| | FastCGI |
| | ======= |
| |
|
| | FastCGI is a deployment option on servers like `nginx`_, `lighttpd`_, and |
| | `cherokee`_; see :doc:`uwsgi` and :doc:`wsgi-standalone` for other options. |
| | To use your WSGI application with any of them you will need a FastCGI |
| | server first. The most popular one is `flup`_ which we will use for |
| | this guide. Make sure to have it installed to follow along. |
| |
|
| | .. admonition:: Watch Out |
| |
|
| | Please make sure in advance that any ``app.run()`` calls you might |
| | have in your application file are inside an ``if __name__ == |
| | '__main__':`` block or moved to a separate file. Just make sure it's |
| | not called because this will always start a local WSGI server which |
| | we do not want if we deploy that application to FastCGI. |
| |
|
| | Creating a `.fcgi` file |
| | |
| |
|
| | First you need to create the FastCGI server file. Let's call it |
| | `yourapplication.fcgi`:: |
| |
|
| | |
| | from flup.server.fcgi import WSGIServer |
| | from yourapplication import app |
| |
|
| | if __name__ == '__main__': |
| | WSGIServer(app).run() |
| |
|
| | This is enough for Apache to work, however nginx and older versions of |
| | lighttpd need a socket to be explicitly passed to communicate with the |
| | FastCGI server. For that to work you need to pass the path to the |
| | socket to the :class:`~flup.server.fcgi.WSGIServer`:: |
| |
|
| | WSGIServer(application, bindAddress='/path/to/fcgi.sock').run() |
| |
|
| | The path has to be the exact same path you define in the server |
| | config. |
| |
|
| | Save the :file:`yourapplication.fcgi` file somewhere you will find it again. |
| | It makes sense to have that in :file:`/var/www/yourapplication` or something |
| | similar. |
| |
|
| | Make sure to set the executable bit on that file so that the servers |
| | can execute it: |
| |
|
| | .. sourcecode:: text |
| |
|
| | $ chmod +x /var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.fcgi |
| |
|
| | Configuring Apache |
| | |
| |
|
| | The example above is good enough for a basic Apache deployment but your |
| | `.fcgi` file will appear in your application URL e.g. |
| | ``example.com/yourapplication.fcgi/news/``. There are few ways to configure |
| | your application so that yourapplication.fcgi does not appear in the URL. |
| | A preferable way is to use the ScriptAlias and SetHandler configuration |
| | directives to route requests to the FastCGI server. The following example |
| | uses FastCgiServer to start 5 instances of the application which will |
| | handle all incoming requests:: |
| |
|
| | LoadModule fastcgi_module /usr/lib64/httpd/modules/mod_fastcgi.so |
| |
|
| | FastCgiServer /var/www/html/yourapplication/app.fcgi -idle-timeout 300 -processes 5 |
| |
|
| | <VirtualHost *> |
| | ServerName webapp1.mydomain.com |
| | DocumentRoot /var/www/html/yourapplication |
| |
|
| | AddHandler fastcgi-script fcgi |
| | ScriptAlias / /var/www/html/yourapplication/app.fcgi/ |
| |
|
| | <Location /> |
| | SetHandler fastcgi-script |
| | </Location> |
| | </VirtualHost> |
| |
|
| | These processes will be managed by Apache. If you're using a standalone |
| | FastCGI server, you can use the FastCgiExternalServer directive instead. |
| | Note that in the following the path is not real, it's simply used as an |
| | identifier to other |
| | directives such as AliasMatch:: |
| |
|
| | FastCgiServer /var/www/html/yourapplication -host 127.0.0.1:3000 |
| |
|
| | If you cannot set ScriptAlias, for example on a shared web host, you can use |
| | WSGI middleware to remove yourapplication.fcgi from the URLs. Set .htaccess:: |
| |
|
| | <IfModule mod_fcgid.c> |
| | AddHandler fcgid-script .fcgi |
| | <Files ~ (\.fcgi)> |
| | SetHandler fcgid-script |
| | Options +FollowSymLinks +ExecCGI |
| | </Files> |
| | </IfModule> |
| |
|
| | <IfModule mod_rewrite.c> |
| | Options +FollowSymlinks |
| | RewriteEngine On |
| | RewriteBase / |
| | RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f |
| | RewriteRule ^(.*)$ yourapplication.fcgi/$1 [QSA,L] |
| | </IfModule> |
| |
|
| | Set yourapplication.fcgi:: |
| |
|
| | |
| | |
| | import sys |
| | sys.path.insert(0, '<your_local_path>/lib/python<your_python_version>/site-packages') |
| |
|
| | from flup.server.fcgi import WSGIServer |
| | from yourapplication import app |
| |
|
| | class ScriptNameStripper(object): |
| | def __init__(self, app): |
| | self.app = app |
| |
|
| | def __call__(self, environ, start_response): |
| | environ['SCRIPT_NAME'] = '' |
| | return self.app(environ, start_response) |
| |
|
| | app = ScriptNameStripper(app) |
| |
|
