Related
How are you meant to debug errors in Flask? Print to the console? Flash messages to the page? Or is there a more powerful option available to figure out what's happening when something goes wrong?
Running the app in debug mode will show an interactive traceback and console in the browser when there is an error. As of Flask 2.2, to run in debug mode, pass the --app and --debug options to the flask command.
$ flask --app example --debug run
Prior to Flask 2.2, this was controlled by the FLASK_ENV=development environment variable instead. You can still use FLASK_APP and FLASK_DEBUG=1 instead of the options above.
For Linux, Mac, Linux Subsystem for Windows, Git Bash on Windows, etc.:
$ export FLASK_APP=example
$ export FLASK_DEBUG=1
$ flask run
For Windows CMD, use set instead of export:
set FLASK_DEBUG=1
For PowerShell, use $env:
$env:FLASK_DEBUG = "1"
If you're using the app.run() method instead of the flask run command, pass debug=True to enable debug mode.
Tracebacks are also printed to the terminal running the server, regardless of development mode.
If you're using PyCharm, VS Code, etc., you can take advantage of its debugger to step through the code with breakpoints. The run configuration can point to a script calling app.run(debug=True, use_reloader=False), or point it at the venv/bin/flask script and use it as you would from the command line. You can leave the reloader disabled, but a reload will kill the debugging context and you will have to catch a breakpoint again.
You can also use pdb, pudb, or another terminal debugger by calling set_trace in the view where you want to start debugging.
Be sure not to use too-broad except blocks. Surrounding all your code with a catch-all try... except... will silence the error you want to debug. It's unnecessary in general, since Flask will already handle exceptions by showing the debugger or a 500 error and printing the traceback to the console.
You can use app.run(debug=True) for the Werkzeug Debugger edit as mentioned below, and I should have known.
From the 1.1.x documentation, you can enable debug mode by exporting an environment variable to your shell prompt:
export FLASK_APP=/daemon/api/views.py # path to app
export FLASK_DEBUG=1
python -m flask run --host=0.0.0.0
One can also use the Flask Debug Toolbar extension to get more detailed information embedded in rendered pages.
from flask import Flask
from flask_debugtoolbar import DebugToolbarExtension
import logging
app = Flask(__name__)
app.debug = True
app.secret_key = 'development key'
toolbar = DebugToolbarExtension(app)
#app.route('/')
def index():
logging.warning("See this message in Flask Debug Toolbar!")
return "<html><body></body></html>"
Start the application as follows:
FLASK_APP=main.py FLASK_DEBUG=1 flask run
If you're using Visual Studio Code, replace
app.run(debug=True)
with
app.run()
It appears when turning on the internal debugger disables the VS Code debugger.
If you want to debug your flask app then just go to the folder where flask app is. Don't forget to activate your virtual environment and paste the lines in the console change "mainfilename" to flask main file.
export FLASK_APP="mainfilename.py"
export FLASK_DEBUG=1
python -m flask run --host=0.0.0.0
After you enable your debugger for flask app almost every error will be printed on the console or on the browser window.
If you want to figure out what's happening, you can use simple print statements or you can also use console.log() for javascript code.
To activate debug mode in flask you simply type set FLASK_DEBUG=1 on your CMD for windows, or export FLASK_DEBUG=1 on Linux terminal then restart your app and you are good to go!!
Install python-dotenv in your virtual environment.
Create a .flaskenv in your project root. By project root, I mean the folder which has your app.py file
Inside this file write the following:
FLASK_APP=myapp
FLASK_ENV=development
Now issue the following command:
flask run
When running as python app.py instead of the flask command, you can pass debug=True to app.run.
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(debug=True)
$ python app.py
with virtual env activate
export FLASK_DEBUG=true
you can configure
export FLASK_APP=app.py # run.py
export FLASK_ENV = "development"
to start
flask run
the result
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: xxx-xxx-xxx
and if you change
export FLASK_DEBUG=false
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: off
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
For Windows users:
Open Powershell and cd into your project directory.
Use these commandos in Powershell, all the other stuff won't work in Powershell.
$env:FLASK_APP = "app"
$env:FLASK_ENV = "development"
If you have PyCharm Professional, you can create a Flask server run configuration and enable the FLASK_DEBUG checkbox. Go to Run > Edit Configurations, select or create a Flask server configuration, and enable the FLASK_DEBUG checkbox. Click OK, then click the run button.
