As many of you know, Flaskr -- a mini-blog-like-app -- is the app that you build for the official Flask tutorial. I've gone through the tutorial more times than I care to admit. Anyway, I wanted to take the tutorial a step further by adding Test-Driven Development (TDD), a bit of JavaScript, and deployment. This post is that tutorial. Enjoy.
Also, if you are completely new to Flask and/or web development in general, it's important to grasp these basic fundamental concepts:
- The difference between GET and POST requests and how functions within the app handle each.
- What "requests" and "responses" are.
- How HTML pages are rendered and/or returned to the end user.
NOTE: This project is powered by TestDriven.io. Please support this open source project by purchasing one of our Flask courses. Learn how to build, test, and deploy microservices powered by Docker, Flask, and React!
This tutorial was last updated on November 5th, 2019:
- 11/05/2019:
- Updated to Python 3.8.0, Flask 1.1.1, and Bootstrap 4.3.1.
- Replaced jQuery with vanilla JavaScript.
- Added Black and Flake8.
- Used Postgres in production.
- Restricted post delete requests.
- 10/07/2018: Updated to Python 3.7.0
- 05/10/2018: Updated to Python 3.6.5, Flask 1.0.2, Bootstrap 4.1.1
- 10/16/2017:
- Updated to Python 3.6.2
- Updated to Bootstrap 4
- 10/10/2017: Added a search feature
- 07/03/2017: Updated to Python 3.6.1
- 01/24/2016: Updated to Python 3! (v3.5.1)
- 08/24/2014: PEP8 updates.
- 02/25/2014: Upgraded to SQLAlchemy.
- 02/20/2014: Completed AJAX.
- 12/06/2013: Added Bootstrap 3 styles
- 11/29/2013: Updated unit tests.
- 11/19/2013: Fixed typo. Updated unit tests.
- 11/11/2013: Added information on requests.
- Test Driven Development?
- Download Python
- Project Setup
- First Test
- Flaskr Setup
- Second Test
- Database Setup
- Templates and Views
- Add Some Color
- Test
- JavaScript
- Deployment
- Test (again!)
- Bootstrap
- SQLAlchemy
- Search Page
- Login Required
- Postgres Heroku
- Linting and Code Formatting
- Conclusion
This tutorial utilizes the following requirements:
- Python v3.8.0
- Flask v1.1.1
- Flask-SQLAlchemy v2.4.1
- Gunicorn v19.9.0
- Psycopg2 v2.8.4
- Flake8 v3.7.9
- Black v19.10b0
Test-Driven Development (TDD) is an iterative development cycle that emphasizes writing automated tests before writing the actual feature or function. Put another way, TDD combines building and testing. This process not only helps ensure correctness of the code -- but also helps to indirectly evolve the design and architecture of the project at hand.
TDD usually follows the "Red-Green-Refactor" cycle, as shown in the image above:
- Write a test
- Run the test (it should fail)
- Write just enough code for the test to pass
- Refactor code and retest, again and again (if necessary)
For more, check out What is Test-Driven Development?.
Before beginning make sure you have the latest version of Python 3.8 installed, which you can download from http://www.python.org/download/.
NOTE: This tutorial uses Python v3.8.0.
Along with Python, the following tools are also installed:
- pip - a package management system for Python, similar to gem or npm for Ruby and Node, respectively.
- venv - used to create isolated environments for development. This is standard practice. Always, always, ALWAYS utilize virtual environments. If you don't, you will eventually run into problems with dependency conflicts.
-
Create a new directory to store the project:
$ mkdir flaskr-tdd $ cd flaskr-tdd
-
Create and activate your virtual env:
$ python3.8 -m venv env $ source env/bin/activate
NOTE: You know that you are in a virtual environment as
env
is now showing before the$
in your terminal --(env)$
. To exit the virtual environment, use the commanddeactivate
. You can reactivate by navigating back to the project directory and runningsource env/bin/activate
. -
Install Flask with pip:
(env)$ pip install flask==1.1.1
Let's start with a simple "hello, world" app.
-
Create a test file:
(env)$ touch app.test.py
Open this file in your favorite text editor -- like Visual Studio Code, Sublime Text, or PyCharm -- and then add the following code:
import unittest from app import app class BasicTestCase(unittest.TestCase): def test_index(self): tester = app.test_client(self) response = tester.get('/', content_type='html/text') self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200) self.assertEqual(response.data, b'Hello, World!') if __name__ == '__main__': unittest.main()
Essentially, we're testing whether the response that we get back is "200" and that "Hello, World!" is displayed.
-
Run the test:
(env)$ python app.test.py
If all goes well, this will fail:
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'app'
-
Now add the code for this to pass.
