create_app`` or
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``make_app`` that returns an instance.
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If parentheses follow the factory name, their contents are parsed as
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Python literals and passed as arguments and keyword arguments to the
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function. This means that strings must still be in quotes.
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Run the Development Server
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--------------------------
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The :func:`run <cli.run_command>` command will start the development server. It
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replaces the :meth:`Flask.run` method in most cases. ::
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$ flask --app hello run
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* Serving Flask app "hello"
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
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.. warning:: Do not use this command to run your application in production.
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Only use the development server during development. The development server
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is provided for convenience, but is not designed to be particularly secure,
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stable, or efficient. See :doc:`/deploying/index` for how to run in production.
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If another program is already using port 5000, you'll see
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``OSError: [Errno 98]`` or ``OSError: [WinError 10013]`` when the
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server tries to start. See :ref:`address-already-in-use` for how to
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handle that.
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Debug Mode
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~~~~~~~~~~
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In debug mode, the ``flask run`` command will enable the interactive debugger and the
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reloader by default, and make errors easier to see and debug. To enable debug mode, use
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the ``--debug`` option.
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.. code-block:: console
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$ flask --app hello run --debug
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* Serving Flask app "hello"
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* Debug mode: on
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
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* Restarting with inotify reloader
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* Debugger is active!
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* Debugger PIN: 223-456-919
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The ``--debug`` option can also be passed to the top level ``flask`` command to enable
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debug mode for any command. The following two ``run`` calls are equivalent.
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.. code-block:: console
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$ flask --app hello --debug run
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$ flask --app hello run --debug
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Watch and Ignore Files with the Reloader
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When using debug mode, the reloader will trigger whenever your Python code or imported
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modules change. The reloader can watch additional files with the ``--extra-files``
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option. Multiple paths are separated with ``:``, or ``;`` on Windows.
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.. code-block:: text
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$ flask run --extra-files file1:dirA/file2:dirB/
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
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* Detected change in '/path/to/file1', reloading
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The reloader can also ignore files using :mod:`fnmatch` patterns with the
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``--exclude-patterns`` option. Multiple patterns are separated with ``:``, or ``;`` on
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Windows.
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Open a Shell
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------------
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To explore the data in your application, you can start an interactive Python
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shell with the :func:`shell <cli.shell_command>` command. An application
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context will be active, and the app instance will be imported. ::
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$ flask shell
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Python 3.10.0 (default, Oct 27 2021, 06:59:51) [GCC 11.1.0] on linux
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App: example [production]
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Instance: /home/david/Projects/pallets/flask/instance
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>>>
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Use :meth:`~Flask.shell_context_processor` to add other automatic imports.
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.. _dotenv:
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Environment Variables From dotenv
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---------------------------------
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The ``flask`` command supports setting any option for any command with
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environment variables. The variables are named like ``FLASK_OPTION`` or
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``FLASK_COMMAND_OPTION``, for example ``FLASK_APP`` or
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``FLASK_RUN_PORT``.
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Rather than passing options every time you run a command, or environment
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variables every time you open a new terminal, you can use Flask's dotenv
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support to set environment variables automatically.
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If `python-dotenv`_ is installed, running the ``flask`` command will set
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environment variables defined in the files ``.env`` and ``.flaskenv``.
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You can also specify an extra file to load with the ``--env-file``
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option. Dotenv files can be used to avoid having to set ``--app`` or
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``FLASK_APP`` manually, and to set configuration using environment
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variables similar to how some deployment services work.
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Variables set on the command line are used over those set in :file:`.env`,
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which are used over those set in :file:`.flaskenv`. :file:`.flaskenv` should be
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used for public variables, such as ``FLASK_APP``, while :file:`.env` should not
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be committed to your repository so that it can set private variables.
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Directories are scanned upwards from the directory you call ``flask``
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from to locate the files.
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The files are only loaded by the ``flask`` command or calling
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:meth:`~Flask.run`. If you would like to load these files when running in
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production, you should call :func:`~cli.load_dotenv` manually.
