152

Does anyone know why I can't overwrite an existing endpoint function if i have two url rules like this

app.add_url_rule('/',
                 view_func=Main.as_view('main'),
                 methods=["GET"])

app.add_url_rule('/<page>/',
                 view_func=Main.as_view('main'),
                 methods=["GET"])

Traceback:

Traceback (most recent call last): 
  File "demo.py", line 20, in <module> methods=["GET"]) 
  File ".../python2.6/site-packages/flask‌​/app.py", 
    line 62, in wrapper_func return f(self, *args, **kwargs) 
  File ".../python2.6/site-packages/flask‌​/app.py", 
    line 984, in add_url_rule 'existing endpoint function: %s' % endpoint)  
AssertionError: View function mapping is overwriting an existing endpoint 
    function: main
3
  • Are you asking how you can, or why you can? Jun 23, 2013 at 0:23
  • 5
    why it does not work I'm following a tutorial
    – Kimmy
    Jun 23, 2013 at 0:26
  • 1
    If someone is curious to know why Flask has this boundation of unique view names see my answer to a similar question: stackoverflow.com/a/47558985/4440675 This answer explains what logic goes behind having a unique name for each method. Nov 29, 2017 at 18:28

19 Answers 19

215

This same issue happened to me when I had more than one API function in the module and tried to wrap each function with 2 decorators:

  1. @app.route()
  2. My custom @exception_handler decorator

I got this same exception because I tried to wrap more than one function with those two decorators:

@app.route("/path1")
@exception_handler
def func1():
    pass

@app.route("/path2")
@exception_handler
def func2():
    pass

Specifically, it is caused by trying to register a few functions with the name wrapper:

def exception_handler(func):
  def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
    try:
        return func(*args, **kwargs)
    except Exception as e:
        error_code = getattr(e, "code", 500)
        logger.exception("Service exception: %s", e)
        r = dict_to_json({"message": e.message, "matches": e.message, "error_code": error_code})
        return Response(r, status=error_code, mimetype='application/json')
  return wrapper

Changing the name of the function solved it for me (wrapper.__name__ = func.__name__):

def exception_handler(func):
  def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
    try:
        return func(*args, **kwargs)
    except Exception as e:
        error_code = getattr(e, "code", 500)
        logger.exception("Service exception: %s", e)
        r = dict_to_json({"message": e.message, "matches": e.message, "error_code": error_code})
        return Response(r, status=error_code, mimetype='application/json')
  # Renaming the function name:
  wrapper.__name__ = func.__name__
  return wrapper

Then, decorating more than one endpoint worked.

6
  • 50
    You can also use functools.wraps to achieve the function rename. Apr 2, 2017 at 22:46
  • 4
    I had to use wrapper.__name__ instead of wrapper.func_name. Perhaps this is a difference between python2 and python3?
    – Resonance
    Jan 30, 2018 at 11:36
  • 2
    That was the problem in my flask restful API using decorators. wrapper.__name__ = func.__name__ before calling wrapper solved the problem.
    – Tom Wojcik
    Apr 5, 2018 at 9:46
  • This is linked to the function being called wrapper, but any name for the inside function will cause this issue. The answer actually does not explain why, though. Is Flask registering this anew for each method that has been decorated and thus detects the "duplicate" or what is the root cause of this?
    – kontur
    Jan 2, 2022 at 10:54
  • this is a bug of flask!
    – marti_
    Jan 19, 2023 at 13:42
77

Your view names need to be unique even if they are pointing to the same view method.

app.add_url_rule('/',
                 view_func=Main.as_view('main'),
                 methods = ['GET'])

app.add_url_rule('/<page>/',
                 view_func=Main.as_view('page'),
                 methods = ['GET'])
1
  • In other words, the $VIEW_NAME in .as_view($VIEW_NAME) method call should be passed in as a unique string name.
    – Devy
    Apr 14, 2020 at 23:52
52

For users that use @app.route it is better to use the key-argument endpoint rather then chaning the value of __name__ like Roei Bahumi stated. Taking his example will be:

@app.route("/path1", endpoint='func1')
@exception_handler
def func1():
    pass

@app.route("/path2", endpoint='func2')
@exception_handler
def func2():
    pass
3
  • 2
    This is an excellent answer. I would just like to point out that providing the endpoint the same as actual function name is not required. You can put anything in the endpoint as long as it doesn't have a conflict. Ex. I have a situation where I am generating a function (3 times) using higher order functions, and I had to generate the endpoint name too to keep them unique.
    – Ishan
    Jan 23, 2022 at 8:17
  • Best answer, it solved my issue as well :-)
    – toshiro92
    Mar 16, 2022 at 2:58
  • This is great to know to add endpoint= and in my situation there simply was duplicate function name, so if people are reading this, be sure to check to make sure that function names are not being duplicated as we cut and paste boiler plate codes a lot. Jun 25, 2023 at 1:07
18

This can happen also when you have identical function names on different routes.