(env)$ touch app.py
Code:
from flask import Flask app = Flask(__name__) @app.route('/') def hello(): return 'Hello, World!' if __name__ == '__main__': app.run()
-
Run the app:
(env)$ python app.py
Then Navigate to http://localhost:5000/ in your browser of choice. You should see "Hello, World!" on your screen.
Return to the terminal. Kill the server with Ctrl+C.
-
Run the test again:
(env)$ python app.test.py . ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 1 test in 0.010s OK
Nice.
-
Add structure
Add two folders, "static" and "templates", in the project root. Your file structure should now look like this:
├── app.py ├── app.test.py ├── static └── templates
-
SQL Schema
Create a new file called schema.sql and add the following code:
drop table if exists entries; create table entries ( id integer primary key autoincrement, title text not null, text text not null );
This will set up a single table with three fields -- "id", "title", and "text". SQLite will be used for our RDMS since it's part of the standard Python library and requires no configuration.
Let's create the basic file for running our application. Before that though, we need to write a test.
-
Simply alter app.test.py like so:
import unittest from app import app class BasicTestCase(unittest.TestCase): def test_index(self): tester = app.test_client(self) response = tester.get('/', content_type='html/text') self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 404) if __name__ == '__main__': unittest.main()
So, we are expecting a 404 error. Run the test. This will fail. Why? We are expecting a 404, but we actually get a 200 back since the route exists.
-
Update app.py:
# imports import sqlite3 from flask import Flask, request, session, g, redirect, url_for, \ abort, render_template, flash, jsonify # configuration DATABASE = 'flaskr.db' DEBUG = True SECRET_KEY = 'my_precious' USERNAME = 'admin' PASSWORD = 'admin' # create and initialize app app = Flask(__name__) app.config.from_object(__name__) if __name__ == '__main__': app.run()
Here, we add in all the required imports, create a configuration section for global variables, initialize the app, and then finally run the app.
-
Run it:
(env)$ python app.py
Launch the server. You should see the 404 error because no routes or views are setup. Return to the terminal. Kill the server. Now run the test. It should pass.
Essentially, we want to open a database connection, create the database based on the schema if it doesn't already exist, then close the connection each time a test is ran.
-
How do we test for the existence of a file? Update app.test.py:
import os import unittest from app import app class BasicTestCase(unittest.TestCase): def test_index(self): tester = app.test_client(self) response = tester.get('/', content_type='html/text') self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 404) def test_database(self): tester = os.path.exists("flaskr.db") self.assertTrue(tester) if __name__ == '__main__': unittest.main()
Run it to make sure it fails, indicating that the database does not exist.
-
Now add the following code to app.py:
# connect to database def connect_db(): """Connects to the database.""" rv = sqlite3.connect(app.config['DATABASE']) rv.row_factory = sqlite3.Row return rv # create the database def init_db(): with app.app_context(): db = get_db() with app.open_resource('schema.sql', mode='r') as f: db.cursor().executescript(f.read()) db.commit() # open database connection def get_db(): if not hasattr(g, 'sqlite_db'): g.sqlite_db = connect_db() return g.sqlite_db # close database connection @app.teardown_appcontext def close_db(error): if hasattr(g, 'sqlite_db'): g.sqlite_db.close()
And add the
init_db()
function at the bottom ofapp.py
to make sure we start the server each time with a fresh database:if __name__ == '__main__': init_db() app.run()
Now it's possible to create a database by starting up a Python shell and importing and calling the
init_db()
function:>>> from app import init_db >>> init_db()
Close the shell, then run the test again. Does it pass? Now we know that the database has been created.
Next, we need to set up the templates and the associated views, which define the routes. Think about this from a user standpoint:
- Users should be able to log in and out.
- Once logged in, users should be able to post.
- Finally, users should be able to view the posts.
Write some tests for this first.
Take a look at the final code. I added docstrings for explanation.
import os
import unittest
import tempfile
import app
class BasicTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def test_index(self):
"""Initial test: Ensure flask was set up correctly."""
tester = app.app.test_client(self)
response = tester.get('/', content_type='html/text')
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
def test_database(self):
"""Initial test: Ensure that the database exists."""
tester = os.path.exists("flaskr.db")
self.assertEqual(tester, True)
class FlaskrTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
"""Set up a blank temp database before each test."""
self.db_fd, app.app.config['DATABASE'] = tempfile.mkstemp()
app.app.config['TESTING'] = True
self.app = app.app.test_client()
app.init_db()
def tearDown(self):
"""Destroy blank temp database after each test."""
os.close(self.db_fd)
os.unlink(app.app.config['DATABASE'])
def login(self, username, password):
"""Login helper function."""
return self.app.post('/login', data=dict(
username=username,
password=password
), follow_redirects=True)
def logout(self):
"""Logout helper function."""
