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Command line toolkit born as a PasteScript replacement for the TurboGears2 web framework

Project description

About gearbox

gearbox is a paster command replacement for TurboGears2. It has been created during the process of providing Python3 support to the TurboGears2 web framework, while still being backward compatible with the existing TurboGears projects.

Installing

gearbox can be installed from pypi:

easy_install gearbox

or:

pip install gearbox

should just work for most of the users

Out of The Box

Just by installing gearbox itself your TurboGears project will be able to use gearbox system wide commands like gearbox serve, gearbox setup-app and gearbox makepackage commands. These commands provide a replacement for the paster serve, paster setup-app and paster create commands.

The main difference with the paster command is usually only that gearbox commands explicitly set the configuration file using the --config option instead of accepting it positionally. By default gearbox will always load a configuration file named development.ini, this mean you can simply run gearbox serve in place of paster serve development.ini

To have a list of the available commands simply run gearbox --help:

$ gearbox --help
usage: gearbox [--version] [-v] [--log-file LOG_FILE] [-q] [-h] [--debug]

TurboGears2 Gearbox toolset

optional arguments:
  --version            show program's version number and exit
  -v, --verbose        Increase verbosity of output. Can be repeated.
  --log-file LOG_FILE  Specify a file to log output. Disabled by default.
  -q, --quiet          suppress output except warnings and errors
  -h, --help           show this help message and exit
  --debug              show tracebacks on errors

Commands:
  help           print detailed help for another command
  makepackage    Creates a basic python package
  migrate        Handles TurboGears2 Database Migrations
  quickstart     Creates a new TurboGears2 project
  serve          Serves a web application that uses a PasteDeploy configuration file
  setup-app      Setup an application, given a config file
  tgshell        Opens an interactive shell with a TurboGears2 app loaded
  scaffold       Creates a new file from a scaffold template

Then it is possible to ask for help for a given command by using gearbox help command:

$ gearbox help serve
usage: gearbox serve [-h] [-n NAME] [-s SERVER_TYPE]
                     [--server-name SECTION_NAME] [--daemon]
                     [--pid-file FILENAME] [--reload]
                     [--reload-interval RELOAD_INTERVAL] [--monitor-restart]
                     [--status] [--user USERNAME] [--group GROUP]
                     [--stop-daemon] [-c CONFIG_FILE]
                     [args [args ...]]

Serves a web application that uses a PasteDeploy configuration file

positional arguments:
  args

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -n NAME, --app-name NAME
                        Load the named application (default main)
  -s SERVER_TYPE, --server SERVER_TYPE
                        Use the named server.
  --server-name SECTION_NAME
                        Use the named server as defined in the configuration
                        file (default: main)
  --daemon              Run in daemon (background) mode
  --pid-file FILENAME   Save PID to file (default to gearbox.pid if running in
                        daemon mode)
  --reload              Use auto-restart file monitor
  --reload-interval RELOAD_INTERVAL
                        Seconds between checking files (low number can cause
                        significant CPU usage)
  --monitor-restart     Auto-restart server if it dies
  --status              Show the status of the (presumably daemonized) server
  --user USERNAME       Set the user (usually only possible when run as root)
  --group GROUP         Set the group (usually only possible when run as root)
  --stop-daemon         Stop a daemonized server (given a PID file, or default
                        gearbox.pid file)
  -c CONFIG_FILE, --config CONFIG_FILE
                        application config file to read (default:
                        development.ini)

Development Tools Commands

Installing the TurboGears 2.3 development tools you will get access some some gearbox commands specific to TurboGears2 projects management, those are the gearbox quickstart, gearbox tgshell and gearbox migrate commands.

While the quickstart command will be automatically available, you will have to enable project scope plugins for gearbox before the other two became available. This will let gearbox know that you are running it inside a TurboGears2 project and so that the commands that only make sense for TurboGears2 projects will became available.

