I have a running Flask application that is set up according to a combination of best practices we found online and in Miguel Grinberg's "Flask Web Development" book.
We now need a second Python application, that is NOT a web app, and that needs access to the same models as the Flask application. We wanted to re-use the same models ofcourse, so both apps can benefit from the shared code.
We have removed dependencies on the flask-sqlalchemy extention (which we used before, when we had just the Flask application). And replaced it with the SQLalchemy Declarative extension described here, which is a bit simpler (Flask-SQLalchemy adds a few specific things to standard SQLAlchemy)
In line with the example we have created a database.py file in the root. In our case there are two things different from the Declarative extension example: I put the engine and session in a class, because all of our models use db.session, instead of db_session, and I pass a dictionary with configuration values to the init(), so that I can re-use this database.py from both Flask as well as another application, using a different configuration. it looks like this:
from sqlalchemy import create_engine
from sqlalchemy.orm import scoped_session, sessionmaker
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base
class Database(object):
def __init__(self, cfg):
self.engine = create_engine(cfg['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'], convert_unicode=True)
self.session = scoped_session(sessionmaker(autocommit=False, autoflush=False, bind=self.engine))
class Model(object):
pass
Base = declarative_base()
So now we come to the actual problem. Flask creates a dictionary-like object containing configuration options, and adds them as a property to the app-instance. It loads them from an instance folder, a config.py in the root of the site and from environment variables. I need to pass in the configuration dictionary from Flask, so I need Flask to FIRST load and assemble the configuration, and after that initialise the database, and have a (configured) db object in the root of the app file. However, we follow the Application factory pattern, so we can use different configurations for different situations (test, production, development).
This means our app/__init__.py
looks something like this (simplified):
from flask import Flask
from database import Database
from flask.ext.mail import Mail
from flask_bcrypt import Bcrypt
from config import config
mail = Mail()
bcrypt = Bcrypt()
def create_app(config_name):
app = Flask(__name__, instance_relative_config=True)
if not config_name:
config_name = 'default'
app.config.from_object(config[config_name])
app.config.from_pyfile('config.py')
config[config_name].init_app(app)
db = Database(app.config)
mail.init_app(app)
bcrypt.init_app(app)
@app.teardown_appcontext
def shutdown_session(exception=None):
db.session.remove()
from main import main as main_blueprint
app.register_blueprint(main_blueprint)
return app
But the db (that the models import from ..), now needs to be inside the create_app() function, because that's where Flask loads the configuration. If I would instantiate the db object outside of the create_app() function, it will be importable from the models, but it is not configured!
an example model looks like this, and as you can see, it expects a "db" in the root of the app:
from . base_models import areas
from sqlalchemy.orm import relationship, backref
from ..utils.helper_functions import newid
from .. import db
class Areas(db.Model, areas):
"""Area model class.
"""
country = relationship("Countries", backref=backref('areas'))
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.area_id = newid()
super(Areas, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def __str__(self):
return u"{}".format(self.area_name).encode('utf8')
def __repr__(self):
return u"<Area: '{}'>".format(self.area_name).encode('utf8')
So my question is, how can I have a db instance that can be configured externally (by either Flask or another app), and still use the Application Factory Pattern?
edit: The code-example was incorrect, it had an import for Flask-SQLalchemy which was replaced by from database import Database
. Sorry for any confusion.
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