return self.app.get('/logout', follow_redirects=True)
# assert functions
def test_empty_db(self):
"""Ensure database is blank."""
rv = self.app.get('/')
assert b'No entries here so far' in rv.data
def test_login_logout(self):
"""Test login and logout using helper functions."""
rv = self.login(
app.app.config['USERNAME'],
app.app.config['PASSWORD']
)
assert b'You were logged in' in rv.data
rv = self.logout()
assert b'You were logged out' in rv.data
rv = self.login(
app.app.config['USERNAME'] + 'x',
app.app.config['PASSWORD']
)
assert b'Invalid username' in rv.data
rv = self.login(
app.app.config['USERNAME'],
app.app.config['PASSWORD'] + 'x'
)
assert b'Invalid password' in rv.data
def test_messages(self):
"""Ensure that a user can post messages."""
self.login(
app.app.config['USERNAME'],
app.app.config['PASSWORD']
)
rv = self.app.post('/add', data=dict(
title='<Hello>',
text='<strong>HTML</strong> allowed here'
), follow_redirects=True)
assert b'No entries here so far' not in rv.data
assert b'<Hello>' in rv.data
assert b'<strong>HTML</strong> allowed here' in rv.data
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
Run the tests now:
(env)$ python app.test.py
All will fail except for test_database()
:
.FFFF
======================================================================
FAIL: test_index (__main__.BasicTestCase)
Initial test: Ensure flask was set up correctly.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "app.test.py", line 14, in test_index
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
AssertionError: 404 != 200
======================================================================
FAIL: test_empty_db (__main__.FlaskrTestCase)
Ensure database is blank.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "app.test.py", line 52, in test_empty_db
assert b'No entries here so far' in rv.data
AssertionError
======================================================================
FAIL: test_login_logout (__main__.FlaskrTestCase)
Test login and logout using helper functions.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "app.test.py", line 60, in test_login_logout
assert b'You were logged in' in rv.data
AssertionError
======================================================================
FAIL: test_messages (__main__.FlaskrTestCase)
Ensure that a user can post messages.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "app.test.py", line 85, in test_messages
assert b'<Hello>' in rv.data
AssertionError
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 5 tests in 0.030s
FAILED (failures=4)
Let's get these all green, one at a time...
-
First, add a view for displaying the entries to app.py:
@app.route('/') def show_entries(): """Searches the database for entries, then displays them.""" db = get_db() cur = db.execute('select * from entries order by id desc') entries = cur.fetchall() return render_template('index.html', entries=entries)
-
Then add the index.html template to the "templates" folder:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>Flaskr</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{{ url_for('static', filename='style.css') }}"> </head> <body> <div class="page"> <h1>Flaskr-TDD</h1> <div class="metanav"> {% if not session.logged_in %} <a href="{{ url_for('login') }}">log in</a> {% else %} <a href="{{ url_for('logout') }}">log out</a> {% endif %} </div> {% for message in get_flashed_messages() %} <div class="flash">{{ message }}</div> {% endfor %} {% block body %}{% endblock %} {% if session.logged_in %} <form action="{{ url_for('add_entry') }}" method="post" class="add-entry"> <dl> <dt>Title:</dt> <dd><input type="text" size="30" name="title"></dd> <dt>Text:</dt> <dd><textarea name="text" rows="5" cols="40"></textarea></dd> <dd><input type="submit" value="Share"></dd> </dl> </form> {% endif %} <ul class="entries"> {% for entry in entries %} <li><h2>{{ entry.title }}</h2>{{ entry.text|safe }}</li> {% else %} <li><em>No entries yet. Add some!</em></li> {% endfor %} </ul> </div> </body> </html>
-
Run the tests now. You should see:
Ran 5 tests in 0.048s FAILED (failures=2, errors=2)
-
Update app.py:
@app.route('/login', methods=['GET', 'POST']) def login(): """User login/authentication/session management.""" error = None if request.method == 'POST': if request.form['username'] != app.config['USERNAME']: error = 'Invalid username' elif request.form['password'] != app.config['PASSWORD']: error = 'Invalid password' else: session['logged_in'] = True flash('You were logged in') return redirect(url_for('index')) return render_template('login.html', error=error) @app.route('/logout') def logout(): """User logout/authentication/session management.""" session.pop('logged_in', None) flash('You were logged out') return redirect(url_for('index'))
In the above
login()
function, the decorator indicates that the route can accept either a GET or POST request. Put simply, a request is initiated by the end user when they access the/login
url. The difference between these requests is simple -- GET is used for accessing a webpage, while POST is used when information is sent to the server. Thus, when a user accesses the/login
url, they are using a GET request, but when they attempt to log in, a POST request is used. -
Add the template - login.html:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>Flaskr-TDD | Login</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{{ url_for('static', filename='style.css') }}"> </head> <body> <div class="page"> <h1>Flaskr</h1> <div class="metanav"> {% if not session.logged_in %} <a href="{{ url_for('login') }}">log in</a> {% else %} <a href="{{ url_for('logout') }}">log out</a> {% endif %} </div> {% for message in get_flashed_messages() %} <div class="flash">{{ message }}</div> {% endfor %} {% block body %}{% endblock %} <h2>Login</h2> {% if error %} <p class="error"><strong>Error:</strong> {{ error }}</p> {% endif %} <form action="{{ url_for('login') }}" method="post"> <dl> <dt>Username:</dt> <dd><input type="text" name="username"></dd> <dt>Password:</dt> <dd><input type="password" name="password"></dd> <dd><input type="submit" value="Login"></dd> </dl> </form> </div> </body> </html>
-
Run the tests again.