Enabling migrate and tgshell commands

To enable gearbox migrate and gearbox tgshell commands make sure that your setup.py entry_points look like:

entry_points={
    'paste.app_factory': [
        'main = makonoauth.config.middleware:make_app'
    ],
    'gearbox.plugins': [
        'turbogears-devtools = tg.devtools'
    ]
}

The paste.app_factory section will let gearbox serve know how to create the application that has to be served. Gearbox relies on PasteDeploy for application setup, so it required a paste.app_factory section to be able to correctly load the application.

While the gearbox.plugins section will let gearbox itself know that inside that directory the tg.devtools commands have to be enabled making gearbox tgshell and gearbox migrate available when we run gearbox from inside our project directory.

Gearbox Interactive Mode

By default launching gearbox without any subcommand will start the interactive mode. This provides an interactive prompt where gearbox commands, system shell commands and python statements can be executed. If you have any doubt about what you can do simply run the help command to get a list of the commands available (running help somecommand will provide help for the given sub command).

Gearbox HTTP Servers

If you are moving your TurboGears2 project from paster you will probably end serving your application with Paste HTTP server even if you are using the gearbox serve command.

The reason for this behavior is that gearbox is going to use what is specified inside the server:main section of your .ini file to serve your application. TurboGears2 projects quickstarted before 2.3 used Paste and so the projects is probably configured to use Paste#http as the server. This is not an issue by itself, it will just require you to have Paste installed to be able to serve the application, to totally remove the Paste dependency simply replace Paste#http with gearbox#wsgiref.

The gearbox#wsgiref also supports an experimental multithreaded version that can be enabled by setting the wsgiref.threaded = true option in your server configuration section.

Serving with GEvent

Gearbox cames with builtin support for gevent, so serving an application under Gevent is just a matter of using gearbox#gevent as your server inside the server:main section of the configuration file.

The gearbox gevent server will automatically monkeypatch all the python modules apart from the DNS related functions before loading your application. Not much more apart making sure that your code is gevent compatible is required.

Scaffolding

Scaffolding is the process of creating a new component of your web application through a template or preset.

The gearbox scaffold command permits to create new files from scaffolds (file templates) which you can place inside your project itself. Scaffold files should be named with .template extension and can be used by running:

$ gearbox scaffold templatename target

This will create a target file (do not provide the extension, that is specified inside the templatename itself) starting from the templatename scaffold.

A tipical scaffold filename will be named like model.py.template and will look like:

class {{target.capitalize()}}(DeclarativeBase):
    __tablename__ = '{{target.lower()}}s'

    uid = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    data = Column(Unicode(255), nullable=False)

Patching

patch is one of the few builtin commands of Gearbox and is commonly used to update code. You can think of it as an easier to used sed command mixed with python.

Here are a few examples, this will replace all xi:include occurrences with py:extends in all the template files recursively:

$ gearbox patch -R '*.html' xi:include -r py:extends

It is also possible to rely on regex and python for more complex replacements, like updating the Copyright year in your documentation:

$ gearbox patch -R '*.rst' -x 'Copyright(\s*)(\d+)' -e -r '"Copyright\\g<1>"+__import__("datetime").datetime.utcnow().strftime("%Y")'

Please refer to gearbox help patch for available options.

Writing new gearbox commands

gearbox relies on the Cliff command framework for commands crations. Most of what the Cliff documentation states is perfectly valid for gearbox commands, some differences only apply in the case of Template based commands.

Template Based Commands

Writing new gearbox template commands is as simple as creating a gearbox.command.TemplateCommand subclass and place it inside a command.py file in a python package.

Inherit from the class and implement the get_description, get_parser and take_action methods as described by the documentation.

The only difference is that your take_action method has to end by calling self.run_template(output_dir, opts) where output_dir is the directory where the template output has to be written and opts are the command options as your take_action method received them.

When the run_template command is called Gearbox will automatically run the template directory in the same package where the command was available.

Each file ending with the _tmpl syntax will be processed with the Tempita template engine and whenever the name of a file or directory contains +optname+ it will be substituted with the value of the option having the same name (e.g., +package+ will be substituted with the value of the –package options which will probably end being the name of the package).

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