Serving WSGI Applications

There are many ways to serve a WSGI application. While you’re developing it, you usually don’t want to have a full-blown webserver like Apache up and running, but instead a simple standalone one. Because of that Werkzeug comes with a builtin development server.

The easiest way is creating a small start-myproject.py file that runs the application using the builtin server:

from werkzeug.serving import run_simple
from myproject import make_app

app = make_app(...)
run_simple('localhost', 8080, app, use_reloader=True)

You can also pass it the extra_files keyword argument with a list of additional files (like configuration files) you want to observe.

werkzeug.serving.run_simple(hostname, port, application, use_reloader=False, use_debugger=False, use_evalex=True, extra_files=None, exclude_patterns=None, reloader_interval=1, reloader_type='auto', threaded=False, processes=1, request_handler=None, static_files=None, passthrough_errors=False, ssl_context=None)

Start a WSGI application. Optional features include a reloader, multithreading and fork support.

This function has a command-line interface too:

python -m werkzeug.serving --help

Changed in version 2.0: Added exclude_patterns parameter.

Changelog

Changed in version 0.15: Bind to a Unix socket by passing a path that starts with unix:// as the hostname.

New in version 0.10: Improved the reloader and added support for changing the backend through the reloader_type parameter. See Reloader for more information.

New in version 0.9: Added command-line interface.

New in version 0.8: Added support for automatically loading a SSL context from certificate file and private key.

New in version 0.6: support for SSL was added.

New in version 0.5: static_files was added to simplify serving of static files as well as passthrough_errors.

Parameters
  • hostname (str) – The host to bind to, for example 'localhost'. If the value is a path that starts with unix:// it will bind to a Unix socket instead of a TCP socket..
  • port (int) – The port for the server. eg: 8080
  • application (WSGIApplication) – the WSGI application to execute
  • use_reloader (bool) – should the server automatically restart the python process if modules were changed?
  • use_debugger (bool) – should the werkzeug debugging system be used?
  • use_evalex (bool) – should the exception evaluation feature be enabled?
  • extra_files (Optional[Iterable[str]]) – a list of files the reloader should watch additionally to the modules. For example configuration files.
  • exclude_patterns (Optional[Iterable[str]]) – List of fnmatch patterns to ignore when running the reloader. For example, ignore cache files that shouldn’t reload when updated.
  • reloader_interval (int) – the interval for the reloader in seconds.
  • reloader_type (str) – the type of reloader to use. The default is auto detection. Valid values are 'stat' and 'watchdog'. See Reloader for more information.
  • threaded (bool) – should the process handle each request in a separate thread?
  • processes (int) – if greater than 1 then handle each request in a new process up to this maximum number of concurrent processes.
  • request_handler (Optional[Type[werkzeug.serving.WSGIRequestHandler]]) – optional parameter that can be used to replace the default one. You can use this to replace it with a different BaseHTTPRequestHandler subclass.
  • static_files (Optional[Dict[str, Union[str, Tuple[str, str]]]]) – a list or dict of paths for static files. This works exactly like SharedDataMiddleware, it’s actually just wrapping the application in that middleware before serving.
  • passthrough_errors (bool) – set this to True to disable the error catching. This means that the server will die on errors but it can be useful to hook debuggers in (pdb etc.)
  • ssl_context (Optional[Union[ssl.SSLContext, Tuple[str, Optional[str]], te.Literal['adhoc']]]) – an SSL context for the connection. Either an ssl.SSLContext, a tuple in the form (cert_file, pkey_file), the string 'adhoc' if the server should automatically create one, or None to disable SSL (which is the default).
Return type

None

werkzeug.serving.is_running_from_reloader()

Checks if the application is running from within the Werkzeug reloader subprocess.

Changelog

New in version 0.10.

Return type

bool

werkzeug.serving.make_ssl_devcert(base_path, host=None, cn=None)

Creates an SSL key for development. This should be used instead of the 'adhoc' key which generates a new cert on each server start. It accepts a path for where it should store the key and cert and either a host or CN. If a host is given it will use the CN *.host/CN=host.

For more information see run_simple().

