This module provides a WSGI gateway handler for the Mongrel2 webserver, allowing easy deployment of python apps on Mongrel2. It provides full support for chunked response encoding, streaming reads of large file uploads, and pluggable backends for evented I/O a la eventlet.
You might also find its supporting classes useful for developing non-WSGI handlers in python.
The simplest way to use this package is as a command-line launcher:
m2wsgi dotted.app.name tcp://127.0.0.1:9999
This will connect to Mongrel2 on the specified request port and start handling requests by passing them through the specified WSGI app. By default you will get a single worker thread handling all requests, which is probably not what you want; increase the number of threads like so:
m2wsgi --num-threads=5 dotted.app.name tcp://127.0.0.1:9999
If threads aren't your thing, you can just start several instances of the handler pointing at the same zmq socket and get the same effect. Better yet, you can use eventlet to shuffle the bits around like so:
m2wsgi --io=eventlet dotted.app.name tcp://127.0.0.1:9999
You can also use --io=gevent if that's how you roll. Contributions for other async backends are most welcome.
If you have more complicated needs, you can use m2wsgi from within your application. The main class is 'WSGIHandler' which provides a simple server interface. The equivalent of the above command-line usage is:
from m2wsgi.io.standard import WSGIHandler handler = WSGIHandler(my_wsgi_app,"tcp://127.0.0.1:9999") handler.serve()
There are a lot of "sensible defaults" being filled in here. It assumes that the Mongrel2 recv socket is on the next port down from the send socket, and that it's OK to connect the socket without a persistent identity.
For finer control over the connection between your handler and Mongrel2, create your own Connection object. Here we use 127.0.0.1:9999 as the send socket with identity AA-BB-CC, and use 127.0.0.2:9992 as the recv socket:
from m2wsgi.io.standard import WSGIHandler, Connection conn = Connection(send_sock="tcp://[email protected]:9999", recv_sock="tcp://127.0.0.1:9992") handler = WSGIHandler(my_wsgi_app,conn) handler.serve()
If you're creating non-WSGI handlers for Mongrel2 you might find the following classes useful:
Connection: represents the connection from your handler to Mongrel2, through which you can read requests and send responses. Client: represents a client connected to the server, to whom you can send data at any time. Request: represents a client request to which you can asynchronously send response data at any time. Handler: a base class for implementing handlers, with nothing WSGI-specific in it.
If you need to add fancy features to the server, you can specify additional WSGI middleware that should be applied around the application. For example, m2wsgi provides a gzip-encoding middleware that can be used to compress response data:
m2wsgi --middleware=GZipMiddleware dotted.app.name tcp://127.0.0.1:9999
If you want additional compression at the expense of WSGI compliance, you can also do some in-server buffering before the gzipping is applied:
m2wsgi --middleware=GZipMiddleware --middleware=BufferMiddleware dotted.app.name tcp://127.0.0.1:9999
The default module for loading middleware is m2wsgi.middleware; specify a full dotted name to load a middleware class from another module.
This module also provides a number of pre-built "devices" - stand-alone executables designed to perform a specific common task. Currently availble devices are:
dispatcher: implements a more flexible request-routing scheme than the standard mongrel2 PUSH socket. response: implements a simple canned response, with ability to interpolate variables from the request.
Yes, there are several existing WSGI gateways for Mongrel2:
None of them fully met my needs. In particular, this package has transparent support for:
- chunked response encoding
- streaming reads of large "async upload" requests
- pluggable IO backends (e.g. eventlet, gevent)
It's also designed from the ground up specifically for Mongrel2. This means it gets a lot of functionality for free, and the code is simpler and lighter as a result.
For example, there is no explicit management of a threadpool and request queue as you might find in e.g. the CherryPy server. Instead, you just start up as many threads as you need, have them all connect to the same handler socket, and mongrel2 (via zmq) will automatically load-balance the requests to them.
Similarly, there's no fancy arrangement of master/worker processes to support clean reloading of the handler; you just kill the old handler process and start up a new one. Send m2wsgi a SIGHUP and it will automatically shutdown and reincarnate itself for a clean restart.
It's not all perfect just yet, although it does seem to mostly work:
- Needs tests something fierce! I just have to find the patience to write the necessary setup and teardown cruft.
- It would be great to grab connection details straight from the mongrel2 config database. Perhaps a Connection.from_config method with keywords to select the connection by handler id, host, route etc.
- support for expect-100-continue; this may have to live in mongrel2