1
  • 1
    This saved me, thanks! I knew it was simple but wasn't sure what had gone wrong (serves me right for copying functions) Oct 27, 2021 at 20:45
14

Adding @wraps(f) above the wrapper function solved my issue.

def list_ownership(f):
    @wraps(f)
    def decorator(*args,**kwargs):
        return f(args,kwargs)
    return decorator
1
12

Flask requires you to associate a single 'view function' with an 'endpoint'. You are calling Main.as_view('main') twice which creates two different functions (exactly the same functionality but different in memory signature). Short story, you should simply do

main_view_func = Main.as_view('main')

app.add_url_rule('/',
             view_func=main_view_func,
             methods=["GET"])

app.add_url_rule('/<page>/',
             view_func=main_view_func,
             methods=["GET"])
8

I would just like to add to this a more 'template' type solution.

def func_name(f):
    def wrap(*args, **kwargs):
        if condition:
            pass
        else:
            whatever you want
        return f(*args, **kwargs)
    wrap.__name__ = f.__name__
    return wrap

would just like to add a really interesting article "Demystifying Decorators" I found recently: https://sumit-ghosh.com/articles/demystifying-decorators-python/

0
7

This is issue for me was from an (breaking) update to flask-jwt-extended (version 4.x.x and up) used in a basic api I wrote a year ago and am now incorporating into a project.

@jwt_required to @jwt_required()

2
2

There is a fix for Flask issue #570 introduced recenty (flask 0.10) that causes this exception to be raised.

See https://github.com/mitsuhiko/flask/issues/796

So if you go to flask/app.py and comment out the 4 lines 948..951, this may help until the issue is resovled fully in a new version.

The diff of that change is here: http://github.com/mitsuhiko/flask/commit/661ee54bc2bc1ea0763ac9c226f8e14bb0beb5b1

1
  • 3
    Re: "until the issue is resolved fully in a new version": There is no "issue" to be resolved. As the issue discussion showed, the raising of an exception in the case of the code in the question is the expected result. As explained in the accepted answer, the endpoints are in conflict. This is a fault in the code of the user of Flask, NOT in Flask itself. Jan 30, 2014 at 15:43
2

If you think you have unique endpoint names and still this error is given then probably you are facing issue. Same was the case with me.

This issue is with flask 0.10 in case you have same version then do following to get rid of this:

sudo pip uninstall flask
sudo pip install flask=0.9
2

maybe something contains no difference

  1. check url
  2. check function name
1
  • 1
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Mar 3, 2022 at 10:53
2

I'm working on a similar problem and I managed to get rid of it by returning the wrapper funcion, which wasn't being done before:

def decorator_func(func_to_decorate):
    def wrapper_func():
        return func_to_decorate
    return wrapper_func     # I wasn't returning wrapper func!
1

Your view names need to be unique even if they are pointing to the same view method, or you can add from functools import wraps and use @wraps https://docs.python.org/2/library/functools.html

1

use flask 0.9 instead use the following commands sudo pip uninstall flask

sudo pip install flask==0.9
1

In case you are using flask on python notebook, you need to restart kernel everytime you make changes in code

1

I encountered the same AssertionError, but have not seen a solution here. In my case, I run a decorated function in a Jupyter cell twice, then the error was caused by running an endpoint function with the same name as an existing running endpoint function.

1

Users of FLASK-RESTX:

The error is triggered when we use both api.init_app(app) and app.register_blueprint(). Just remove of the two.

app = Flask(__name__)
app.register_blueprint(api, url_prefix='/api/1')
app.run(debug=True)

Calling Api.init_app() is not required here because registering the blueprint with the app takes care of setting up the routing for the application.

https://flask-restx.readthedocs.io/en/latest/scaling.html

0

This can also happen if you have selected your debugger as "Python: File" instead of "Python: Flask", making it "Python: Flask" helped me get rid of the said error.

0

For those that come here later.

To expand on the comment that ryannjohnson left on this answer.

When you use the @wraps() function from the functools library, as far as I understand, it essentially allows you to achieve the same result as using wrapper.__name__ = func.__name__ except it's more concise and it doesn't require you to manually perform the renaming yourself.

Just wanted to add an answer here to make it easier to find this info for those that might not see the comments and are more focused on the submitted answers.

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