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declaration is optional.
View documentation.
This gets you a ASGI app, with a production static files server pre-installed, Jinja templating (without additional imports), and a production webserver based on uvloop, serving up requests with gzip compression automatically.
"Pleasantly very taken with python-responder. @kennethreitz at his absolute best." —Rudraksh M.K.
"ASGI is going to enable all sorts of new high-performance web services. It's awesome to see Responder starting to take advantage of that." — Tom Christie author of Django REST Framework
"I love that you are exploring new patterns. Go go go!" — Danny Greenfield, author of Two Scoops of Django
See the documentation's feature tour for more details on features available in Responder.
Install the most recent stable release:
pip install --upgrade 'responder'
Include support for all extensions and interfaces:
pip install --upgrade 'responder[full]'
Individual optional installation extras are:
- graphql: Adds GraphQL support via Graphene
- openapi: Adds OpenAPI/Swagger interface support
Or, install directly from the repository:
pip install 'responder[full] @ git+https://github.com/kennethreitz/responder.git'
Responder supports Python 3.6+.
The primary concept here is to bring the niceties that are brought forth from both Flask and Falcon and unify them into a single framework, along with some new ideas I have. I also wanted to take some of the API primitives that are instilled in the Requests library and put them into a web framework. So, you'll find a lot of parallels here with Requests.
- Setting
resp.content
sends back bytes. - Setting
resp.text
sends back unicode, while settingresp.html
sends back HTML. - Setting
resp.media
sends back JSON/YAML (.text
/.html
/.content
override this). - Case-insensitive
req.headers
dict (from Requests directly). resp.status_code
,req.method
,req.url
, and other familiar friends.
- Flask-style route expression, with new capabilities -- all while using Python 3.6+'s new f-string syntax.
- I love Falcon's "every request and response is passed into to each view and mutated"
methodology, especially
response.media
, and have used it here. In addition to supporting JSON, I have decided to support YAML as well, as Kubernetes is slowly taking over the world, and it uses YAML for all the things. Content-negotiation and all that. - A built in testing client that uses the actual Requests you know and love.
- The ability to mount other WSGI apps easily.
- Automatic gzipped-responses.
- In addition to Falcon's
on_get
,on_post
, etc methods, Responder features anon_request
method, which gets called on every type of request, much like Requests. - A production static file server is built-in.
- Uvicorn built-in as a production web server. I would have chosen Gunicorn, but it doesn't run on Windows. Plus, Uvicorn serves well to protect against slowloris attacks, making nginx unnecessary in production.
- GraphQL support, via Graphene. The goal here is to have any GraphQL query exposable at any route, magically.
- Provide an official way to run webpack.
See Development Sandbox.