You should still see some errors! Look at one of the errors --
werkzeug.routing.BuildError: Could not build url for endpoint 'index'. Did you mean 'login' instead?
Essentially, we are trying to redirect to the
index()
function, which does not exist. Rename theshow_entries()
function toindex()
within app.py then re-test:Ran 5 tests in 0.048s FAILED (failures=1, errors=2)
-
Next, add in a view for adding entries:
@app.route('/add', methods=['POST']) def add_entry(): """Add new post to database.""" if not session.get('logged_in'): abort(401) db = get_db() db.execute( 'insert into entries (title, text) values (?, ?)', [request.form['title'], request.form['text']] ) db.commit() flash('New entry was successfully posted') return redirect(url_for('index'))
-
Retest.
Now you should see:
..F.. ====================================================================== FAIL: test_empty_db (__main__.FlaskrTestCase) Ensure database is blank. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "app.test.py", line 52, in test_empty_db assert b'No entries here so far' in rv.data AssertionError ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 5 tests in 0.054s FAILED (failures=1)
This error is asserting that when the route
/
is hit, the message "No entries here so far" is returned. Check the index.html template. The message actually reads "No entries yet. Add some!". So update the test and then retest:Ran 5 tests in 0.055s OK
Perfect.
Save the following styles to a new file called style.css in the "static" folder:
body {
font-family: sans-serif;
background: #eee;
}
a, h1, h2 {
color: #377BA8;
}
h1, h2 {
font-family: 'Georgia', serif;
margin: 0;
}
h1 {
border-bottom: 2px solid #eee;
}
h2 {
font-size: 1.2em;
}
.page {
margin: 2em auto;
width: 35em;
border: 5px solid #ccc;
padding: 0.8em;
background: white;
}
.entries {
list-style: none;
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
.entries li {
margin: 0.8em 1.2em;
}
.entries li h2 {
margin-left: -1em;
}
.add-entry {
font-size: 0.9em;
border-bottom: 1px solid #ccc;
}
.add-entry dl {
font-weight: bold;
}
.metanav {
text-align: right;
font-size: 0.8em;
padding: 0.3em;
margin-bottom: 1em;
background: #fafafa;
}
.flash {
background: #CEE5F5;
padding: 0.5em;
border: 1px solid #AACBE2;
}
.error {
background: #F0D6D6;
padding: 0.5em;
}
Run your app, log in (username/password = "admin"), add a post, log out.
Now let's add some JavaScript to make the site slightly more interactive.
-
Open index.html and update the first
<li
> like so:<li class="entry"> <h2 id="{{ entry.id }}">{{ entry.title }}</h2> {{ entry.text|safe }} </li>
Now we can use JavaScript to target each
<li
>. First, we need to add the following script to the document just before the closing body tag:<script type="text/javascript" src="{{url_for('static', filename='main.js') }}"></script>
-
Create a main.js file in your "static" directory and add the following code:
(function() { console.log('ready!'); // sanity check })(); const postElements = document.getElementsByClassName('entry'); for (var i = 0; i < postElements.length; i++) { postElements[i].addEventListener('click', function() { const postId = this.getElementsByTagName('h2')[0].getAttribute('id'); const node = this; fetch(`/delete/${postId}`) .then(function(resp) { return resp.json(); }) .then(function(result) { if (result.status === 1) { node.parentNode.removeChild(node); console.log(result); } location.reload(); }) .catch(function(err) { console.log(err); }); }); }
-
Add a new function in app.py to remove the post from the database:
@app.route('/delete/<post_id>', methods=['GET']) def delete_entry(post_id): """Delete post from database""" result = {'status': 0, 'message': 'Error'} try: db = get_db() db.execute('delete from entries where id=' + post_id) db.commit() result = {'status': 1, 'message': "Post Deleted"} except Exception as e: result = {'status': 0, 'message': repr(e)} return jsonify(result)
-
Finally, add a new test:
def test_delete_message(self): """Ensure the messages are being deleted.""" rv = self.app.get('/delete/1') data = json.loads((rv.data).decode('utf-8')) self.assertEqual(data['status'], 1)
Make sure to add the following import as well --
import json
.Manually test this out by running the server and adding two new entries. Click on one of them. It should be removed from the DOM as well as the database. Double check this.
