- •Front Matter
- •Copyright, Trademarks, and Attributions
- •Attributions
- •Print Production
- •Contacting The Publisher
- •HTML Version and Source Code
- •Typographical Conventions
- •Author Introduction
- •Audience
- •Book Content
- •The Genesis of repoze.bfg
- •The Genesis of Pyramid
- •Thanks
- •Pyramid Introduction
- •What Makes Pyramid Unique
- •URL generation
- •Debug Toolbar
- •Debugging settings
- •Class-based and function-based views
- •Extensible templating
- •Rendered views can return dictionaries
- •Event system
- •Built-in internationalization
- •HTTP caching
- •Sessions
- •Speed
- •Exception views
- •No singletons
- •View predicates and many views per route
- •Transaction management
- •Flexible authentication and authorization
- •Traversal
- •Tweens
- •View response adapters
- •Testing
- •Support
- •Documentation
- •What Is The Pylons Project?
- •Pyramid and Other Web Frameworks
- •Installing Pyramid
- •Before You Install
- •Installing Pyramid on a UNIX System
- •Installing the virtualenv Package
- •Creating the Virtual Python Environment
- •Installing Pyramid Into the Virtual Python Environment
- •Installing Pyramid on a Windows System
- •What Gets Installed
- •Application Configuration
- •Summary
- •Creating Your First Pyramid Application
- •Hello World
- •Imports
- •View Callable Declarations
- •WSGI Application Creation
- •WSGI Application Serving
- •Conclusion
- •References
- •Creating a Pyramid Project
- •Scaffolds Included with Pyramid
- •Creating the Project
- •Installing your Newly Created Project for Development
- •Running The Tests For Your Application
- •Running The Project Application
- •Reloading Code
- •Viewing the Application
- •The Debug Toolbar
- •The Project Structure
- •The MyProject Project
- •development.ini
- •production.ini
- •MANIFEST.in
- •setup.py
- •setup.cfg
- •The myproject Package
- •__init__.py
- •views.py
- •static
- •templates/mytemplate.pt
- •tests.py
- •Modifying Package Structure
- •Using the Interactive Shell
- •What Is This pserve Thing
- •Using an Alternate WSGI Server
- •Startup
- •The Startup Process
- •Deployment Settings
- •Request Processing
- •URL Dispatch
- •High-Level Operational Overview
- •Route Pattern Syntax
- •Route Declaration Ordering
- •Route Matching
- •The Matchdict
- •The Matched Route
- •Routing Examples
- •Example 1
- •Example 2
- •Example 3
- •Matching the Root URL
- •Generating Route URLs
- •Static Routes
- •Debugging Route Matching
- •Using a Route Prefix to Compose Applications
- •Custom Route Predicates
- •Route Factories
- •Using Pyramid Security With URL Dispatch
- •Route View Callable Registration and Lookup Details
- •References
- •Views
- •View Callables
- •View Callable Responses
- •Using Special Exceptions In View Callables
- •HTTP Exceptions
- •How Pyramid Uses HTTP Exceptions
- •Custom Exception Views
- •Using a View Callable to Do an HTTP Redirect
- •Handling Form Submissions in View Callables (Unicode and Character Set Issues)
- •Alternate View Callable Argument/Calling Conventions
- •Renderers
- •Writing View Callables Which Use a Renderer
- •Built-In Renderers
- •string: String Renderer
- •json: JSON Renderer
- •JSONP Renderer
- •*.pt or *.txt: Chameleon Template Renderers
- •*.mak or *.mako: Mako Template Renderer
- •Varying Attributes of Rendered Responses
- •Deprecated Mechanism to Vary Attributes of Rendered Responses
- •Adding and Changing Renderers
- •Adding a New Renderer
- •Changing an Existing Renderer
- •Overriding A Renderer At Runtime
- •Templates
- •Using Templates Directly
- •System Values Used During Rendering
- •Chameleon ZPT Templates
