The Python Flask templates that make use of the incubator project of-watchdog.
Templates available in this repository:
-
python3-http
-
python3-http-debian (ideal for compiled dependencies like numpy, pandas, pillow)
-
python3-flask
-
python3-flask-debian (ideal for compiled dependencies like numpy, pandas, pillow)
-
python27-flask (Python 2.7 is deprecated)
Notes:
- To build and deploy a function for an ARM computer, you'll need to use
faas-cli publish --platforms
If you need to install Pip modules from private Git repositories, we provide an alternative set of templates for OpenFaaS Pro customers:
The templates named python*-flask*
are designed as a drop-in replacement for the classic python3
template, but using the more efficient of-watchdog. The move to use flask as an underlying framework allows for greater control over the HTTP request and response.
Those templates named python*-http*
are designed to offer full control over the HTTP request and response. Flask is used as an underlying framework.
The witness
HTTP server is used along with Flask for all templates.
Are you referencing pip modules which require a native build toolchain? It's advisable to use the template with a -debian
suffix in this case. The Debian images are larger, however they are usually more efficient for use with modules like numpy
and pandas
.
We try to keep the default Python 3 version up-to-date, however, you can specify a specific python version using the PYTHON_VERSION
build argument.
The current stable version of Python is 3.12, you might want to test the next pre-release using:
functions:
pgfn:
lang: python3-http-debian
handler: ./pgfn
image: pgfn:latest
build_args:
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.12
Or pin to a older version while you wait for your dependencies to be updated.
functions:
pgfn:
lang: python3-http-debian
handler: ./pgfn
image: pgfn:latest
build_args:
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.10
This can also be set using the --build-arg
flag.
faas-cli build --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.12
For the -debian
templates, the DEBIAN_OS
build_args is also available to specify the Debian version. The default is currently bookworm
.
Using template pull with the repository's URL:
faas-cli template pull https://github.com/openfaas-incubator/python-flask-template
Using the template store:
# Either command downloads both templates
faas-cli template store pull python3-http
# Or
faas-cli template store pull python3-flask
Using your stack.yml
file:
configuration:
templates:
- name: python3-http
Create a new function
export OPENFAAS_PREFIX=alexellis2
export FN="tester"
faas-cli new --lang python3-http $FN
Build, push, and deploy
faas-cli up -f $FN.yml
Test the new function
echo -n content | faas-cli invoke $FN
The function handler is passed two arguments, event and context.
event contains data about the request, including:
- body
- headers
- method
- query
- path
context contains basic information about the function, including:
- hostname
By default, the template will automatically attempt to set the correct Content-Type header for you based on the type of response.
For example, returning a dict object type will automatically attach the header Content-Type: application/json
and returning a string type will automatically attach the Content-Type: text/html, charset=utf-8
for you.
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": {"message": "Hello from OpenFaaS!"},
"headers": {
"Content-Type": "application/json"
}
}
Successful response status code and JSON response body
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": {
"key": "value"
}
}
Successful response status code and string response body
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 201,
"body": "Object successfully created"
}
Failure response status code and JSON error message
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 400,
"body": {
"error": "Bad request"
}
}
Setting custom response headers
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": {
"key": "value"
},
"headers": {
"Location": "https://www.example.com/"
}
}
Accessing request body
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": "You said: " + str(event.body)
}
Accessing request method
def handle(event, context):
if event.method == 'GET':
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": "GET request"
}
else:
return {
"statusCode": 405,
"body": "Method not allowed"
}
Accessing request query string arguments
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": {
"name": event.query['name']
}
}
Accessing request headers
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": {
"content-type-received": event.headers.get('Content-Type')
}
}
stack.yml
version: 1.0
provider:
name: openfaas
gateway: http://127.0.0.1:8080
functions:
pgfn:
lang: python3-http-debian
handler: ./pgfn
image: pgfn:latest
build_options:
- libpq
Alternatively you can specify ADDITIONAL_PACKAGE
in the build_args
section for the function.
build_args:
ADDITIONAL_PACKAGE: "libpq-dev gcc python3-dev"
requirements.txt
psycopg2==2.9.3
Create a database and table:
CREATE DATABASE main;
\c main;
CREATE TABLE users (
name TEXT,
);
-- Insert the original Postgresql author's name into the test table:
INSERT INTO users (name) VALUES ('Michael Stonebraker');
handler.py:
import psycopg2
def handle(event, context):
try:
conn = psycopg2.connect("dbname='main' user='postgres' port=5432 host='192.168.1.35' password='passwd'")
except Exception as e:
print("DB error {}".format(e))
return {
"statusCode": 500,
"body": e
}
cur = conn.cursor()
cur.execute("""SELECT * from users;""")
rows = cur.fetchall()
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": rows
}
Always read the secret from an OpenFaaS secret at /var/openfaas/secrets/secret-name
. The use of environment variables is an anti-pattern and will be visible via the OpenFaaS API.
Create a new function
export OPENFAAS_PREFIX=alexellis2
export FN="tester"
faas-cli new --lang python3-flask $FN
Build, push, and deploy
faas-cli up -f $FN.yml
Test the new function
echo -n content | faas-cli invoke $FN
def handle(req):
"""handle a request to the function
Args:
req (str): request body
"""
return "Hi" + str(req)
def handle(req):
return "request accepted", 201
def handle(req):
return "request accepted", 201, {"Content-Type":"binary/octet-stream"}
Update stack.yml:
environment:
RAW_BODY: True
Note: the value for
RAW_BODY
is case-sensitive.
def handle(req):
"""handle a request to the function
Args:
req (str): request body
"""
# req is bytes, so an input of "hello" returns i.e. b'hello'
return str(req)
The python3
templates will run pytest
using tox
during the faas-cli build
. There are several options for controlling this.
The template exposes the build arg TEST_ENABLED
. You can completely disable testing during build by passing the following flag to the CLI
--build-arg 'TEST_ENABLED=false'
You can also set it permanently in your stack.yaml, see the YAML reference in the docs.
The template creates a default tox.ini
file, modifying this file can completely control what happens during the test. You can change the test command, for example switching to nose
. See the tox docs for more details and examples.
If you don't want to use tox
at all, you can also change the test command that is used. The template exposes the build arg TEST_COMMAND
. You can override the test command during build by passing the following flag to the CLI
--build-arg 'TEST_COMMAND=bash test.sh'
Setting the command to any other executable in the image or any scripts you have in your function.
You can also set it permanently in your stack.yaml, see the YAML reference in the docs.