mirror of https://github.com/pallets/flask.git
168 lines
6.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
168 lines
6.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
Signals
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=======
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Signals are a lightweight way to notify subscribers of certain events during the
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lifecycle of the application and each request. When an event occurs, it emits the
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signal, which calls each subscriber.
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Signals are implemented by the `Blinker`_ library. See its documentation for detailed
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information. Flask provides some built-in signals. Extensions may provide their own.
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Many signals mirror Flask's decorator-based callbacks with similar names. For example,
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the :data:`.request_started` signal is similar to the :meth:`~.Flask.before_request`
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decorator. The advantage of signals over handlers is that they can be subscribed to
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temporarily, and can't directly affect the application. This is useful for testing,
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metrics, auditing, and more. For example, if you want to know what templates were
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rendered at what parts of what requests, there is a signal that will notify you of that
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information.
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Core Signals
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------------
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See :ref:`core-signals-list` for a list of all built-in signals. The :doc:`lifecycle`
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page also describes the order that signals and decorators execute.
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Subscribing to Signals
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----------------------
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To subscribe to a signal, you can use the
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:meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.connect` method of a signal. The first
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argument is the function that should be called when the signal is emitted,
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the optional second argument specifies a sender. To unsubscribe from a
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signal, you can use the :meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.disconnect` method.
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For all core Flask signals, the sender is the application that issued the
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signal. When you subscribe to a signal, be sure to also provide a sender
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unless you really want to listen for signals from all applications. This is
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especially true if you are developing an extension.
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For example, here is a helper context manager that can be used in a unit test
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to determine which templates were rendered and what variables were passed
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to the template::
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from flask import template_rendered
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from contextlib import contextmanager
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@contextmanager
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def captured_templates(app):
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recorded = []
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def record(sender, template, context, **extra):
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recorded.append((template, context))
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template_rendered.connect(record, app)
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try:
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yield recorded
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finally:
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template_rendered.disconnect(record, app)
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This can now easily be paired with a test client::
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with captured_templates(app) as templates:
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rv = app.test_client().get('/')
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assert rv.status_code == 200
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assert len(templates) == 1
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template, context = templates[0]
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assert template.name == 'index.html'
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assert len(context['items']) == 10
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Make sure to subscribe with an extra ``**extra`` argument so that your
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calls don't fail if Flask introduces new arguments to the signals.
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All the template rendering in the code issued by the application `app`
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in the body of the ``with`` block will now be recorded in the `templates`
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variable. Whenever a template is rendered, the template object as well as
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context are appended to it.
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Additionally there is a convenient helper method
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(:meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.connected_to`) that allows you to
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temporarily subscribe a function to a signal with a context manager on
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its own. Because the return value of the context manager cannot be
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specified that way, you have to pass the list in as an argument::
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from flask import template_rendered
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def captured_templates(app, recorded, **extra):
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def record(sender, template, context):
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recorded.append((template, context))
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return template_rendered.connected_to(record, app)
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The example above would then look like this::
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templates = []
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with captured_templates(app, templates, **extra):
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...
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template, context = templates[0]
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Creating Signals
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----------------
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If you want to use signals in your own application, you can use the
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blinker library directly. The most common use case are named signals in a
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custom :class:`~blinker.base.Namespace`. This is what is recommended
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most of the time::
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from blinker import Namespace
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my_signals = Namespace()
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Now you can create new signals like this::
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model_saved = my_signals.signal('model-saved')
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The name for the signal here makes it unique and also simplifies
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debugging. You can access the name of the signal with the
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:attr:`~blinker.base.NamedSignal.name` attribute.
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.. _signals-sending:
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Sending Signals
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---------------
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If you want to emit a signal, you can do so by calling the
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:meth:`~blinker.base.Signal.send` method. It accepts a sender as first
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argument and optionally some keyword arguments that are forwarded to the
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signal subscribers::
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class Model(object):
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...
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def save(self):
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model_saved.send(self)
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Try to always pick a good sender. If you have a class that is emitting a
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signal, pass ``self`` as sender. If you are emitting a signal from a random
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function, you can pass ``current_app._get_current_object()`` as sender.
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.. admonition:: Passing Proxies as Senders
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Never pass :data:`~flask.current_app` as sender to a signal. Use
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``current_app._get_current_object()`` instead. The reason for this is
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that :data:`~flask.current_app` is a proxy and not the real application
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object.
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Signals and Flask's Request Context
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-----------------------------------
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Signals fully support :doc:`reqcontext` when receiving signals.
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Context-local variables are consistently available between
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:data:`~flask.request_started` and :data:`~flask.request_finished`, so you can
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rely on :class:`flask.g` and others as needed. Note the limitations described
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in :ref:`signals-sending` and the :data:`~flask.request_tearing_down` signal.
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Decorator Based Signal Subscriptions
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------------------------------------
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You can also easily subscribe to signals by using the
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:meth:`~blinker.base.NamedSignal.connect_via` decorator::
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from flask import template_rendered
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@template_rendered.connect_via(app)
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def when_template_rendered(sender, template, context, **extra):
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print(f'Template {template.name} is rendered with {context}')
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.. _blinker: https://pypi.org/project/blinker/
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