- •A Sample ZPT Template
- •Using ZPT Macros in Pyramid
- •Templating with Chameleon Text Templates
- •Side Effects of Rendering a Chameleon Template
- •Debugging Templates
- •Chameleon Template Internationalization
- •Templating With Mako Templates
- •A Sample Mako Template
- •Automatically Reloading Templates
- •Available Add-On Template System Bindings
- •View Configuration
- •Mapping a Resource or URL Pattern to a View Callable
- •@view_defaults Class Decorator
- •NotFound Errors
- •Debugging View Configuration
- •Static Assets
- •Serving Static Assets
- •Generating Static Asset URLs
- •Advanced: Serving Static Assets Using a View Callable
- •Root-Relative Custom Static View (URL Dispatch Only)
- •Overriding Assets
- •The override_asset API
- •Request and Response Objects
- •Request
- •Special Attributes Added to the Request by Pyramid
- •URLs
- •Methods
- •Unicode
- •Multidict
- •Dealing With A JSON-Encoded Request Body
- •Cleaning Up After a Request
- •More Details
- •Response
- •Headers
- •Instantiating the Response
- •Exception Responses
- •More Details
- •Sessions
- •Using The Default Session Factory
- •Using a Session Object
- •Using Alternate Session Factories
- •Creating Your Own Session Factory
- •Flash Messages
- •Using the session.flash Method
- •Using the session.pop_flash Method
- •Using the session.peek_flash Method
- •Preventing Cross-Site Request Forgery Attacks
- •Using the session.get_csrf_token Method
- •Using the session.new_csrf_token Method
- •Using Events
- •An Example
- •Reloading Templates
- •Reloading Assets
- •Debugging Authorization
- •Debugging Not Found Errors
- •Debugging Route Matching
- •Preventing HTTP Caching
- •Debugging All
- •Reloading All
- •Default Locale Name
- •Including Packages
- •pyramid.includes vs. pyramid.config.Configurator.include()
- •Mako Template Render Settings
- •Mako Directories
- •Mako Module Directory
- •Mako Input Encoding
- •Mako Error Handler
- •Mako Default Filters
- •Mako Import
- •Mako Preprocessor
- •Examples
- •Understanding the Distinction Between reload_templates and reload_assets
- •Adding A Custom Setting
- •Logging
- •Sending Logging Messages
- •Filtering log messages
- •Logging Exceptions
- •PasteDeploy Configuration Files
- •PasteDeploy
- •Entry Points and PasteDeploy .ini Files
- •[DEFAULTS] Section of a PasteDeploy .ini File
- •Command-Line Pyramid
- •Displaying Matching Views for a Given URL
- •The Interactive Shell
- •Extending the Shell
- •IPython or bpython
- •Displaying All Application Routes
- •Invoking a Request
- •Writing a Script
- •Changing the Request
- •Cleanup
- •Setting Up Logging
- •Making Your Script into a Console Script
- •Internationalization and Localization
- •Creating a Translation String
- •Using The TranslationString Class
- •Using the TranslationStringFactory Class
- •Working With gettext Translation Files
- •Installing Babel and Lingua
- •Extracting Messages from Code and Templates
- •Initializing a Message Catalog File
- •Updating a Catalog File
- •Compiling a Message Catalog File
- •Using a Localizer
- •Performing a Translation
- •Performing a Pluralization
- •Obtaining the Locale Name for a Request
- •Performing Date Formatting and Currency Formatting
- •Chameleon Template Support for Translation Strings
- •Mako Pyramid I18N Support
- •Localization-Related Deployment Settings
- •Activating Translation
- •Adding a Translation Directory
- •Setting the Locale
- •Locale Negotiators
- •The Default Locale Negotiator
- •Using a Custom Locale Negotiator
- •Virtual Hosting
- •Virtual Root Support
- •Further Documentation and Examples
- •Test Set Up and Tear Down
- •What?
