Quickstart
If you haven’t done so already, please take a moment to install the Falcon web framework before continuing.
Learning by Example
Here is a simple example from Falcon’s README, showing how to get started writing an API:
# things.py # Let's get this party started! import falcon # Falcon follows the REST architectural style, meaning (among # other things) that you think in terms of resources and state # transitions, which map to HTTP verbs. class ThingsResource(object): def on_get(self, req, resp): """Handles GET requests""" resp.status = falcon.HTTP_200 # This is the default status resp.body = ('\nTwo things awe me most, the starry sky ' 'above me and the moral law within me.\n' '\n' ' ~ Immanuel Kant\n\n') # falcon.API instances are callable WSGI apps app = falcon.API() # Resources are represented by long-lived class instances things = ThingsResource() # things will handle all requests to the '/things' URL path app.add_route('/things', things)
You can run the above example using any WSGI server, such as uWSGI or Gunicorn. For example:
$ pip install gunicorn $ gunicorn things:app
On Windows where Gunicorn and uWSGI don’t work yet you can use Waitress server
$ pip install waitress $ waitress-serve --port=8000 things:app
Then, in another terminal:
$ curl localhost:8000/things
Curl is a bit of a pain to use, so let’s install HTTPie and use it from now on.
$ pip install --upgrade httpie $ http localhost:8000/things
More Features
Here is a more involved example that demonstrates reading headers and query parameters, handling errors, and working with request and response bodies.
import json import logging import uuid from wsgiref import simple_server import falcon import requests class StorageEngine(object): def get_things(self, marker, limit): return [{'id': str(uuid.uuid4()), 'color': 'green'}] def add_thing(self, thing): thing['id'] = str(uuid.uuid4()) return thing class StorageError(Exception): @staticmethod def handle(ex, req, resp, params): description = ('Sorry, couldn\'t write your thing to the ' 'database. It worked on my box.') raise falcon.HTTPError(falcon.HTTP_725, 'Database Error', description) class SinkAdapter(object): engines = { 'ddg': 'https://duckduckgo.com', 'y': 'https://search.yahoo.com/search', } def __call__(self, req, resp, engine): url = self.engines[engine] params = {'q': req.get_param('q', True)} result = requests.get(url, params=params) resp.status = str(result.status_code) + ' ' + result.reason resp.content_type = result.headers['content-type'] resp.body = result.text class AuthMiddleware(object): def process_request(self, req, resp): token = req.get_header('Authorization') account_id = req.get_header('Account-ID') challenges = ['Token type="Fernet"'] if token is None: description = ('Please provide an auth token ' 'as part of the request.') raise falcon.HTTPUnauthorized('Auth token required', description, challenges, href='http://docs.example.com/auth') if not self._token_is_valid(token, account_id): description = ('The provided auth token is not valid. ' 'Please request a new token and try again.') raise falcon.HTTPUnauthorized('Authentication required', description, challenges, href='http://docs.example.com/auth') def _token_is_valid(self, token, account_id): return True # Suuuuuure it's valid... class RequireJSON(object): def process_request(self, req, resp): if not req.client_accepts_json: raise falcon.HTTPNotAcceptable( 'This API only supports responses encoded as JSON.', href='http://docs.examples.com/api/json') if req.method in ('POST', 'PUT'): if 'application/json' not in req.content_type: raise falcon.HTTPUnsupportedMediaType( 'This API only supports requests encoded as JSON.', href='http://docs.examples.com/api/json') class JSONTranslator(object): # NOTE: Starting with Falcon 1.3, you can simply # use req.media and resp.media for this instead. def process_request(self, req, resp): # req.stream corresponds to the WSGI wsgi.input environ variable, # and allows you to read bytes from the request body. # # See also: PEP 3333 if req.content_length in (None, 0): # Nothing to do return body = req.stream.read() if not body: raise falcon.HTTPBadRequest('Empty request body', 'A valid JSON document is required.') try: req.context['doc'] = json.loads(body.decode('utf-8')) except (ValueError, UnicodeDecodeError): raise falcon.HTTPError(falcon.HTTP_753, 'Malformed JSON', 'Could not decode the request body. The ' 'JSON was incorrect or not encoded as ' 'UTF-8.') def process_response(self, req, resp, resource): if 'result' not in resp.context: return resp.body = json.dumps(resp.context['result']) def max_body(limit): def hook(req, resp, resource, params): length = req.content_length if length is not None and length > limit: msg = ('The size of the request is too large. The body must not ' 'exceed ' + str(limit) + ' bytes in length.') raise falcon.HTTPRequestEntityTooLarge( 'Request body is too large', msg) return hook class ThingsResource(object): def __init__(self, db): self.db = db self.logger = logging.getLogger('thingsapp.' + __name__) def on_get(self, req, resp, user_id): marker = req.get_param('marker') or '' limit = req.get_param_as_int('limit') or 50 try: result = self.db.get_things(marker, limit) except Exception as ex: self.logger.error(ex) description = ('Aliens have attacked our base! We will ' 'be back as soon as we fight them off. ' 'We appreciate your patience.') raise falcon.HTTPServiceUnavailable( 'Service Outage', description, 30) # An alternative way of doing DRY serialization would be to # create a custom class that inherits from falcon.Request. This # class could, for example, have an additional 'doc' property # that would serialize to JSON under the covers. # # NOTE: Starting with Falcon 1.3, you can simply # use resp.media for this instead. resp.context['result'] = result resp.set_header('Powered-By', 'Falcon') resp.status = falcon.HTTP_200 @falcon.before(max_body(64 * 1024)) def on_post(self, req, resp, user_id): try: doc = req.context['doc'] except KeyError: raise falcon.HTTPBadRequest( 'Missing thing', 'A thing must be submitted in the request body.') proper_thing = self.db.add_thing(doc) resp.status = falcon.HTTP_201 resp.location = '/%s/things/%s' % (user_id, proper_thing['id']) # Configure your WSGI server to load "things.app" (app is a WSGI callable) app = falcon.API(middleware=[ AuthMiddleware(), RequireJSON(), JSONTranslator(), ]) db = StorageEngine() things = ThingsResource(db) app.add_route('/{user_id}/things', things) # If a responder ever raised an instance of StorageError, pass control to # the given handler. app.add_error_handler(StorageError, StorageError.handle) # Proxy some things to another service; this example shows how you might # send parts of an API off to a legacy system that hasn't been upgraded # yet, or perhaps is a single cluster that all data centers have to share. sink = SinkAdapter() app.add_sink(sink, r'/search/(?P<engine>ddg|y)\Z') # Useful for debugging problems in your API; works with pdb.set_trace(). You # can also use Gunicorn to host your app. Gunicorn can be configured to # auto-restart workers when it detects a code change, and it also works # with pdb. if __name__ == '__main__': httpd = simple_server.make_server('127.0.0.1', 8000, app) httpd.serve_forever()
To test this example go to the another terminal and run:
$ http localhost:8000/1/things authorization:custom-token
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://falcon.readthedocs.io/en/1.3.0/user/quickstart.html