Then run your automated test suite. It should pass:
...... ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 6 tests in 0.062s OK
With the app in a working state, let's shift gears and deploy the app to Heroku.
-
To do this, first sign up and then install the Heroku CLI.
-
Next, install a production-grade WSGI web server called Gunicorn:
(env)$ pip install gunicorn==19.9.0
-
Create a Procfile in the project root:
(env)$ touch Procfile
And add the following code:
web: gunicorn app:app
-
Create a requirements.txt file to specify the external dependencies that need to be installed for the app to work:
(env)$ pip freeze > requirements.txt
-
Create a .gitignore file in the project root:
(env)$ touch .gitignore
And include the following files and folders (so they are not included in version control):
env *.pyc *.DS_Store __pycache__
-
To specify the correct Python runtime, add a new file to the project root called runtime.txt:
python-3.8.0
-
Add a local Git repo:
(env)$ git init (env)$ git add -A (env)$ git commit -m "initial"
-
Deploy to Heroku:
(env)$ heroku create (env)$ git push heroku master
Let's test this in the cloud. Run heroku open
to open the app in the browser.
Let's update the styles with Bootstrap 4.
-
First, remove the style.css stylesheet from both index.html and login.html. Then add this stylesheet to both files:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.3.1/css/bootstrap.min.css">
Now we have full access to all of the Bootstrap helper classes.
-
Replace the code in login.html with:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>Flaskr-TDD | Login</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.3.1/css/bootstrap.min.css"> </head> <body> <div class="container"> <br><br> <h1>Flaskr</h1> <br><br> {% for message in get_flashed_messages() %} <div class="flash alert alert-success col-sm-4" role="success">{{ message }}</div> {% endfor %} <h3>Login</h3> {% if error %}<p class="alert alert-danger col-sm-4" role="danger"><strong>Error:</strong> {{ error }}</p>{% endif %} <form action="{{ url_for('login') }}" method="post" class="form-group"> <dl> <dt>Username:</dt> <dd><input type="text" name="username" class="form-control col-sm-4"></dd> <dt>Password:</dt> <dd><input type="password" name="password" class="form-control col-sm-4"></dd> <br><br> <dd><input type="submit" class="btn btn-primary" value="Login"></dd> <span>Use "admin" for username and password</span> </dl> </form> </div> <script type="text/javascript" src="{{url_for('static', filename='main.js') }}"></script> </body> </html>
-
And replace the code in index.html with:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>Flaskr</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.3.1/css/bootstrap.min.css"> </head> <body> <div class="container"> <br><br> <h1>Flaskr</h1> <br><br> {% if not session.logged_in %} <a class="btn btn-success" role="button" href="{{ url_for('login') }}">log in</a> {% else %} <a class="btn btn-warning" role="button" href="{{ url_for('logout') }}">log out</a> {% endif %} <br><br> {% for message in get_flashed_messages() %} <div class="flash alert alert-success col-sm-4" role="success">{{ message }}</div> {% endfor %} {% if session.logged_in %} <form action="{{ url_for('add_entry') }}" method="post" class="add-entry form-group"> <dl> <dt>Title:</dt> <dd><input type="text" size="30" name="title" class="form-control col-sm-4"></dd> <dt>Text:</dt> <dd><textarea name="text" rows="5" cols="40" class="form-control col-sm-4"></textarea></dd> <br><br> <dd><input type="submit" class="btn btn-primary" value="Share"></dd> </dl> </form> {% endif %} <br> <ul class="entries"> {% for entry in entries %} <li class="entry"><h2 id="{{ entry.id }}">{{ entry.title }}</h2>{{ entry.text|safe }}</li> {% else %} <li><em>No entries yet. Add some!</em></li> {% endfor %} </ul> </div> <script type="text/javascript" src="{{url_for('static', filename='main.js') }}"></script> </body> </html>
-
Run the app locally:
(env)$ python app.py
Check out your changes in the browser!
Let's upgrade to Flask-SQLAlchemy, in order to better manage our database.
-
Start by installing Flask-SQLAlchemy:
(env)$ pip install Flask-SQLAlchemy==2.4.1
-
Create a create_db.py file, then add the following code:
# create_db.py from app import db from models import Flaskr # create the database and the db table db.create_all() # commit the changes db.session.commit()
This file will be used to create our new database. Go ahead and delete the old .db (flaskr.db) along with the schema.sql file.