- •Using the Configurator and pyramid.testing APIs in Unit Tests
- •Creating Integration Tests
- •Creating Functional Tests
- •Resources
- •Location-Aware Resources
- •Generating The URL Of A Resource
- •Overriding Resource URL Generation
- •Generating the Path To a Resource
- •Finding a Resource by Path
- •Obtaining the Lineage of a Resource
- •Determining if a Resource is In The Lineage of Another Resource
- •Finding the Root Resource
- •Resources Which Implement Interfaces
- •Finding a Resource With a Class or Interface in Lineage
- •Pyramid API Functions That Act Against Resources
- •Much Ado About Traversal
- •URL Dispatch
- •Historical Refresher
- •Traversal (aka Resource Location)
- •View Lookup
- •Use Cases
- •Traversal
- •Traversal Details
- •The Resource Tree
- •The Traversal Algorithm
- •A Description of The Traversal Algorithm
- •Traversal Algorithm Examples
- •References
- •Security
- •Enabling an Authorization Policy
- •Enabling an Authorization Policy Imperatively
- •Protecting Views with Permissions
- •Setting a Default Permission
- •Assigning ACLs to your Resource Objects
- •Elements of an ACL
- •Special Principal Names
- •Special Permissions
- •Special ACEs
- •ACL Inheritance and Location-Awareness
- •Changing the Forbidden View
- •Debugging View Authorization Failures
- •Debugging Imperative Authorization Failures
- •Creating Your Own Authentication Policy
- •Creating Your Own Authorization Policy
- •Combining Traversal and URL Dispatch
- •A Review of Non-Hybrid Applications
- •URL Dispatch Only
- •Traversal Only
- •Hybrid Applications
- •The Root Object for a Route Match
- •Using *traverse In a Route Pattern
- •Using *subpath in a Route Pattern
- •Corner Cases
- •Registering a Default View for a Route That Has a view Attribute
- •Using Hooks
- •Changing the Not Found View
- •Changing the Forbidden View
- •Changing the Request Factory
- •Using The Before Render Event
- •Adding Renderer Globals (Deprecated)
- •Using Response Callbacks
- •Using Finished Callbacks
- •Changing the Traverser
- •Changing How pyramid.request.Request.resource_url() Generates a URL
- •Changing How Pyramid Treats View Responses
- •Using a View Mapper
- •Creating a Tween Factory
- •Registering an Implicit Tween Factory
- •Suggesting Implicit Tween Ordering
- •Explicit Tween Ordering
- •Displaying Tween Ordering
- •Pyramid Configuration Introspection
- •Using the Introspector
- •Introspectable Objects
- •Pyramid Introspection Categories
- •Introspection in the Toolbar
- •Disabling Introspection
- •Rules for Building An Extensible Application
- •Fundamental Plugpoints
- •Extending an Existing Application
- •Extending the Application
- •Overriding Views
- •Overriding Routes
- •Overriding Assets
- •Advanced Configuration
- •Two-Phase Configuration
- •Using config.action in a Directive
- •Adding Configuration Introspection
- •Introspectable Relationships
- •Thread Locals
- •Why and How Pyramid Uses Thread Local Variables
- •Using the Zope Component Architecture in Pyramid
- •Using the ZCA Global API in a Pyramid Application
- •Disusing the Global ZCA API
- •Enabling the ZCA Global API by Using hook_zca
- •Enabling the ZCA Global API by Using The ZCA Global Registry
- •Background
- •Design
- •Overall
- •Models
- •Views
- •Security
- •Summary
- •Installation
- •Preparation
- •Make a Project
- •Run the Tests
- •Expose Test Coverage Information
- •Start the Application
- •Visit the Application in a Browser
- •Decisions the zodb Scaffold Has Made For You
- •Basic Layout
- •Resources and Models with models.py
- •Views With views.py
- •Defining the Domain Model
- •Delete the Database
- •Edit models.py
- •Look at the Result of Our Edits to models.py
- •View the Application in a Browser
- •Defining Views
- •Declaring Dependencies in Our setup.py File
- •Adding View Functions
- •Viewing the Result of all Our Edits to views.py
- •Adding Templates
- •Viewing the Application in a Browser
- •Adding Authorization
- •Add Authentication and Authorization Policies
- •Add security.py
- •Give Our Root Resource an ACL
- •Add Login and Logout Views
- •Change Existing Views
- •Add permission Declarations to our view_config Decorators
- •Add the login.pt Template
- •Change view.pt and edit.pt
- •See Our Changes To views.py and our Templates
- •View the Application in a Browser
- •Adding Tests
- •Test the Models
- •Test the Views
- •Functional tests
- •View the results of all our edits to tests.py
- •Run the Tests
- •Distributing Your Application
- •SQLAlchemy + URL Dispatch Wiki Tutorial
- •Background
- •Design
- •Overall
- •Models
- •Views
- •Security
- •Summary
- •Installation
- •Preparation
- •Making a Project
- •Running the Tests
- •Exposing Test Coverage Information
- •Initializing the Database
- •Starting the Application
- •Decisions the alchemy Scaffold Has Made For You
- •Basic Layout