You can install python-dotenv with
pip install python-dotenv then create a .flask_env or a .env file
The contents of the file can be:
FLASK_APP=myapp
FLASK_DEBUG=True
Use loggers and print statements in the Development Environment, you can go for sentry in case of production environments.
How are you meant to debug errors in Flask? Print to the console? Flash messages to the page? Or is there a more powerful option available to figure out what's happening when something goes wrong?
Running the app in debug mode will show an interactive traceback and console in the browser when there is an error. As of Flask 2.2, to run in debug mode, pass the --app and --debug options to the flask command.
$ flask --app example --debug run
Prior to Flask 2.2, this was controlled by the FLASK_ENV=development environment variable instead. You can still use FLASK_APP and FLASK_DEBUG=1 instead of the options above.
For Linux, Mac, Linux Subsystem for Windows, Git Bash on Windows, etc.:
$ export FLASK_APP=example
$ export FLASK_DEBUG=1
$ flask run
For Windows CMD, use set instead of export:
set FLASK_DEBUG=1
For PowerShell, use $env:
$env:FLASK_DEBUG = "1"
If you're using the app.run() method instead of the flask run command, pass debug=True to enable debug mode.
Tracebacks are also printed to the terminal running the server, regardless of development mode.
If you're using PyCharm, VS Code, etc., you can take advantage of its debugger to step through the code with breakpoints. The run configuration can point to a script calling app.run(debug=True, use_reloader=False), or point it at the venv/bin/flask script and use it as you would from the command line. You can leave the reloader disabled, but a reload will kill the debugging context and you will have to catch a breakpoint again.
You can also use pdb, pudb, or another terminal debugger by calling set_trace in the view where you want to start debugging.
Be sure not to use too-broad except blocks. Surrounding all your code with a catch-all try... except... will silence the error you want to debug. It's unnecessary in general, since Flask will already handle exceptions by showing the debugger or a 500 error and printing the traceback to the console.
You can use app.run(debug=True) for the Werkzeug Debugger edit as mentioned below, and I should have known.
From the 1.1.x documentation, you can enable debug mode by exporting an environment variable to your shell prompt:
export FLASK_APP=/daemon/api/views.py # path to app
export FLASK_DEBUG=1
python -m flask run --host=0.0.0.0
One can also use the Flask Debug Toolbar extension to get more detailed information embedded in rendered pages.
from flask import Flask
from flask_debugtoolbar import DebugToolbarExtension
import logging
app = Flask(__name__)
app.debug = True
app.secret_key = 'development key'
toolbar = DebugToolbarExtension(app)
#app.route('/')
def index():
logging.warning("See this message in Flask Debug Toolbar!")
return "<html><body></body></html>"
Start the application as follows:
FLASK_APP=main.py FLASK_DEBUG=1 flask run
If you're using Visual Studio Code, replace
app.run(debug=True)
with
app.run()
It appears when turning on the internal debugger disables the VS Code debugger.
If you want to debug your flask app then just go to the folder where flask app is. Don't forget to activate your virtual environment and paste the lines in the console change "mainfilename" to flask main file.
export FLASK_APP="mainfilename.py"
export FLASK_DEBUG=1
python -m flask run --host=0.0.0.0
After you enable your debugger for flask app almost every error will be printed on the console or on the browser window.
If you want to figure out what's happening, you can use simple print statements or you can also use console.log() for javascript code.
To activate debug mode in flask you simply type set FLASK_DEBUG=1 on your CMD for windows, or export FLASK_DEBUG=1 on Linux terminal then restart your app and you are good to go!!
Install python-dotenv in your virtual environment.
Create a .flaskenv in your project root. By project root, I mean the folder which has your app.py file
Inside this file write the following:
FLASK_APP=myapp
FLASK_ENV=development
Now issue the following command:
flask run
When running as python app.py instead of the flask command, you can pass debug=True to app.run.
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(debug=True)
$ python app.py
with virtual env activate
export FLASK_DEBUG=true
you can configure
export FLASK_APP=app.py # run.py
export FLASK_ENV = "development"
to start
flask run
the result
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: xxx-xxx-xxx
and if you change
export FLASK_DEBUG=false
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: off
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
For Windows users:
Open Powershell and cd into your project directory.
Use these commandos in Powershell, all the other stuff won't work in Powershell.