-
Next add a models.py file, which will be used to generate the new schema:
from app import db class Flaskr(db.Model): __tablename__ = 'flaskr' post_id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True) title = db.Column(db.String, nullable=False) text = db.Column(db.String, nullable=False) def __init__(self, title, text): self.title = title self.text = text def __repr__(self): return f'<title {self.body}>'
# imports
import os
from flask import Flask, request, session, g, redirect, url_for, \
abort, render_template, flash, jsonify
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
# get the folder where this file runs
basedir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
# configuration
DATABASE = 'flaskr.db'
DEBUG = True
SECRET_KEY = 'my_precious'
USERNAME = 'admin'
PASSWORD = 'admin'
# define the full path for the database
DATABASE_PATH = os.path.join(basedir, DATABASE)
# database config
SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI = 'sqlite:///' + DATABASE_PATH
SQLALCHEMY_TRACK_MODIFICATIONS = False
# create app
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config.from_object(__name__)
db = SQLAlchemy(app)
import models
@app.route('/')
def index():
"""Searches the database for entries, then displays them."""
entries = db.session.query(models.Flaskr)
return render_template('index.html', entries=entries)
@app.route('/add', methods=['POST'])
def add_entry():
"""Adds new post to the database."""
if not session.get('logged_in'):
abort(401)
new_entry = models.Flaskr(request.form['title'], request.form['text'])
db.session.add(new_entry)
db.session.commit()
flash('New entry was successfully posted')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/login', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def login():
"""User login/authentication/session management."""
error = None
if request.method == 'POST':
if request.form['username'] != app.config['USERNAME']:
error = 'Invalid username'
elif request.form['password'] != app.config['PASSWORD']:
error = 'Invalid password'
else:
session['logged_in'] = True
flash('You were logged in')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
return render_template('login.html', error=error)
@app.route('/logout')
def logout():
"""User logout/authentication/session management."""
session.pop('logged_in', None)
flash('You were logged out')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/delete/<int:post_id>', methods=['GET'])
def delete_entry(post_id):
"""Deletes post from database."""
result = {'status': 0, 'message': 'Error'}
try:
new_id = post_id
db.session.query(models.Flaskr).filter_by(post_id=new_id).delete()
db.session.commit()
result = {'status': 1, 'message': "Post Deleted"}
flash('The entry was deleted.')
except Exception as e:
result = {'status': 0, 'message': repr(e)}
return jsonify(result)
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
Notice the changes in the config at the top as well the means in which we're now accessing and manipulating the database in each view function -- via SQLAlchemy instead of vanilla SQL.
Run the following command to create the initial database:
(env)$ python create_db.py
Update this line:
<li class="entry"><h2 id="{{ entry.post_id }}">{{ entry.title }}</h2>{{ entry.text|safe }}</li>
Pay attention to the post_id
. Check the database to ensure that there is a matching field.
Finally, update the tests:
import unittest
import os
import json
from app import app, db
TEST_DB = 'test.db'
class BasicTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def test_index(self):
"""initial test. ensure flask was set up correctly"""
tester = app.test_client(self)
response = tester.get('/', content_type='html/text')
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
def test_database(self):
"""initial test. ensure that the database exists"""
tester = os.path.exists("flaskr.db")
self.assertTrue(tester)
class FlaskrTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
"""Set up a blank temp database before each test"""
basedir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
app.config['TESTING'] = True
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'] = 'sqlite:///' + \
os.path.join(basedir, TEST_DB)
self.app = app.test_client()
db.create_all()
def tearDown(self):
"""Destroy blank temp database after each test"""
db.drop_all()
def login(self, username, password):
"""Login helper function"""
return self.app.post('/login', data=dict(
username=username,
password=password
), follow_redirects=True)
def logout(self):
"""Logout helper function"""
return self.app.get('/logout', follow_redirects=True)
# assert functions
def test_empty_db(self):
"""Ensure database is blank"""
rv = self.app.get('/')
self.assertIn(b'No entries yet. Add some!', rv.data)
def test_login_logout(self):
"""Test login and logout using helper functions"""
rv = self.login(app.config['USERNAME'], app.config['PASSWORD'])
self.assertIn(b'You were logged in', rv.data)
rv = self.logout()
self.assertIn(b'You were logged out', rv.data)
rv = self.login(app.config['USERNAME'] + 'x', app.config['PASSWORD'])
self.assertIn(b'Invalid username', rv.data)
rv = self.login(app.config['USERNAME'], app.config['PASSWORD'] + 'x')
self.assertIn(b'Invalid password', rv.data)
def test_messages(self):
"""Ensure that user can post messages"""
self.login(app.config['USERNAME'], app.config['PASSWORD'])
rv = self.app.post('/add', data=dict(
title='<Hello>',
text='<strong>HTML</strong> allowed here'
), follow_redirects=True)
self.assertNotIn(b'No entries here so far', rv.data)
self.assertIn(b'<Hello>', rv.data)
self.assertIn(b'<strong>HTML</strong> allowed here', rv.data)
def test_delete_message(self):
"""Ensure the messages are being deleted"""
rv = self.app.get('/delete/1')
data = json.loads(rv.data)
self.assertEqual(data['status'], 1)
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
We've mostly just updated the setUp()
and tearDown()
methods.
