Is there any clever solution to store static files in Flask's application root directory. robots.txt and sitemap.xml are expected to be found in /, so my idea was to create routes for them:

@app.route('/sitemap.xml', methods=['GET'])
def sitemap():
  response = make_response(open('sitemap.xml').read())
  response.headers["Content-type"] = "text/plain"
  return response

There must be something more convenient :)

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5 Answers

up vote 22 down vote accepted

@vonPetrushev is right, in production you'll want to serve static files via nginx or apache, but for development it's nice to have your dev environment simple having your python app serving up the static content as well so you don't have to worry about changing configurations and multiple projects. To do that, you'll want to use the SharedDataMiddleware.

from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
'''
Your app setup and code
'''
if app.config['DEBUG']:
    from werkzeug import SharedDataMiddleware
    import os
    app.wsgi_app = SharedDataMiddleware(app.wsgi_app, {
      '/': os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'static')
    })

This example assumes your static files are in the folder "static", adjust to whatever fits your environment.

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THANKS! This is what I needed! I'm looking to do this for my production heroku. See the answers on the following thread: flask.pocoo.org/mailinglist/archive/2012/2/22/… – David Mar 29 at 22:45
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Serving static files has nothing to do with application that is meant to deliver dynamic content. The correct way of serving static files is dependent of what server you're using. After all, when you get your app up and running, you will need to bind it to a web server. I can speak only for apache httpd, so the way of serving static files is defined in the virtual host that you are binding to your application through mod-wsgi. Here is the guide that will show you how to serve sitemaps, robots.txt or any static content: http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/QuickConfigurationGuide#Mounting_At_Root_Of_Site

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That's the answer i've been looking for. Thanks! – biesiad Nov 22 '10 at 15:29
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From the documentation here: http://flask.pocoo.org/docs/quickstart/#static-files

Dynamic web applications need static files as well. That’s usually where the CSS and JavaScript files are coming from. Ideally your web server is configured to serve them for you, but during development Flask can do that as well. Just create a folder called static in your package or next to your module and it will be available at /static on the application.

To generate URLs to that part of the URL, use the special 'static' URL name:

url_for('static', filename='style.css')

The file has to be stored on the filesystem as static/style.css.

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This might have been added since this question was asked, but I was looking through flask's "helpers.py" and I found flask.send_from_directory:

send_from_directory(directory, filename, **options)
'''
  send_from_directory(directory, filename, **options)
  Send a file from a given directory with send_file.  This
  is a secure way to quickly expose static files from an upload folder
  or something similar.
'''

... which references flask.send_file:

send_file(filename_or_fp, mimetype=None, as_attachment=False, attachment_filename=None, add_etags=True, cache_timeout=43200, conditional=False)

... which seems better for more control, although send_from_directory passes **options directly through to send_file.

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I'm having the same dilemma as well. Did some search and found my answer(MHO):

Might as well quote from the documentation

Dynamic web applications need static files as well. That’s usually where the CSS and JavaScript files are coming from. Ideally your web server is configured to serve them for you, but during development Flask can do that as well. Just create a folder called static in your package or next to your module and it will be available at /static on the application.

IMHO: When your application is up for production, static file serving should be (or is ideally) configured on the webserver (nginx, apache); but during development, Flask made it available to serve static files. This is to help you develop rapidly - no need to setup webservers and such.

Hope it helps.

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