Flexible and efficient upload handling for Flask
Project description
Flask-Reuploaded
Flask-Reuploaded provides file uploads for Flask.
Notes on this package
This is an independently maintained version of Flask-Uploads based on the 0.2.1 version of the original, but also including four years of unreleased changes, at least not released to PyPi.
Noteworthy is the fix for the Werkzeug API change.
Goals
provide a stable drop-in replacement for Flask-Uploads
regain momentum for this widely used package
provide working PyPI packages
Migration guide from Flask-Uploads
Incompatibilities between Flask-Reuploaded and Flask-Uploads
Currently, there are no known incompatibilities.
Just follow the Uninstall and install instructions below.
Please note, that Flask-Uploads, and thus also Flask-Reuploaded has an builtin autoserve feature.
This means that uploaded files are automatically served for viewing and downloading.
e.g. if you configure an UploadSet with the name photos, and upload a picture called snow.jpg, the picture can be automatically accessed at e.g. http://localhost:5000/_uploads/photos/snow.jpg unless
you set UPLOADED_PHOTOS_URL to an empty string
you configure UPLOADED_PHOTOS_URL with a valid string (then the picture is served from there)
or you set UPLOADS_AUTOSERVE to False.
The last option is new in Flask-Reuploaded.
In order to stay compatible with Flask-Uploads, by default UPLOADS_AUTOSERVE is currently set to True,
With Flask-Reuploaded version 1.0.0, UPLOADS_AUTOSERVE will default to False, as this feature is/was undocumented, surprising, and actually it could lead to unwanted data disclosure.
Setting it explicitly to False is recommended.
Uninstall and install
If you have used Flask-Uploads and want to migrate to Flask-Reuploaded, you only have to install Flask-Reuploaded instead of Flask-Uploads.
That’s all!
So, if you use pip to install your packages, instead of …
$ pip install `Flask-Uploads` # don't do this! package is broken
… just do …
$ pip install `Flask-Reuploaded`
Flask-Reuploaded is a drop-in replacement.
This means you do not have to change a single line of code.
Installation
$ pip install Flask-Reuploaded
Getting started
create an UploadSet
from flask_uploads import IMAGES
photos = UploadSet("photos", IMAGES)
configure your Flask app and this extension
app.config["UPLOADED_PHOTOS_DEST"] = "static/img"
app.config["SECRET_KEY"] = os.urandom(24)
configure_uploads(app, photos)
use photos in your view function
photos.save(request.files['photo'])
See below for a complete example.
Documentation
The documentation can be found at…
Minimal example application
Application code, e.g. main.py
import os
from flask import Flask, flash, render_template, request
# please note the import from `flask_uploads` - not `flask_reuploaded`!!
# this is done on purpose to stay compatible with `Flask-Uploads`
from flask_uploads import IMAGES, UploadSet, configure_uploads
app = Flask(__name__)
photos = UploadSet("photos", IMAGES)
app.config["UPLOADED_PHOTOS_DEST"] = "static/img"
app.config["SECRET_KEY"] = os.urandom(24)
configure_uploads(app, photos)
@app.route("/", methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def upload():
if request.method == 'POST' and 'photo' in request.files:
photos.save(request.files['photo'])
flash("Photo saved successfully.")
return render_template('upload.html')
return render_template('upload.html')
HTML code for upload.html
<!doctype html>
<html lang=en>
<head>
<meta charset=utf-8>
<title>Flask-Reuploaded Example</title>
</head>
<body>
{% with messages = get_flashed_messages() %}
{% if messages %}
<ul class=flashes>
{% for message in messages %}
<li>{{ message }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endif %}
{% endwith %}
<form method=POST enctype=multipart/form-data action="{{ url_for('upload') }}">
<input type=file name=photo>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
</body>
</html>
Project structure
The project structure would look as following…
❯ tree -I "__*|h*"
.
├── main.py
├── static
│ └── img
└── templates
└── upload.html
Running the example application
In order to run the application, you have to enter the following commands…
❯ export FLASK_APP=main.py
❯ flask run
Then point your browser to http://127.0.0.1:5000/.
Contributing
Contributions are more than welcome.
Please have a look at the open issues.
There is also a short contributing guide.
Changelog
0.5.0
improve documentation of example app
document surprising autoserve feature
issue a warning when using autoserve without explicit configuration
0.4.0
add type annotations
drop support for Python 2 and Python 3.5 (#8)
deprecate patch_request_class (#43)
use a src directory for source code (#21)
add tox env for check-python-versions (#20)
add flake8-bugbear
add short contribution guide (#6)
add getting started (#59)
delete broken example and add minimal example to README (#15)
add support for Python 3.9
use gh actions instead of Travis CI
0.3.2
documentation update (#5)
update docs/index.rst
use blue ReadTheDocs theme
update sphinx configuration
add documentation link to setup.py, so it shows on PyPi
add note about documentation in the README file
delete old theme files
configure isort to force single line imports
0.3.1
0.3
Besides including four years of unreleased changes from the original package, most notable the fix for the Werkzeug API change, the following changes happened since forking the original package.
Project details
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