Run the tests, and then manually test it by running the server and logging in and out, adding new entries, and deleting old entries.
If all is well, update your requirements (pip freeze > requirements.txt
) commit your code, then PUSH the new version to Heroku!
Let's add a search page to our blog. It will be a nice feature that will come in handy after we have a number of blog posts.
@app.route('/search/', methods=['GET'])
def search():
query = request.args.get("query")
entries = db.session.query(models.Flaskr)
if query:
return render_template('search.html', entries=entries, query=query)
return render_template('search.html')
NOTE: Be sure to write a test for this on your own!
In the "templates" folder create a new file called search.html:
(env)$ touch search.html
Now add the following code to search.html:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Flaskr</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.3.1/css/bootstrap.min.css">
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<br><br>
<h1>Flaskr</h1>
<br><br>
<a class="btn btn-primary" role="button" href="{{ url_for('index') }}"> Home </a>
{% if not session.logged_in %}
<a class="btn btn-success" role="button" href="{{ url_for('login') }}">log in</a>
{% else %}
<a class="btn btn-warning" role="button" href="{{ url_for('logout') }}">log out</a>
{% endif %}
<br><br>
{% for message in get_flashed_messages() %}
<div class="flash alert alert-success col-sm-4" role="success">{{ message }}</div>
{% endfor %}
<form action="{{ url_for('search') }}" method="get" class="from-group">
<dl>
<dt>Search:</dt>
<dd><input type="text" name="query" class="form-control col-sm-4" ></dd>
<br>
<dd><input type="submit" class="btn btn-info" value="Search" ></dd>
</dl>
</form>
<ul class="entries">
{% for entry in entries %}
{% if query.lower() in entry.title.lower() or query.lower() in entry.text.lower() %}
<li class="entry"><h2 id="{{ entry.post_id }}">{{ entry.title }}</h2>{{ entry.text|safe }}</li>
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{url_for('static', filename='main.js') }}"></script>
</body>
</html>
Add a search button for better navigation just below <h1>Flaskr</h1>
:
<a class="btn btn-info" role="button" href="{{ url_for('search') }}">Search</a>
Test it out locally. If all is well, commit your code and update the version on Heroku.
Currently, posts can be deleted by anyone. Let's change that so one has to be logged in in order to delete a post.
Add the following decorator to app.py:
def login_required(f):
@wraps(f)
def decorated_function(*args, **kwargs):
if not session.get('logged_in'):
flash('Please log in.')
return jsonify({'status': 0, 'message': 'Please log in.'}), 401
return f(*args, **kwargs)
return decorated_function
Don't forget the import:
from functools import wraps
NOTE: Be sure to write tests for this on your own!
Next, add the decorator to the delete_entry
view:
@app.route('/delete/<int:post_id>', methods=['GET'])
@login_required
def delete_entry(post_id):
"""Deletes post from database."""
result = {'status': 0, 'message': 'Error'}
try:
new_id = post_id
db.session.query(models.Flaskr).filter_by(post_id=new_id).delete()
db.session.commit()
result = {'status': 1, 'message': "Post Deleted"}
flash('The entry was deleted.')
except Exception as e:
result = {'status': 0, 'message': repr(e)}
return jsonify(result)
Update the test:
def test_delete_message(self):
"""Ensure the messages are being deleted"""
rv = self.app.get('/delete/1')
data = json.loads(rv.data)
self.assertEqual(data['status'], 0)
self.login(app.config['USERNAME'], app.config['PASSWORD'])
rv = self.app.get('/delete/1')
data = json.loads(rv.data)
self.assertEqual(data['status'], 1)
Test it out locally again. If all is well, commit your code and update the version on Heroku.
SQLite is a great database to use in order to get an app up and running quickly. That said, it's not intended to be used as a production grade database. So, let's move to using Postgres on Heroku.
