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Utilities
Various utility functions shipped with Werkzeug.
General Helpers
class werkzeug.utils.cached_property(fget, name=None, doc=None)
-
A
property()
that is only evaluated once. Subsequent access returns the cached value. Setting the property sets the cached value. Deleting the property clears the cached value, accessing it again will evaluate it again.class Example: @cached_property def value(self): # calculate something important here return 42 e = Example() e.value # evaluates e.value # uses cache e.value = 16 # sets cache del e.value # clears cache
If the class defines
__slots__
, it must add_cache_{name}
as a slot. Alternatively, it can add__dict__
, but that’s usually not desirable.Changed in version 2.1: Works with
__slots__
.Changelog
Changed in version 2.0:
del obj.name
clears the cached value.
class werkzeug.utils.environ_property(name, default=None, load_func=None, dump_func=None, read_only=None, doc=None)
-
Maps request attributes to environment variables. This works not only for the Werkzeug request object, but also any other class with an environ attribute:
>>> class Test(object): ... environ = {'key': 'value'} ... test = environ_property('key') >>> var = Test() >>> var.test 'value'
If you pass it a second value it’s used as default if the key does not exist, the third one can be a converter that takes a value and converts it. If it raises
ValueError
orTypeError
the default value is used. If no default value is providedNone
is used.Per default the property is read only. You have to explicitly enable it by passing
read_only=False
to the constructor.- Parameters
- Return type
-
None
class werkzeug.utils.header_property(name, default=None, load_func=None, dump_func=None, read_only=None, doc=None)
-
Like
environ_property
but for headers.- Parameters
- Return type
-
None
werkzeug.utils.redirect(location, code=302, Response=None)
-
Returns a response object (a WSGI application) that, if called, redirects the client to the target location. Supported codes are 301, 302, 303, 305, 307, and 308. 300 is not supported because it’s not a real redirect and 304 because it’s the answer for a request with a request with defined If-Modified-Since headers.
Changelog
New in version 0.10: The class used for the Response object can now be passed in.
New in version 0.6: The location can now be a unicode string that is encoded using the
iri_to_uri()
function.- Parameters
-
- location (str) – the location the response should redirect to.
- code (int) – the redirect status code. defaults to 302.
- Response (class) – a Response class to use when instantiating a response. The default is
werkzeug.wrappers.Response
if unspecified.
- Return type
werkzeug.utils.append_slash_redirect(environ, code=308)
-
Redirect to the current URL with a slash appended.
If the current URL is
/user/42
, the redirect URL will be42/
. When joined to the current URL during response processing or by the browser, this will produce/user/42/
.The behavior is undefined if the path ends with a slash already. If called unconditionally on a URL, it may produce a redirect loop.
- Parameters
-
- environ (WSGIEnvironment) – Use the path and query from this WSGI environment to produce the redirect URL.
- code (int) – the status code for the redirect.
- Return type
Changed in version 2.1: Produce a relative URL that only modifies the last segment. Relevant when the current path has multiple segments.
Changed in version 2.1: The default status code is 308 instead of 301. This preserves the request method and body.
werkzeug.utils.send_file(path_or_file, environ, mimetype=None, as_attachment=False, download_name=None, conditional=True, etag=True, last_modified=None, max_age=None, use_x_sendfile=False, response_class=None, _root_path=None)
-
Send the contents of a file to the client.
The first argument can be a file path or a file-like object. Paths are preferred in most cases because Werkzeug can manage the file and get extra information from the path. Passing a file-like object requires that the file is opened in binary mode, and is mostly useful when building a file in memory with
io.BytesIO
.Never pass file paths provided by a user. The path is assumed to be trusted, so a user could craft a path to access a file you didn’t intend.
If the WSGI server sets a
file_wrapper
inenviron
, it is used, otherwise Werkzeug’s built-in wrapper is used. Alternatively, if the HTTP server supportsX-Sendfile
,use_x_sendfile=True
will tell the server to send the given path, which is much more efficient than reading it in Python.- Parameters
-
- path_or_file (Union[os.PathLike, str, IO[bytes]]) – The path to the file to send, relative to the current working directory if a relative path is given. Alternatively, a file-like object opened in binary mode. Make sure the file pointer is seeked to the start of the data.
- environ (WSGIEnvironment) – The WSGI environ for the current request.
- mimetype (Optional[str]) – The MIME type to send for the file. If not provided, it will try to detect it from the file name.
- as_attachment (bool) – Indicate to a browser that it should offer to save the file instead of displaying it.
- download_name (Optional[str]) – The default name browsers will use when saving the file. Defaults to the passed file name.
- conditional (bool) – Enable conditional and range responses based on request headers. Requires passing a file path and
environ
. - etag (Union[bool, str]) – Calculate an ETag for the file, which requires passing a file path. Can also be a string to use instead.
- last_modified (Optional[Union[datetime.datetime, int, float]]) – The last modified time to send for the file, in seconds. If not provided, it will try to detect it from the file path.
