Blueprints and Views¶
A view function is the code you write to respond to requests to your application. Flask uses patterns to match the incoming request URL to the view that should handle it. The view returns data that Flask turns into an outgoing response. Flask can also go the other direction and generate a URL to a view based on its name and arguments.
Create a Blueprint¶
A Blueprint
is a way to organize a group of related views and
other code. Rather than registering views and other code directly with
an application, they are registered with a blueprint. Then the blueprint
is registered with the application when it is available in the factory
function.
Flaskr will have two blueprints, one for authentication functions and one for the blog posts functions. The code for each blueprint will go in a separate module. Since the blog needs to know about authentication, you’ll write the authentication one first.
import functools
from flask import (
Blueprint, flash, g, redirect, render_template, request, session, url_for
)
from werkzeug.security import check_password_hash, generate_password_hash
from flaskr.db import get_db
bp = Blueprint('auth', __name__, url_prefix='/auth')
This creates a Blueprint
named 'auth'
. Like the application
object, the blueprint needs to know where it’s defined, so __name__
is passed as the second argument. The url_prefix
will be prepended
to all the URLs associated with the blueprint.
Import and register the blueprint from the factory using
app.register_blueprint()
. Place the
new code at the end of the factory function before returning the app.
def create_app():
app = ...
# existing code omitted
from . import auth
app.register_blueprint(auth.bp)
return app
The authentication blueprint will have views to register new users and to log in and log out.
The First View: Register¶
When the user visits the /auth/register
URL, the register
view
will return HTML with a form for them to fill out. When they submit
the form, it will validate their input and either show the form again
with an error message or create the new user and go to the login page.
For now you will just write the view code. On the next page, you’ll write templates to generate the HTML form.
@bp.route('/register', methods=('GET', 'POST'))
def register():
if request.method == 'POST':
username = request.form['username']
password = request.form['password']
db = get_db()
error = None
if not username:
error = 'Username is required.'
elif not password:
error = 'Password is required.'
if error is None:
try:
db.execute(
"INSERT INTO user (username, password) VALUES (?, ?)",
(username, generate_password_hash(password)),
)
db.commit()
except db.IntegrityError:
error = f"User {username} is already registered."
else:
return redirect(url_for("auth.login"))
flash(error)
return render_template('auth/register.html')
Here’s what the register
view function is doing:
@bp.route
associates the URL/register
with theregister
view function. When Flask receives a request to/auth/register
, it will call theregister
view and use the return value as the response.If the user submitted the form,
request.method
will be'POST'
. In this case, start validating the input.request.form
is a special type ofdict
mapping submitted form keys and values. The user will input theirusername
andpassword
.Validate that
username
andpassword
are not empty.If validation succeeds, insert the new user data into the database.
db.execute
takes a SQL query with?
placeholders for any user input, and a tuple of values to replace the placeholders with. The database library will take care of escaping the values so you are not vulnerable to a SQL injection attack.For security, passwords should never be stored in the database directly. Instead,
generate_password_hash()
is used to securely hash the password, and that hash is stored. Since this query modifies data,db.commit()
needs to be called afterwards to save the changes.An
sqlite3.IntegrityError
will occur if the username already exists, which should be shown to the user as another validation error.
After storing the user, they are redirected to the login page.
url_for()
generates the URL for the login view based on its name. This is preferable to writing the URL directly as it allows you to change the URL later without changing all code that links to it.redirect()
generates a redirect response to the generated URL.If validation fails, the error is shown to the user.
flash()
stores messages that can be retrieved when rendering the template.When the user initially navigates to
auth/register
, or there was a validation error, an HTML page with the registration form should be shown.render_template()
will render a template containing the HTML, which you’ll write in the next step of the tutorial.
Login¶
This view follows the same pattern as the register
view above.
@bp.route('/login', methods=('GET', 'POST'))
def login():
if request.method == 'POST':
username = request.form['username']
password = request.form['password']
db = get_db()
error = None
user = db.execute(
'SELECT * FROM user WHERE username = ?', (username,)
).fetchone()
if user is None:
error = 'Incorrect username.'
elif not check_password_hash(user['password'], password):
error = 'Incorrect password.'
if error is None:
session.clear()
session['user_id'] = user['id']
return redirect(url_for('index'))
flash(error)
return render_template('auth/login.html')
There are a few differences from the register
view:
The user is queried first and stored in a variable for later use.
fetchone()
returns one row from the query. If the query returned no results, it returnsNone
. Later,fetchall()
will be used, which returns a list of all results.check_password_hash()
hashes the submitted password in the same way as the stored hash and securely compares them. If they match, the password is valid.session
is adict
that stores data across requests. When validation succeeds, the user’sid
is stored in a new session. The data is stored in a cookie that is sent to the browser, and the browser then sends it back with subsequent requests. Flask securely signs the data so that it can’t be tampered with.
Now that the user’s id
is stored in the session
, it will be
available on subsequent requests. At the beginning of each request, if
a user is logged in their information should be loaded and made
available to other views.
@bp.before_app_request
def load_logged_in_user():
user_id = session.get('user_id')
if user_id is None:
g.user = None
else:
g.user = get_db().execute(
'SELECT * FROM user WHERE id = ?', (user_id,)
).fetchone()
bp.before_app_request()
registers
a function that runs before the view function, no matter what URL is
requested. load_logged_in_user
checks if a user id is stored in the
session
and gets that user’s data from the database, storing it
on g.user
, which lasts for the length of the request. If
there is no user id, or if the id doesn’t exist, g.user
will be
None
.
Logout¶
To log out, you need to remove the user id from the session
.
Then load_logged_in_user
won’t load a user on subsequent requests.
@bp.route('/logout')
def logout():
session.clear()
return redirect(url_for('index'))
Require Authentication in Other Views¶
Creating, editing, and deleting blog posts will require a user to be logged in. A decorator can be used to check this for each view it’s applied to.
def login_required(view):
@functools.wraps(view)
def wrapped_view(**kwargs):
if g.user is None:
return redirect(url_for('auth.login'))
return view(**kwargs)
return wrapped_view
This decorator returns a new view function that wraps the original view it’s applied to. The new function checks if a user is loaded and redirects to the login page otherwise. If a user is loaded the original view is called and continues normally. You’ll use this decorator when writing the blog views.
Endpoints and URLs¶
The url_for()
function generates the URL to a view based on a name
and arguments. The name associated with a view is also called the
endpoint, and by default it’s the same as the name of the view
function.
For example, the hello()
view that was added to the app
factory earlier in the tutorial has the name 'hello'
and can be
linked to with url_for('hello')
. If it took an argument, which
you’ll see later, it would be linked to using
url_for('hello', who='World')
.
When using a blueprint, the name of the blueprint is prepended to the
name of the function, so the endpoint for the login
function you
wrote above is 'auth.login'
because you added it to the 'auth'
blueprint.
Continue to Templates.