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.. _python-dotenv: https://github.com/theskumar/python-dotenv#readme
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Setting Command Options
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Click is configured to load default values for command options from
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environment variables. The variables use the pattern
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``FLASK_COMMAND_OPTION``. For example, to set the port for the run
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command, instead of ``flask run --port 8000``:
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.. tabs::
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.. group-tab:: Bash
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.. code-block:: text
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$ export FLASK_RUN_PORT=8000
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$ flask run
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
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.. group-tab:: Fish
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.. code-block:: text
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$ set -x FLASK_RUN_PORT 8000
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$ flask run
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
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.. group-tab:: CMD
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.. code-block:: text
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> set FLASK_RUN_PORT=8000
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> flask run
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
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.. group-tab:: Powershell
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.. code-block:: text
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> $env:FLASK_RUN_PORT = 8000
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> flask run
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* Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
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These can be added to the ``.flaskenv`` file just like ``FLASK_APP`` to
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control default command options.
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Disable dotenv
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ``flask`` command will show a message if it detects dotenv files but
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python-dotenv is not installed.
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ flask run
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* Tip: There are .env files present. Do "pip install python-dotenv" to use them.
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You can tell Flask not to load dotenv files even when python-dotenv is
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installed by setting the ``FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV`` environment variable.
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This can be useful if you want to load them manually, or if you're using
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a project runner that loads them already. Keep in mind that the
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environment variables must be set before the app loads or it won't
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configure as expected.
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.. tabs::
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.. group-tab:: Bash
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.. code-block:: text
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$ export FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV=1
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$ flask run
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.. group-tab:: Fish
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.. code-block:: text
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$ set -x FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV 1
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$ flask run
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.. group-tab:: CMD
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.. code-block:: text
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> set FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV=1
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> flask run
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.. group-tab:: Powershell
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.. code-block:: text
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> $env:FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV = 1
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> flask run
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Environment Variables From virtualenv
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-------------------------------------
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If you do not want to install dotenv support, you can still set environment
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variables by adding them to the end of the virtualenv's :file:`activate`
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script. Activating the virtualenv will set the variables.
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.. tabs::
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.. group-tab:: Bash
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Unix Bash, :file:`venv/bin/activate`::
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$ export FLASK_APP=hello
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.. group-tab:: Fish
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Fish, :file:`venv/bin/activate.fish`::
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$ set -x FLASK_APP hello
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.. group-tab:: CMD
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Windows CMD, :file:`venv\\Scripts\\activate.bat`::
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> set FLASK_APP=hello
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.. group-tab:: Powershell
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Windows Powershell, :file:`venv\\Scripts\\activate.ps1`::
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> $env:FLASK_APP = "hello"
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It is preferred to use dotenv support over this, since :file:`.flaskenv` can be
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committed to the repository so that it works automatically wherever the project
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is checked out.
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Custom Commands
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---------------
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The ``flask`` command is implemented using `Click`_. See that project's
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documentation for full information about writing commands.
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This example adds the command ``create-user`` that takes the argument
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``name``. ::
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import click
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from flask import Flask
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app = Flask(__name__)
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@app.cli.command("create-user")
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@click.argument("name")
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def create_user(name):
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...
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::
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$ flask create-user admin
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This example adds the same command, but as ``user create``, a command in a
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group. This is useful if you want to organize multiple related commands. ::
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import click
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from flask import Flask
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from flask.cli import AppGroup
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app = Flask(__name__)
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user_cli = AppGroup('user')
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@user_cli.command('create')
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@click.argument('name')
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def create_user(name):
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...
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app.cli.add_command(user_cli)
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::
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$ flask user create demo
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See :ref:`testing-cli` for an overview of how to test your custom
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commands.
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Registering Commands with Blueprints
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If your application uses blueprints, you can optionally register CLI
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commands directly onto them. When your blueprint is registered onto your
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application, the associated commands will be available to the ``flask``
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command. By default, those commands will be nested in a group matching
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the name of the blueprint.
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.. code-block:: python
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from flask import Blueprint
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bp = Blueprint('students', __name__)
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@bp.cli.command('create')
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@click.argument('name')
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def create(name):
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...
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app.register_blueprint(bp)
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.. code-block:: text
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$ flask students create alice
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You can alter the group name by specifying the ``cli_group`` parameter
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when creating the :class:`Blueprint` object, or later with
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:meth:`app.register_blueprint(bp, cli_group='...') <Flask.register_blueprint>`.