Start by provisioning a new hobby-dev plan Postgres database:
(env)$ heroku addons:create heroku-postgresql:hobby-dev
Once created, the database URL can be access via the DATABASE_URL
environment variable:
(env)$ heroku config
You should see something similar to:
=== dry-garden-92414 Config Vars
DATABASE_URL: postgres://wqvcyzyveczscw:df14796eabbf0a1d9eb8a96a206bcd906101162c8ef7f2e7be5e2f7514c22b48@ec2-54-227-250-19.compute-1.amazonaws.com:5432/d64vugb1eio9h1
Next, update app.py like so:
# imports
import os
from functools import wraps
from flask import Flask, request, session, g, redirect, url_for, \
abort, render_template, flash, jsonify
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
# get the folder where this file runs
basedir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
# configuration
SECRET_KEY = 'my_precious'
USERNAME = 'admin'
PASSWORD = 'admin'
# database config
SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI = os.getenv(
'DATABASE_URL',
f'sqlite:///{os.path.join(basedir, "flaskr.db")}'
)
SQLALCHEMY_TRACK_MODIFICATIONS = False
# create app
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config.from_object(__name__)
db = SQLAlchemy(app)
import models
def login_required(f):
@wraps(f)
def decorated_function(*args, **kwargs):
if not session.get('logged_in'):
flash('Please log in.')
return jsonify({'status': 0, 'message': 'Please log in.'}), 401
return f(*args, **kwargs)
return decorated_function
@app.route('/')
def index():
"""Searches the database for entries, then displays them."""
entries = db.session.query(models.Flaskr)
return render_template('index.html', entries=entries)
@app.route('/add', methods=['POST'])
def add_entry():
"""Adds new post to the database."""
if not session.get('logged_in'):
abort(401)
new_entry = models.Flaskr(request.form['title'], request.form['text'])
db.session.add(new_entry)
db.session.commit()
flash('New entry was successfully posted')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/login', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def login():
"""User login/authentication/session management."""
error = None
if request.method == 'POST':
if request.form['username'] != app.config['USERNAME']:
error = 'Invalid username'
elif request.form['password'] != app.config['PASSWORD']:
error = 'Invalid password'
else:
session['logged_in'] = True
flash('You were logged in')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
return render_template('login.html', error=error)
@app.route('/logout')
def logout():
"""User logout/authentication/session management."""
session.pop('logged_in', None)
flash('You were logged out')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/delete/<int:post_id>', methods=['GET'])
@login_required
def delete_entry(post_id):
"""Deletes post from database."""
result = {'status': 0, 'message': 'Error'}
try:
new_id = post_id
db.session.query(models.Flaskr).filter_by(post_id=new_id).delete()
db.session.commit()
result = {'status': 1, 'message': "Post Deleted"}
flash('The entry was deleted.')
except Exception as e:
result = {'status': 0, 'message': repr(e)}
return jsonify(result)
@app.route('/search/', methods=['GET'])
def search():
query = request.args.get("query")
entries = db.session.query(models.Flaskr)
if query:
return render_template('search.html', entries=entries, query=query)
return render_template('search.html')
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
First, we removed DEBUG = True
. We'll let the DEBUG
config variable be defined by the FLASK_ENV environment variable (which defaults to production
). We also updated the SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI
so that it uses the value of the DATABASE_URL
environment variable if it's available. Otherwise, it will use the SQLite URL.
Run the tests to ensure they still pass:
(env)$ python app.test.py
......
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 6 tests in 0.122s
OK
To test locally, run:
(env)$ FLASK_ENV=development python app.py
Try logging in and out, adding a few new entries, and deleting old entries.
Before updating Heroku, add Psycopg2 -- a Postgres database adapter for Python -- to the requirements file:
Flask==1.1.1
Flask-SQLAlchemy==2.4.1
gunicorn==19.9.0
psycopg2-binary==2.8.4
Commit and push your code up to Heroku.
Snce we're using a new database on Heroku, you'll need to run the following command once to create the tables:
(env)$ heroku run python create_db.py
Test things out.
Finally, we can lint and auto format our code with Flake8 and Black, respectively:
(env)$ pip install flake8==3.7.9
(env)$ pip install black==19.10b0
Run Flake8 and correct any issues:
(env)$ flake8 --exclude env --ignore E402,E501 .
./app.py:5:1: F401 'flask.g' imported but unused
./create_db.py:5:1: F401 'models.Flaskr' imported but unused
Update the code formatting per Black:
$ black --exclude=env .
reformatted /Users/michael.herman/repos/github/flaskr-tdd/models.py
reformatted /Users/michael.herman/repos/github/flaskr-tdd/app.py
reformatted /Users/michael.herman/repos/github/flaskr-tdd/app.test.py
All done! ✨ 🍰 ✨
3 files reformatted, 1 file left unchanged.
Test everything out once last time!
- Want my code? Grab it here.
- View my app on Heroku. Cheers!
- Want more Flask fun? Check out TestDriven.io. Learn how to build, test, and deploy microservices powered by Docker, Flask, and React!
- Want something else added to this tutorial? Add an issue to the repo. Cheers!
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