| | if __name__ == '__main__': |
| | WSGIServer(app).run() |
| |
|
| | Configuring lighttpd |
| | |
| |
|
| | A basic FastCGI configuration for lighttpd looks like that:: |
| |
|
| | fastcgi.server = ("/yourapplication.fcgi" => |
| | (( |
| | "socket" => "/tmp/yourapplication-fcgi.sock", |
| | "bin-path" => "/var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.fcgi", |
| | "check-local" => "disable", |
| | "max-procs" => 1 |
| | )) |
| | ) |
| |
|
| | alias.url = ( |
| | "/static/" => "/path/to/your/static/" |
| | ) |
| |
|
| | url.rewrite-once = ( |
| | "^(/static($|/.*))$" => "$1", |
| | "^(/.*)$" => "/yourapplication.fcgi$1" |
| | ) |
| |
|
| | Remember to enable the FastCGI, alias and rewrite modules. This configuration |
| | binds the application to ``/yourapplication``. If you want the application to |
| | work in the URL root you have to work around a lighttpd bug with the |
| | :class:`~werkzeug.contrib.fixers.LighttpdCGIRootFix` middleware. |
| |
|
| | Make sure to apply it only if you are mounting the application the URL |
| | root. Also, see the Lighty docs for more information on `FastCGI and Python |
| | <https://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/wiki/Docs_ModFastCGI>`_ (note that |
| | explicitly passing a socket to run() is no longer necessary). |
| |
|
| | Configuring nginx |
| | |
| |
|
| | Installing FastCGI applications on nginx is a bit different because by |
| | default no FastCGI parameters are forwarded. |
| |
|
| | A basic Flask FastCGI configuration for nginx looks like this:: |
| |
|
| | location = /yourapplication { rewrite ^ /yourapplication/ last; } |
| | location /yourapplication { try_files $uri @yourapplication; } |
| | location @yourapplication { |
| | include fastcgi_params; |
| | fastcgi_split_path_info ^(/yourapplication)(.*)$; |
| | fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_path_info; |
| | fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME $fastcgi_script_name; |
| | fastcgi_pass unix:/tmp/yourapplication-fcgi.sock; |
| | } |
| |
|
| | This configuration binds the application to ``/yourapplication``. If you |
| | want to have it in the URL root it's a bit simpler because you don't |
| | have to figure out how to calculate ``PATH_INFO`` and ``SCRIPT_NAME``:: |
| |
|
| | location / { try_files $uri @yourapplication; } |
| | location @yourapplication { |
| | include fastcgi_params; |
| | fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_script_name; |
| | fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME ""; |
| | fastcgi_pass unix:/tmp/yourapplication-fcgi.sock; |
| | } |
| |
|
| | Running FastCGI Processes |
| | |
| |
|
| | Since nginx and others do not load FastCGI apps, you have to do it by |
| | yourself. `Supervisor can manage FastCGI processes. |
| | <http://supervisord.org/configuration.html |
| | You can look around for other FastCGI process managers or write a script |
| | to run your `.fcgi` file at boot, e.g. using a SysV ``init.d`` script. |
| | For a temporary solution, you can always run the ``.fcgi`` script inside |
| | GNU screen. See ``man screen`` for details, and note that this is a |
| | manual solution which does not persist across system restart:: |
| |
|
| | $ screen |
| | $ /var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.fcgi |
| |
|
| | Debugging |
| | |
| |
|
| | FastCGI deployments tend to be hard to debug on most web servers. Very |
| | often the only thing the server log tells you is something along the |
| | lines of "premature end of headers". In order to debug the application |
| | the only thing that can really give you ideas why it breaks is switching |
| | to the correct user and executing the application by hand. |
| |
|
| | This example assumes your application is called `application.fcgi` and |
| | that your web server user is `www-data`:: |
| |
|
| | $ su www-data |
| | $ cd /var/www/yourapplication |
| | $ python application.fcgi |
| | Traceback (most recent call last): |
| | File "yourapplication.fcgi", line 4, in <module> |
| | ImportError: No module named yourapplication |
| |
|
| | In this case the error seems to be "yourapplication" not being on the |
| | python path. Common problems are: |
| |
|
| | - Relative paths being used. Don't rely on the current working directory. |
| | - The code depending on environment variables that are not set by the |
| | web server. |
| | - Different python interpreters being used. |
| |
|
| | .. _nginx: https://nginx.org/ |
| | .. _lighttpd: https://www.lighttpd.net/ |
| | .. _cherokee: https://cherokee-project.com/ |
| | .. _flup: https://pypi.org/project/flup/ |
| |
|