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An unladen web framework for building APIs and app backends.

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Overview

Runner Come hang out with us in #falconframework on freenode.

Falcon is a high-performance Python framework for building cloud APIs. It encourages the REST architectural style, and tries to do as little as possible while remaining highly effective.

Perfection is finally attained not when there is no longer anything to add, but when there is no longer anything to take away.

- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Design Goals

Fast. Cloud APIs need to turn around requests quickly, and make efficient use of hardware. This is particularly important when serving many concurrent requests. Falcon processes requests several times faster than other popular web frameworks.

Light. Only the essentials are included, with six and mimeparse being the only dependencies outside the standard library. We work to keep the code lean, making Falcon easier to test, optimize, and deploy.

Flexible. Falcon can be deployed in a variety of ways, depending on your needs. The framework speaks WSGI, and works great with Python 2.6 and 2.7, PyPy, and Python 3.3. There’s no tight coupling with any async framework, leaving you free to mix-and-match what you need.

Features

  • Intuitive routing via URI templates and resource classes

  • Easy access to headers and bodies through request and response classes

  • Idiomatic HTTP error responses via a handy exception base class

  • DRY request processing using global, resource, and method hooks

  • Snappy unit testing through WSGI helpers and mocks

  • 20% speed boost when Cython is available

  • Python 2.6, Python 2.7, PyPy and Python 3.3 support

  • Speed, speed, and more speed!

Install

$ pip install cython falcon

Test

$ pip install nose && nosetests

To test across all supported Python versions:

$ pip install tox && tox

Usage

Read the source, Luke!

Docstrings can be found throughout the Falcon code base for your learning pleasure. You can also ask questions in #falconframework on freenode. We are planning on having real docs eventually; if you need them right away, consider sending a pull request. ;)

You can also check out Marconi’s WSGI driver to get a feel for how you might leverage Falcon in a real-world app.

Here is a simple, contrived example showing how to create a Falcon-based API.

# things.py

# Let's get this party started
import falcon


# Falcon follows the REST architectural style, meaning (among
# other things) that you think in terms of resources and state
# transitions, which map to HTTP verbs.
class ThingsResource:
    def on_get(self, req, resp):
        """Handles GET requests"""
        resp.status = falcon.HTTP_200  # This is the default status
        resp.body = ('\nTwo things awe me most, the starry sky '
                     'above me and the moral law within me.\n'
                     '\n'
                     '    ~ Immanuel Kant\n\n')

# falcon.API instances are callable WSGI apps
app = falcon.API()

# Resources are represented by long-lived class instances
things = ThingsResource()

# things will handle all requests to the '/things' URL path
app.add_route('/things', things)

You can run the above example using any WSGI server, such as uWSGI or Gunicorn. For example:

$ pip install gunicorn
$ gunicorn things:app

Then, in another terminal:

$ curl localhost:8000/things

More Cowbell

Here is a more involved example that demonstrates reading headers and query parameters, handling errors, and working with request and response bodies.

import json
import logging
from wsgiref import simple_server

import falcon


class StorageEngine:
    pass


class StorageError(Exception):
    @staticmethod
    def handle(ex, req, resp, params):
        description = ('Sorry, couldn\'t write your thing to the '
                       'database. It worked on my box.')

        raise falcon.HTTPError(falcon.HTTP_725,
                               'Database Error',
                               description)


def token_is_valid(token, user_id):
    return True  # Suuuuuure it's valid...


def auth(req, resp, params):
    # Alternatively, do this in middleware
    token = req.get_header('X-Auth-Token')

    if token is None:
        description = ('Please provide an auth token '
                       'as part of the request.')

        raise falcon.HTTPUnauthorized('Auth token required',
                                      description,
                                      href='http://docs.example.com/auth')

    if not token_is_valid(token, params['user_id']):
        description = ('The provided auth token is not valid. '
                       'Please request a new token and try again.')

        raise falcon.HTTPUnauthorized('Authentication required',
                                      description,
                                      href='http://docs.example.com/auth',
                                      scheme='Token; UUID')


def check_media_type(req, resp, params):
    if not req.client_accepts_json:
        raise falcon.HTTPUnsupportedMediaType(
            'This API only supports the JSON media type.',
            href='http://docs.examples.com/api/json')


class ThingsResource:

    def __init__(self, db):
        self.db = db
        self.logger = logging.getLogger('thingsapp.' + __name__)

    def on_get(self, req, resp, user_id):
        marker = req.get_param('marker') or ''
        limit = req.get_param_as_int('limit') or 50

        try:
            result = self.db.get_things(marker, limit)
        except Exception as ex:
            self.logger.error(ex)

            description = ('Aliens have attacked our base! We will '
                           'be back as soon as we fight them off. '
                           'We appreciate your patience.')

            raise falcon.HTTPServiceUnavailable(
                'Service Outage',
                description,
                30)

        resp.set_header('X-Powered-By', 'Donuts')
        resp.status = falcon.HTTP_200
        resp.body = json.dumps(result)

    def on_post(self, req, resp, user_id):
        try:
            raw_json = req.stream.read()
        except Exception:
            raise falcon.HTTPError(falcon.HTTP_748,
                                   'Read Error',
                                   'Could not read the request body. Must be '
                                   'them ponies again.')

        try:
            thing = json.loads(raw_json, 'utf-8')
        except ValueError:
            raise falcon.HTTPError(falcon.HTTP_753,
                                   'Malformed JSON',
                                   'Could not decode the request body. The '
                                   'JSON was incorrect.')

        proper_thing = self.db.add_thing(thing)

        resp.status = falcon.HTTP_201
        resp.location = '/%s/things/%s' % (user_id, proper_thing.id)

# Configure your WSGI server to load "things.app" (app is a WSGI callable)
app = falcon.API(before=[auth, check_media_type])

db = StorageEngine()
things = ThingsResource(db)
app.add_route('/{user_id}/things', things)

# If a responder ever raised an instance of StorageError, pass control to
# the given handler.
app.add_error_handler(StorageError, StorageError.handle)

# Useful for debugging problems in your API; works with pdb.set_trace()
if __name__ == '__main__':
    httpd = simple_server.make_server('127.0.0.1', 8000, app)
    httpd.serve_forever()

Contributing

Kurt Griffiths (kgriffs) is the creator and current maintainer of the Falcon framework, with the generous help of a number of contributors. Pull requests are always welcome.

Before submitting a pull request, please ensure you have added/updated the appropriate tests (and that all existing tests still pass with your changes), and that your coding style follows PEP 8 and doesn’t cause pyflakes to complain.

Commit messages should be formatted using AngularJS conventions (one-liners are OK for now but body and footer may be required as the project matures).

Comments follow Google’s style guide.

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