4

I am looking for a LAMPish/WAMPish experience.

Something very transparent. Write the script, hit F5 and see the results. Very little, if any abstraction. SQLAlchemy and (maybe) some simple templating engine will be used.

I need simple access to the environment - similar to the PHP way. Something like the COOKIE, SESSION, POST, GET objects.

I don't want to write a middleware layer just to get some web serving up and running. And I do not want to deal with specifics of CGI.

This is not meant for a very complex project and it is for beginning programmers and/or beginning Python programmers.

An MVC framework is not out of the question. ASP.NET MVC is nicely done IMO. One thing I liked is that POSTed data is automatically cast to data model objects if so desired.

Can you help me out here?

Thanks!

PS: I did not really find anything matching these criteria in older posts.

4
  • "I don't want to write a middleware layer just to get some web serving up and running. And I do not want to deal with specifics of CGI." I'm not sure how to interpret that: a use middleware (i.e. a web framework) to avoid the specifics of CGI. What do you mean by "middleware"? Can you give an example?
    – S.Lott
    Jun 4, 2009 at 9:56
  • 1
    I do not want to deal with the interface between my application and the web server. It should just work. Having looked at "werkzeug" where that is not the case, I just thought I'd mention it. Maybe my choice of the word "middle ware" was wrong.
    – user51710
    Jun 4, 2009 at 11:28
  • "It should just work" doesn't mean much. There's an interface. Someone must write code that exchanges data across that interface. I don't really get the question -- still -- could you provide some details or some sample code that would meet your "just work" standard?
    – S.Lott
    Jun 4, 2009 at 17:16
  • 1
    To come back to the example of Werkzeug - there was a lot going on that I did not readily understand. Part of it was the Python syntax I am not used to. But the other part was things that certainly make a lot of sense, but only if you have relatively much background knowledge. (see werkzeug.pocoo.org/documentation/0.5/… for some code examples) In LAMP/WAMP you do not have to know where the request objects come from and how they are created. You do not have to make that connection between the server and your application. And that is what I want.
    – user51710
    Jun 6, 2009 at 11:48

7 Answers 7

7

CherryPy might be what you need. It transparently maps URLs onto Python functions, and handles all the cookie and session stuff (and of course the POST / GET parameters for you).

It's not a full-stack solution like Django or Rails. On the other hand, that means that it doesn't lump you with a template engine or ORM you don't like; you're free to use whatever you like.

It includes a WSGI compliant web server, so you don't even need Apache.

3
  • 1
    This combination works for me. In combination with SQLAlchemy, you have to be a little bit careful to get the multithreading right. You can lift this code code.google.com/p/webpyte/source/browse/trunk/webpyte/… to achieve this (or directly use webpyte)
    – stephan
    Jun 4, 2009 at 9:49
  • 1
    +1 because it's not just a minimal-effort web app framework, it's also a great introduction to writing RESTful services. Aug 12, 2009 at 17:00
  • For those coming in 2022 or later: I've used CherryPy in production for mission critical services and it performed great with it's built-in webserver for years. If you want something simple, this stiff may be it.
    – 576i
    Feb 18, 2022 at 13:48
5

For low barrier to entry, web.py is very very light and simple.

Features:

  • easy (dev) deploy... copy web.py folder into your app directory, then start the server
  • regex-based url mapping
  • very simple class mappings
  • built-in server (most frameworks have this of course)
  • very thin (as measured by lines of code, at least) layer over python application code.

Here is its hello world:

import web

urls = (
    '/(.*)', 'hello'
)
app = web.application(urls, globals())

class hello:        
    def GET(self, name):
        if not name: 
            name = 'world'
        return 'Hello, ' + name + '!'

if __name__ == "__main__":
    app.run()

As much as I like Werkzeug conceptually, writing wsgi plumbing in the Hello, World! is deeply unpleasant, and totally gets in the way of actually demoing an app.

That said, web.py isn't perfect, and for big jobs, it's probably not the right tool, since:

  • routes style systems are (imho) better than pure regex ones
  • integrating web.py with other middlewares might be adventurous
1
  • All this said, web.py has lots of issues, which might bite when your application gets heavier, so be forewarned!
    – Gregg Lind
    Jun 21, 2010 at 17:20
5

What you're describing most resembles Pylons, it seems to me. However, the number of web frameworks in/for Python is huge -- see this page for an attempt to list and VERY briefly characterize each and every one of them!-)

1

Have you looked into the Django web framework? Its an MVC framework written in python, and is relatively simple to set up and get started. You can run it with nothing but python, as it can use SQLite and its own development server, or you can set it up to use MySQL and Apache if you'd like.

Pylons is another framework that supports SQLAlchemy for models. I've never used it but it seems promising.

5
  • 1
    We've invested some amount of work into SQLAlchemy so I'd like to use that. The problem with Django is that it does support that only experimentally afaik.
    – user51710
    Jun 4, 2009 at 6:29
  • 1
    Edit: You can try Pylons if you would really like SQLAlchemy. Jun 4, 2009 at 7:01
  • The investment in SQL Alchemy should apply to the Django ORM without too much trouble. There's rewriting, but it's syntactic and minor. Also, you'll be able to drop some stuff when moving from SA to Django.
    – S.Lott
    Jun 4, 2009 at 9:55
  • Not so fast, S.Lott! What about compound primary keys and blobs in django?
    – pihentagy
    Dec 17, 2009 at 23:28
  • "syntactic and minor" -- I guess it depends on what you're doing with SA. What I tend to do with SA doesn't usually fall into that category.
    – Gregg Lind
    Jun 21, 2010 at 17:22
1

Look at:

  • WSGI, the standard Python API for HTTP servers to call Python code.
  • Django, a popular, feature-rich, well documented Python web framework
  • web.py, a minimal Python web framework
1
  • 3
    I would vote up web.py if it was in a separate comment. I don't want to vote up Django, which is not simple to deploy at all, or low barrier to entry.
    – Gregg Lind
    Aug 12, 2009 at 16:42
1

Don't forget Bottle. It is a single-file micro web framework with no dependencies and very easy to use. Here is an "Hello world" example:

from bottle import route, run
@route('/')
def index():
    return 'Hello World!'
run(host='localhost', port=8080)

And here an example for accessing POST variables (cookies and GET vars are similar)

from bottle import route, request
@route('/submit', method='POST')
def submit():
    name = request.POST.get('name', 'World')
    return 'Hello %s!' % name
0

Check out web2py. It runs out of the box with no configuration - even from a USB stick. The template language is pure Python and you can develop your entire app through the browser editor (although I find vim faster ;)

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