I've been using python for years, but I have little experience with python web programming. I'd like to create a very simple web service that exposes some functionality from an existing python script for use within my company. It will likely return the results in csv. What's the quickest way to get something up? If it affects your suggestion, I will likely be adding more functionality to this, down the road.
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This shows a nice quick sample: dreamsyssoft.com/blog/blog.php?/archives/…– Rocky PulleyJul 26, 2013 at 18:00
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github.com/pramttl/webipy I wrote this tool which automatically transforms your python functions into web endpoints. It has some restrictions on your function definitions, but is by far the quickest way to generate web endpoints for your python functions. Infact webipy uses django, but it automatically generates django views required for all your python functions. You do not have to write any "web code".– Pranjal MittalNov 25, 2014 at 12:01
9 Answers
Have a look at werkzeug. Werkzeug started as a simple collection of various utilities for WSGI applications and has become one of the most advanced WSGI utility modules. It includes a powerful debugger, full featured request and response objects, HTTP utilities to handle entity tags, cache control headers, HTTP dates, cookie handling, file uploads, a powerful URL routing system and a bunch of community contributed addon modules.
It includes lots of cool tools to work with http and has the advantage that you can use it with wsgi in different environments (cgi, fcgi, apache/mod_wsgi or with a plain simple python server for debugging).
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2I ended up using werkzeug for this. I love how flexible it is. Thanks for the recommendation. Apr 2, 2009 at 21:11
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1I tried about three other web frameworks before I got to this one. This is the first one I could get working out of the box. Great rec! Apr 3, 2015 at 13:52
web.py is probably the simplest web framework out there. "Bare" CGI is simpler, but you're completely on your own when it comes to making a service that actually does something.
"Hello, World!" according to web.py isn't much longer than an bare CGI version, but it adds URL mapping, HTTP command distinction, and query parameter parsing for free:
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()
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Ah yes, web.py seems great. As of now, the Web site <webpy.org> says: 500 - Internal Server Error Otherwise, our code does not work for me: ... app = web.application(urls, globals()) AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'application' Jan 6, 2009 at 9:32
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1The web site is back. You might want to check your version, as Tim's code looks right. Jan 6, 2009 at 19:57
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1I ran into this too. If you are running Ubuntu, the version that ships in the 8.10 repository is quite out-of-date. Grab the newest from the website or use easy_install and you should be golden.– bouvardJan 6, 2009 at 20:55
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according to webpy.org (the official web.py website) yandex is using web.py (they have 70 million page views/day).. so it must be efficient.. Mar 15, 2011 at 19:47
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This is exactly what I needed. Simple, straight to the point and easy to use.– GuiSimDec 9, 2012 at 18:24
The simplest way to get a Python script online is to use CGI:
#!/usr/bin/python
print "Content-type: text/html"
print
print "<p>Hello world.</p>"
Put that code in a script that lives in your web server CGI directory, make it executable, and run it. The cgi
module has a number of useful utilities when you need to accept parameters from the user.
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When doing this method make sure the handler is setup appropriately for python scripts in Apache, example: AddHandler cgi-script .cgi .pl .py May 5, 2016 at 13:28
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2The point is to run app without any additional web-server like apache. Aug 23, 2016 at 9:35
Raw CGI is kind of a pain, Django is kind of heavyweight. There are a number of simpler, lighter frameworks about, e.g. CherryPy. It's worth looking around a bit.
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2+1 for CherryPy. It's perfect for when you want something simpler than Django. Jan 7, 2009 at 14:16
Look at the WSGI reference implementation. You already have it in your Python libraries. It's quite simple.
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Like I said, my experience with python web programming is pretty limited, but a WSGI app can be run "standalone", without a web server like apache, right? Jan 6, 2009 at 15:30
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Yes. Totally stand-alone. Works great. You can't use port 80, however, without Apache or special privileges -- but that's an OS security issue.– S.LottJan 6, 2009 at 15:50
If you mean with "Web Service" something accessed by other Programms SimpleXMLRPCServer might be right for you. It is included with every Python install since Version 2.2.
For Simple human accessible things I usually use Pythons SimpleHTTPServer which also comes with every install. Obviously you also could access SimpleHTTPServer by client programs.
Life is simple if you get a good web framework. Web services in Django are easy. Define your model, write view functions that return your CSV documents. Skip the templates.
If you mean "web service" in SOAP/WSDL sense, you might want to look at Generating a WSDL using Python and SOAPpy
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I just mean "web service" in the most informal sense. Providing data via http that will be consumed by some other app. As I said in the question, it will likely be csv. Jan 6, 2009 at 15:24
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WSDL would be probably the most standards based...and that would be for being consumed...– ThufirJan 16, 2017 at 22:11
maybe Twisted http://twistedmatrix.com/trac/
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I don't have anything against Twisted, but this is exactly what I wanted to stay away from (heavy dependencies). Jan 6, 2009 at 15:25
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i agree it can be a bit daunting at first glance, but im not sure what you mean by 'heavy dependencies'. It uses packages from standard python as far as I know. There are a lot of moving parts inside the module but for simple things you don't need to do that much.– mabbitJan 8, 2009 at 3:48