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The following are equivalent:
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.. code-block:: python
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bp = Blueprint('students', __name__, cli_group='other')
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# or
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app.register_blueprint(bp, cli_group='other')
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.. code-block:: text
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$ flask other create alice
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Specifying ``cli_group=None`` will remove the nesting and merge the
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commands directly to the application's level:
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.. code-block:: python
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bp = Blueprint('students', __name__, cli_group=None)
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# or
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app.register_blueprint(bp, cli_group=None)
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.. code-block:: text
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$ flask create alice
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Application Context
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Commands added using the Flask app's :attr:`~Flask.cli` or
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:class:`~flask.cli.FlaskGroup` :meth:`~cli.AppGroup.command` decorator
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will be executed with an application context pushed, so your custom
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commands and parameters have access to the app and its configuration. The
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:func:`~cli.with_appcontext` decorator can be used to get the same
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behavior, but is not needed in most cases.
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.. code-block:: python
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import click
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from flask.cli import with_appcontext
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@click.command()
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@with_appcontext
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def do_work():
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...
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app.cli.add_command(do_work)
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Plugins
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-------
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Flask will automatically load commands specified in the ``flask.commands``
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`entry point`_. This is useful for extensions that want to add commands when
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they are installed. Entry points are specified in :file:`setup.py` ::
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from setuptools import setup
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setup(
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name='flask-my-extension',
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...,
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entry_points={
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'flask.commands': [
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'my-command=flask_my_extension.commands:cli'
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],
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},
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)
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.. _entry point: https://packaging.python.org/tutorials/packaging-projects/#entry-points
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Inside :file:`flask_my_extension/commands.py` you can then export a Click
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object::
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import click
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@click.command()
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def cli():
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...
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Once that package is installed in the same virtualenv as your Flask project,
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you can run ``flask my-command`` to invoke the command.
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.. _custom-scripts:
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Custom Scripts
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--------------
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When you are using the app factory pattern, it may be more convenient to define
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your own Click script. Instead of using ``--app`` and letting Flask load
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your application, you can create your own Click object and export it as a
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`console script`_ entry point.
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Create an instance of :class:`~cli.FlaskGroup` and pass it the factory::
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import click
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from flask import Flask
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from flask.cli import FlaskGroup
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def create_app():
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app = Flask('wiki')
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# other setup
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return app
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@click.group(cls=FlaskGroup, create_app=create_app)
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def cli():
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"""Management script for the Wiki application."""
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Define the entry point in :file:`setup.py`::
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from setuptools import setup
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setup(
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name='flask-my-extension',
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...,
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entry_points={
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'console_scripts': [
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'wiki=wiki:cli'
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],
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},
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)
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Install the application in the virtualenv in editable mode and the custom
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script is available. Note that you don't need to set ``--app``. ::
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$ pip install -e .
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$ wiki run
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.. admonition:: Errors in Custom Scripts
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When using a custom script, if you introduce an error in your
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module-level code, the reloader will fail because it can no longer
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load the entry point.
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The ``flask`` command, being separate from your code, does not have
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this issue and is recommended in most cases.
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.. _console script: https://packaging.python.org/tutorials/packaging-projects/#console-scripts
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PyCharm Integration
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-------------------
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PyCharm Professional provides a special Flask run configuration to run the development
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server. For the Community Edition, and for other commands besides ``run``, you need to
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create a custom run configuration. These instructions should be similar for any other
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IDE you use.
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In PyCharm, with your project open, click on *Run* from the menu bar and go to *Edit
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Configurations*. You'll see a screen similar to this:
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.. image:: _static/pycharm-run-config.png
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:align: center
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:class: screenshot
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:alt: Screenshot of PyCharm run configuration.
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Once you create a configuration for the ``flask run``, you can copy and change it to
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call any other command.
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Click the *+ (Add New Configuration)* button and select *Python*. Give the configuration
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a name such as "flask run".
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Click the *Script path* dropdown and change it to *Module name*, then input ``flask``.
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The *Parameters* field is set to the CLI command to execute along with any arguments.
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This example uses ``--app hello run --debug``, which will run the development server in
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debug mode. ``--app hello`` should be the import or file with your Flask app.
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If you installed your project as a package in your virtualenv, you may uncheck the
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*PYTHONPATH* options. This will more accurately match how you deploy later.
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Click *OK* to save and close the configuration. Select the configuration in the main
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PyCharm window and click the play button next to it to run the server.
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Now that you have a configuration for ``flask run``, you can copy that configuration and
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change the *Parameters* argument to run a different CLI command.
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