$env:FLASK_APP = "app"
$env:FLASK_ENV = "development"
If you have PyCharm Professional, you can create a Flask server run configuration and enable the FLASK_DEBUG checkbox. Go to Run > Edit Configurations, select or create a Flask server configuration, and enable the FLASK_DEBUG checkbox. Click OK, then click the run button.
You can install python-dotenv with
pip install python-dotenv then create a .flask_env or a .env file
The contents of the file can be:
FLASK_APP=myapp
FLASK_DEBUG=True
Use loggers and print statements in the Development Environment, you can go for sentry in case of production environments.
I am trying to debug my flask app but when I start my wsgi script as debug It won't connect. My wsgi.py
from flask_app import app as application
if __name__ == "__main__":
application.run(host="0.0.0.0", port=5000)
and console message
pydev debugger: process 13472 is connecting
Connected to pydev debugger (build 143.1919)
* Running on http://0.0.0.0:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
pydev debugger: process 15356 is connecting
Running it normally works like a charm. How can I get any errors messages as indication to what is wrong?
EDIT:
it seems that it doesn't open the port in 5000 because when I run netstat -a and wsgi is running in debug mode, I don't see 0.0.0.0:5000 listening or timewait state anywhere. WHen run normally I can see 0.0.0.0:5000 listening
Just had the same problem with flask 0.12.1 and PyCharm 2017.1.2.
In PyCharm I ticked the
File > Settings > Build, Execution, Deployment > Debugger > 'Can accept external connections'
box, then restarted the debugger and it is now connecting to the pydev debugger.
Note that I have since unticked the box again and restarted the debugger and it still connects, so not sure if that is actually a legit solution, but seemed to work for me.
I was running flask in a public_ip server(with some users)
run command is
(host='0.0.0.0', port=80, debug=True)
but flask server blocking somewhere one hour ago (the log show last request is one hour before)
so how can I debug on it?(figure out it's blocking on which python line?)
I have tried
gdb python3.4-dbg pid,but my flask app can't run by python3.4-dbg,for
from PIL import _imaging as core
ImportError: cannot import name '_imaging'
I believe the command is:
gdb -p pid
to attach to a running process.
oh,I find a way
after install python-dbg
use gdb python pid to attach flask
and use py-bt py-list py-locals to check the blocking stack
I'm investigating how to develop a decent web app with Python. Since I don't want some high-order structures to get in my way, my choice fell on the lightweight Flask framework. Time will tell if this was the right choice.
So, now I've set up an Apache server with mod_wsgi, and my test site is running fine. However, I'd like to speed up the development routine by making the site automatically reload upon any changes in py or template files I make. I see that any changes in site's .wsgi file causes reloading (even without WSGIScriptReloading On in the apache config file), but I still have to prod it manually (ie, insert extra linebreak, save). Is there some way how to cause reload when I edit some of the app's py files? Or, I am expected to use IDE that refreshes the .wsgi file for me?
Run the flask run CLI command with debug mode enabled, which will automatically enable the reloader. As of Flask 2.2, you can pass --app and --debug options on the command line.
$ flask --app main.py --debug run
--app can also be set to module:app or module:create_app instead of module.py. See the docs for a full explanation.
More options are available with:
$ flask run --help
Prior to Flask 2.2, you needed to set the FLASK_APP and FLASK_ENV=development environment variables.
$ export FLASK_APP=main.py
$ export FLASK_ENV=development
$ flask run
It is still possible to set FLASK_APP and FLASK_DEBUG=1 in Flask 2.2.
If you are talking about test/dev environments, then just use the debug option. It will auto-reload the flask app when a code change happens.
app.run(debug=True)
Or, from the shell:
$ export FLASK_DEBUG=1
$ flask run
http://flask.palletsprojects.com/quickstart/#debug-mode
In test/development environments
The werkzeug debugger already has an 'auto reload' function available that can be enabled by doing one of the following:
app.run(debug=True)
or
app.debug = True
You can also use a separate configuration file to manage all your setup if you need be. For example I use 'settings.py' with a 'DEBUG = True' option. Importing this file is easy too;
app.config.from_object('application.settings')
However this is not suitable for a production environment.
Production environment
Personally I chose Nginx + uWSGI over Apache + mod_wsgi for a few performance reasons but also the configuration options. The touch-reload option allows you to specify a file/folder that will cause the uWSGI application to reload your newly deployed flask app.
