I want to pass a SQL query as parameter in a POST request. Ideally this SQL query will be further passed into MySQL connection, and then it can fetch data back.
Here is what I did:
These are basic modules and settings:
from flask import Flask
from flask_cors import CORS, cross_origin
app = Flask(__name__)
CORS(app)
from app import app
from flaskext.mysql import MySQL
mysql = MySQL()
app.config['MYSQL_DATABASE_USER'] = 'root'
app.config['MYSQL_DATABASE_PASSWORD'] = 'root'
app.config['MYSQL_DATABASE_DB'] = 'hibernate1'
app.config['MYSQL_DATABASE_HOST'] = 'localhost'
mysql.init_app(app)
This is the main.py, where I want to pass a SQL query:
from urllib import response
import pymysql
from app import app
from config import mysql
from flask import jsonify
from flask import flash, request
#app.route('/SQL/<query>', methods=['POST'])
def return_query(query):
conn = mysql.connect()
cursor = conn.cursor(pymysql.cursors.DictCursor)
cursor.execute(query)
Rows = cursor.fetchall()
respone = jsonify(Rows)
return respone
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run()
This is test.py:
import requests
dictToSend = {"query": "select * from student"}
res = requests.post('http://localhost:5000/SQL', json = dictToSend)
print ('response from server:', res.text)
dictFromServer = res.json()
print(dictFromServer)
However, I got the following errors:
response from server: <!doctype html>
<html lang=en>
<title>404 Not Found</title>
<h1>Not Found</h1>
<p>The requested URL was not found on the server. If you entered the URL manually please check your spelling and try again.</p>
It says the requested URL was not found. But the following GET request works fine:
#app.route('/', methods=['GET'])
def return_hello():
return {"data": "hello"}
Could anyone tell me what I missed in the POST request? Thanks.
I'm trying to use MySQL cursor to interact with remote database:
from flask import Flask
from flask_mysqldb import MySQL
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config['MYSQL_USER'] = 'sql7368254' # it's a testing database. Nothing to exploit, really.
app.config['MYSQL_PASSWORD'] = 'YnCZ8j4jbi'
app.config['MYSQL_HOST'] = 'sql7.freemysqlhosting.net'
app.config['MYSQL_DB'] = 'sql7368254'
app.config['MYSQL_CURSORCLASS'] = 'DictCursor'
db = MySQL(app)
#app.route('/')
def index():
cur = db.connection.cursor()
cur.execute('''CREATE TABLE users (id INTEGER, email VARCHAR(30), password VARCHAR(255))''')
return 'Done'
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(debug=True)
When I spin this off I get:
* Serving Flask app "server.py"
* Environment: production
WARNING: This is a development server. Do not use it in a production deployment.
Use a production WSGI server instead.
* Debug mode: off
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
"Segmentation fault" isn't telling me what is wrong. What might be an issue ?
The import was a problem:
from flask_mysqldb import MySQL
As this topic describes. Flask-MySQLdb doesn't work nicely with Python 3.
Using Python MySQL connector instead is advised.
I have Flask application and I want to use flask-socketio to handle webosockets with gunicorn and eventlets.
Although, when I try to connect my test client (http://www.websocket.org/echo.html) I am receiving:
WebSocket connection to 'ws://localhost/socket.io?encoding=text' failed: Error during WebSocket handshake: Unexpected response code: 200
socketio_app.py
from flask import Flask, render_template
from flask_socketio import SocketIO
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config['SECRET_KEY'] = 'secret!'
socketio = SocketIO(app, port=9090, host='0.0.0.0', async_mode='eventlet', debug=True)
#app.route('/socket.io')
def index():
return render_template('index.html')
if __name__ == '__main__':
socketio.run(app)
and I run it in this way:
gunicorn -k eventlet -w 1 socketio_app:app -b 0.0.0.0:9090 --error-logfile - --access-logfile - --log-level debug
Should I use it in another way? Should I manually modify my response like that?
#app.route('/socket.io')
def index():
return Response(status=101, headers={
'Connection': 'Upgrade',
'Upgrade': 'websocket'
})
You are using a WebSocket client to connect to a Socket.IO server. Use a Socket.IO client and you will be fine. WebSocket is not the same as Socket.IO, the latter is implemented on top of WebSocket and uses a different protocol.