- max_age (Optional[Union[int, Callable[[Optional[str]], Optional[int]]]]) – How long the client should cache the file, in seconds. If set,
Cache-Control
will bepublic
, otherwise it will beno-cache
to prefer conditional caching. - use_x_sendfile (bool) – Set the
X-Sendfile
header to let the server to efficiently send the file. Requires support from the HTTP server. Requires passing a file path. - response_class (Optional[Type[Response]]) – Build the response using this class. Defaults to
Response
. - _root_path (Optional[Union[os.PathLike, str]]) – Do not use. For internal use only. Use
send_from_directory()
to safely send files under a path.
- Return type
Changelog
Changed in version 2.0.2:
send_file
only sets a detectedContent-Encoding
ifas_attachment
is disabled.New in version 2.0: Adapted from Flask’s implementation.
Changed in version 2.0:
download_name
replaces Flask’sattachment_filename
parameter. Ifas_attachment=False
, it is passed withContent-Disposition: inline
instead.Changed in version 2.0:
max_age
replaces Flask’scache_timeout
parameter.conditional
is enabled andmax_age
is not set by default.Changed in version 2.0:
etag
replaces Flask’sadd_etags
parameter. It can be a string to use instead of generating one.Changed in version 2.0: If an encoding is returned when guessing
mimetype
fromdownload_name
, set theContent-Encoding
header.
werkzeug.utils.import_string(import_name, silent=False)
-
Imports an object based on a string. This is useful if you want to use import paths as endpoints or something similar. An import path can be specified either in dotted notation (
xml.sax.saxutils.escape
) or with a colon as object delimiter (xml.sax.saxutils:escape
).If
silent
is True the return value will beNone
if the import fails.
werkzeug.utils.find_modules(import_path, include_packages=False, recursive=False)
-
Finds all the modules below a package. This can be useful to automatically import all views / controllers so that their metaclasses / function decorators have a chance to register themselves on the application.
Packages are not returned unless
include_packages
isTrue
. This can also recursively list modules but in that case it will import all the packages to get the correct load path of that module.
werkzeug.utils.secure_filename(filename)
-
Pass it a filename and it will return a secure version of it. This filename can then safely be stored on a regular file system and passed to
os.path.join()
. The filename returned is an ASCII only string for maximum portability.On windows systems the function also makes sure that the file is not named after one of the special device files.
>>> secure_filename("My cool movie.mov") 'My_cool_movie.mov' >>> secure_filename("../../../etc/passwd") 'etc_passwd' >>> secure_filename('i contain cool \xfcml\xe4uts.txt') 'i_contain_cool_umlauts.txt'
The function might return an empty filename. It’s your responsibility to ensure that the filename is unique and that you abort or generate a random filename if the function returned an empty one.
Changelog
New in version 0.5.
URL Helpers
Please refer to URL Helpers.
User Agent API
class werkzeug.user_agent.UserAgent(string)
-
Represents a parsed user agent header value.
The default implementation does no parsing, only the
string
attribute is set. A subclass may parse the string to set the common attributes or expose other information. Setwerkzeug.wrappers.Request.user_agent_class
to use a subclass.- Parameters
-
string (str) – The header value to parse.
- Return type
-
None
Changelog
New in version 2.0: This replaces the previous
useragents
module, but does not provide a built-in parser.platform: Optional[str] = None
-
The OS name, if it could be parsed from the string.
browser: Optional[str] = None
-
The browser name, if it could be parsed from the string.
version: Optional[str] = None
-
The browser version, if it could be parsed from the string.
language: Optional[str] = None
-
The browser language, if it could be parsed from the string.
string: str
-
The original header value.
to_header()
-
Convert to a header value.
- Return type
Security Helpers
werkzeug.security.generate_password_hash(password, method='pbkdf2:sha256', salt_length=16)
-
Hash a password with the given method and salt with a string of the given length. The format of the string returned includes the method that was used so that
check_password_hash()
can check the hash.The format for the hashed string looks like this:
method$salt$hash
This method can not generate unsalted passwords but it is possible to set param method=’plain’ in order to enforce plaintext passwords. If a salt is used, hmac is used internally to salt the password.
If PBKDF2 is wanted it can be enabled by setting the method to
pbkdf2:method:iterations
where iterations is optional:pbkdf2:sha256:80000$salt$hash pbkdf2:sha256$salt$hash
werkzeug.security.check_password_hash(pwhash, password)
-
Check a password against a given salted and hashed password value. In order to support unsalted legacy passwords this method supports plain text passwords, md5 and sha1 hashes (both salted and unsalted).
Returns
True
if the password matched,False
otherwise.- Parameters
-
- pwhash (str) – a hashed string like returned by
generate_password_hash()
. - password (str) – the plaintext password to compare against the hash.
- pwhash (str) – a hashed string like returned by
- Return type
werkzeug.security.safe_join(directory, *pathnames)
-
Safely join zero or more untrusted path components to a base directory to avoid escaping the base directory.
Logging
Werkzeug uses standard Python logging
. The logger is named "werkzeug"
.
import logging
logger = logging.getLogger("werkzeug")
If the logger level is not set, it will be set to INFO
on first use. If there is no handler for that level, a StreamHandler
is added.
© 2007–2022 Pallets
Licensed under the BSD 3-clause License.
https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/en/2.1.x/utils/