For example, your update script pulls your newest changes down and touches 'reload_me.txt' file. Your uWSGI ini script (which is kept up by Supervisord - obviously) has this line in it somewhere:
touch-reload = '/opt/virtual_environments/application/reload_me.txt'
I hope this helps!
If you're running using uwsgi look at the python auto reload option:
uwsgi --py-autoreload 1
Example uwsgi-dev-example.ini:
[uwsgi]
socket = 127.0.0.1:5000
master = true
virtualenv = /Users/xxxx/.virtualenvs/sites_env
chdir = /Users/xxx/site_root
module = site_module:register_debug_server()
callable = app
uid = myuser
chmod-socket = 660
log-date = true
workers = 1
py-autoreload = 1
site_root/__init__.py
def register_debug_server():
from werkzeug.debug import DebuggedApplication
app = Flask(__name__)
app.debug = True
app = DebuggedApplication(app, evalex=True)
return app
Then run:
uwsgi --ini uwsgi-dev-example.ini
Note: This example also enables the debugger.
I went this route to mimic production as close as possible with my nginx setup. Simply running the flask app with it's built in web server behind nginx it would result in a bad gateway error.
For Flask 1.0 until 2.2, the basic approach to hot re-loading is:
$ export FLASK_APP=my_application
$ export FLASK_ENV=development
$ flask run
you should use FLASK_ENV=development (not FLASK_DEBUG=1)
as a safety check, you can run flask run --debugger just to make sure it's turned on
the Flask CLI will now automatically read things like FLASK_APP and FLASK_ENV if you have an .env file in the project root and have python-dotenv installed
app.run(use_reloader=True)
we can use this, use_reloader so every time we reload the page our code changes will be updated.
I got a different idea:
First:
pip install python-dotenv
Install the python-dotenv module, which will read local preference for your project environment.
Second:
Add .flaskenv file in your project directory. Add following code:
FLASK_ENV=development
It's done!
With this config for your Flask project, when you run flask run and you will see this output in your terminal:
And when you edit your file, just save the change. You will see auto-reload is there for you:
With more explanation:
Of course you can manually hit export FLASK_ENV=development every time you need. But using different configuration file to handle the actual working environment seems like a better solution, so I strongly recommend this method I use.
Use this method:
app.run(debug=True)
It will auto-reload the flask app when a code change happens.
Sample code:
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
#app.route("/")
def index():
return "Hello World"
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(debug=True)
Well, if you want save time not reloading the webpage everytime when changes happen, then you can try the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + R to reload the page quickly.
From the terminal you can simply say
export FLASK_APP=app_name.py
export FLASK_ENV=development
flask run
or in your file
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(debug=True)
Enable the reloader in flask 2.2:
flask run --reload
Flask applications can optionally be executed in debug mode. In this mode, two very convenient modules of the development server called the reloader and the debugger are enabled by default.
When the reloader is enabled, Flask watches all the source code files of your project and automatically restarts the server when any of the files are modified.
By default, debug mode is disabled. To enable it, set a FLASK_DEBUG=1 environment variable before invoking flask run:
(venv) $ export FLASK_APP=hello.py for Windows use > set FLASK_APP=hello.py
(venv) $ export FLASK_DEBUG=1 for Windows use > set FLASK_DEBUG=1
(venv) $ flask run
* Serving Flask app "hello"
* Forcing debug mode on
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 273-181-528
Having a server running with the reloader enabled is extremely useful during development, because every time you modify and save a source file, the server automatically restarts and picks up the change.
To achieve this in PyCharm set 'Environment Variables' section to:
PYTHONUNBUFFERED=1;
FLASK_DEBUG=1
For Flask 'run / debug configurations'.
To help with fast automatic change in browser:
pip install livereload
from livereload import Server
if __name__ == '__main__':
server = Server(app.wsgi_app)
server.serve()
Next, Start your server again:
eg. your .py file is app.py
python app.py
I believe a better solution is to set the app configuration. For me, I built the tool and then pushed it to a development server where I had to set up a WSGI pipeline to manage the flask web app. I had some data being updated to a template and I wanted it to refresh every X minutes (WSGI deployment for the Flask site through APACHE2 on UBUNTU 18). In your app.py or whatever your main app is, add app.config.update dictionary below and mark TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD=True, you will find that any templates that are automatically updated on the server will be reflected in the browser. There is some great documentation on the Flask site for configuration handling found here.
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config.update(
TEMPLATES_AUTO_RELOAD=True
)