I am very new to Flask. Trying to build a flask app which fetches data from the backend neo4j and posts it in JSON format. The eventual aim is to do visualisation using d3.js . But for starters, I want to post it as JSON.
Below is my views.py:
import models
from models import Customer
from flask import Flask, request, session, redirect, url_for, render_template, flash,json,jsonify
import os
app = Flask(__name__)
#app.route('/',methods = ['GET','POST'])
def enter_ID():
if request.method == 'POST':
Galactic_ID = request.form['Galactic_ID']
if Customer(Galactic_ID).find():
return redirect(url_for('Customer_relationships',Galactic_ID=request.form.get('Galactic_ID')))
else:
return "Wrong Galactic_ID"
else:
return render_template('Gal.html')
#app.route('/Customer_relationships/<Galactic_ID>')
def Customer_relationships(Galactic_ID):
data = Customer(Galactic_ID).get_relationships():
return render_template('rel.html',Galactic_ID=Galactic_ID,data =json.dumps(data))
if __name__ == '__main__':
host = os.getenv('IP','0.0.0.0')
port = int(os.getenv('PORT',5000))
app.secret_key = os.urandom(24)
app.run(host=host,port=port)
In views.py , Customer(Galactic_ID).find() and Customer(Galactic_ID).get_relationships() call the functions find(self) and get_relationships(self) under Customer class in models.py :
When I try and run this below are the HTTP Calls:
127.0.0.1 - - [29/Jul/2016 17:54:53] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 -
127.0.0.1 - - [29/Jul/2016 17:54:56] "POST / HTTP/1.1" 302 -
127.0.0.1 - - [29/Jul/2016 17:54:56] "GET /Customer_relationships/2000000000084001287 HTTP/1.1" 200 -
127.0.0.1 - - [29/Jul/2016 17:54:56] "POST /Customer_relationships HTTP/1.1" 404 -
Below is the working solution:
import models
from models import Customer
from flask import Flask, request, session, redirect, url_for, render_template, flash,json,jsonify
import os
app = Flask(__name__)
#app.route('/',methods = ['GET','POST'])
def enter_ID():
if request.method == 'POST':
Galactic_ID = request.form['Galactic_ID']
if Customer(Galactic_ID).find():
return redirect(url_for('relationships',ID=request.form.get('Galactic_ID')))
else:
return "Wrong Galactic_ID"
else:
return render_template('Gal.html')
#app.route('/Customer_relationships',defaults={'ID':'Galactic_ID'},methods=['GET','POST'])
#app.route('/Customer_relationships/<ID>',methods=['GET','POST'])
def relationships(ID):
data = Customer(ID).get_relationships()
return render_template('rel.html',data= json.dumps(data))
if __name__ == '__main__':
host = os.getenv('IP','0.0.0.0')
port = int(os.getenv('PORT',5000))
app.secret_key = os.urandom(24)
app.run(host=host,port=port)
I had a similar issue that was fixed with the flask-cors module.
First it needs to be installed in the terminal $ pip install flask-cors
Then added to your app:
from flask import Flask
from flask_cors import CORS
app = Flask(__name__)
CORS(app)
#app.route("/", methods=['POST'])
def helloWorld():
return "Hello, cross-origin-world!"
I am using Sublime Text 2 as my editor and creating a new Google App Engine project.
EDIT: I am running this code through localhost. I get this error on when viewing the app on appspot:
Status: 500 Internal Server Error Content-Type: text/plain Content-Length: 59 A server error occurred. Please contact the administrator.
I have this code:
import webapp2 as webapp
from google.appengine.ext.webapp.util import run_wsgi_app
class IndexPage(webapp.RequestHandler):
def get(self):
self.response.out.write('Hello, World!')
app = webapp.WSGIApplication([('/.*', IndexPage)], debug = True)
def main():
run_wsgi_app(app)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
It causes an AssertionError:
File "C:\Python27\lib\wsgiref\handlers.py", line 202, in write
assert type(data) is StringType,"write() argument must be string"
AssertionError: write() argument must be string
What does the error mean and what could be causing it?
GAE was not recognizing my app.yaml file properly. Once I fixed that, it worked. Thanks