- •View Declarations via views.py
- •Content Models with models.py
- •Making Edits to models.py
- •Changing scripts/initializedb.py
- •Reinitializing the Database
- •Viewing the Application in a Browser
- •Defining Views
- •Declaring Dependencies in Our setup.py File
- •Running setup.py develop
- •Changing the views.py File
- •Adding Templates
- •Adding Routes to __init__.py
- •Viewing the Application in a Browser
- •Adding Authorization
- •Adding A Root Factory
- •Add an Authorization Policy and an Authentication Policy
- •Adding an authentication policy callback
- •Adding Login and Logout Views
- •Changing Existing Views
- •Adding the login.pt Template
- •Seeing Our Changes To views.py and our Templates
- •Viewing the Application in a Browser
- •Adding Tests
- •Testing the Models
- •Testing the Views
- •Functional tests
- •Viewing the results of all our edits to tests.py
- •Running the Tests
- •Distributing Your Application
- •Converting a repoze.bfg Application to Pyramid
- •Running a Pyramid Application under mod_wsgi
- •pyramid.authorization
- •pyramid.authentication
- •Authentication Policies
- •Helper Classes
- •pyramid.chameleon_text
- •pyramid.chameleon_zpt
- •pyramid.config
- •pyramid.events
- •Functions
- •Event Types
- •pyramid.exceptions
- •pyramid.httpexceptions
- •HTTP Exceptions
- •pyramid.i18n
- •pyramid.interfaces
- •Event-Related Interfaces
- •Other Interfaces
- •pyramid.location
- •pyramid.paster
- •pyramid.registry
- •pyramid.renderers
- •pyramid.request
- •pyramid.response
- •Functions
- •pyramid.scripting
- •pyramid.security
- •Authentication API Functions
- •Authorization API Functions
- •Constants
- •Return Values
- •pyramid.settings
- •pyramid.testing
- •pyramid.threadlocal
- •pyramid.traversal
- •pyramid.url
- •pyramid.view
- •pyramid.wsgi
- •Glossary
24.10. FINDING A RESOURCE WITH A CLASS OR INTERFACE IN LINEAGE
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entry = BlogEntry(’title’, ’body’, ’author’) directlyProvides(entry, IBlogEntry)
zope.interface.directlyProvides() will replace any existing interface that was previously provided by an instance. If a resource object already has instance-level interface declarations that you don’t want to replace, use the zope.interface.alsoProvides() function:
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import datetime |
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from zope.interface import alsoProvides |
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from zope.interface import directlyProvides |
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from zope.interface import Interface |
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|
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class IBlogEntry1(Interface): |
7pass
8 |
|
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class IBlogEntry2(Interface): |
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pass |
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24. RESOURCES
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class Thing1(object): pass class Thing2(object): pass
a = Thing1() b = Thing2()
b.__parent__ = a
Calling find_interface(a, Thing1) will return the a resource because a is of class Thing1 (the resource passed as the first argument is considered first, and is returned if the class or interface spec matches).
Calling find_interface(b, Thing1) will return the a resource because a is of class Thing1 and a is the first resource in b‘s lineage of this class.
Calling find_interface(b, Thing2) will return the b resource.
The second argument to find_interface may also be a interface instead of a class. If it is an interface, each resource in the lineage is checked to see if the resource implements the specificed interface (instead of seeing if the resource is of a class). See also Resources Which Implement Interfaces.
24.11 Pyramid API Functions That Act Against Resources
A resource object is used as the context provided to a view. See Traversal and URL Dispatch for more information about how a resource object becomes the context.
The APIs provided by pyramid.traversal are used against resource objects. These functions can be used to find the “path” of a resource, the root resource in a resource tree, or to generate a URL for a resource.
The APIs provided by pyramid.location are used against resources. These can be used to walk down a resource tree, or conveniently locate one resource “inside” another.
Some APIs in pyramid.security accept a resource object as a parameter. For example, the has_permission() API accepts a resource object as one of its arguments; the ACL is obtained from this resource or one of its ancestors. Other APIs in the pyramid.security module also accept context as an argument, and a context is always a resource.
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