Changelog

New in version 0.9.

Parameters
  • base_path (str) – the path to the certificate and key. The extension .crt is added for the certificate, .key is added for the key.
  • host (Optional[str]) – the name of the host. This can be used as an alternative for the cn.
  • cn (Optional[str]) – the CN to use.
Return type

Tuple[str, str]

Information

The development server is not intended to be used on production systems. It was designed especially for development purposes and performs poorly under high load. For deployment setups have a look at the Application Deployment pages.

Reloader

Changelog

Changed in version 0.10.

The Werkzeug reloader constantly monitors modules and paths of your web application, and restarts the server if any of the observed files change.

Since version 0.10, there are two backends the reloader supports: stat and watchdog.

  • The default stat backend simply checks the mtime of all files in a regular interval. This is sufficient for most cases, however, it is known to drain a laptop’s battery.
  • The watchdog backend uses filesystem events, and is much faster than stat. It requires the watchdog module to be installed. The recommended way to achieve this is to add Werkzeug[watchdog] to your requirements file.

If watchdog is installed and available it will automatically be used instead of the builtin stat reloader.

To switch between the backends you can use the reloader_type parameter of the run_simple() function. 'stat' sets it to the default stat based polling and 'watchdog' forces it to the watchdog backend.

Note

Some edge cases, like modules that failed to import correctly, are not handled by the stat reloader for performance reasons. The watchdog reloader monitors such files too.

Colored Logging

The development server highlights the request logs in different colors based on the status code. On Windows, Colorama must be installed as well to enable this.

Virtual Hosts

Many web applications utilize multiple subdomains. This can be a bit tricky to simulate locally. Fortunately there is the hosts file that can be used to assign the local computer multiple names.

This allows you to call your local computer yourapplication.local and api.yourapplication.local (or anything else) in addition to localhost.

You can find the hosts file on the following location:

Windows

%SystemRoot%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts

Linux / OS X

/etc/hosts

You can open the file with your favorite text editor and add a new name after localhost:

127.0.0.1       localhost yourapplication.local api.yourapplication.local

Save the changes and after a while you should be able to access the development server on these host names as well. You can use the URL Routing system to dispatch between different hosts or parse request.host yourself.

Shutting Down The Server

Changelog

New in version 0.7.

Starting with Werkzeug 0.7 the development server provides a way to shut down the server after a request. This currently only works with Python 2.6 and later and will only work with the development server. To initiate the shutdown you have to call a function named 'werkzeug.server.shutdown' in the WSGI environment:

def shutdown_server(environ):
    if not 'werkzeug.server.shutdown' in environ:
        raise RuntimeError('Not running the development server')
    environ['werkzeug.server.shutdown']()

Troubleshooting

On operating systems that support ipv6 and have it configured such as modern Linux systems, OS X 10.4 or higher as well as Windows Vista some browsers can be painfully slow if accessing your local server. The reason for this is that sometimes “localhost” is configured to be available on both ipv4 and ipv6 sockets and some browsers will try to access ipv6 first and then ipv4.

At the current time the integrated webserver does not support ipv6 and ipv4 at the same time and for better portability ipv4 is the default.

If you notice that the web browser takes ages to load the page there are two ways around this issue. If you don’t need ipv6 support you can disable the ipv6 entry in the hosts file by removing this line:

::1             localhost

Alternatively you can also disable ipv6 support in your browser. For example if Firefox shows this behavior you can disable it by going to about:config and disabling the network.dns.disableIPv6 key. This however is not recommended as of Werkzeug 0.6.1!

Starting with Werkzeug 0.6.1, the server will now switch between ipv4 and ipv6 based on your operating system’s configuration. This means if that you disabled ipv6 support in your browser but your operating system is preferring ipv6, you will be unable to connect to your server. In that situation, you can either remove the localhost entry for ::1 or explicitly bind the hostname to an ipv4 address (127.0.0.1)

SSL

Changelog

New in version 0.6.

The builtin server supports SSL for testing purposes. If an SSL context is provided it will be used. That means a server can either run in HTTP or HTTPS mode, but not both.

Quickstart

The easiest way to do SSL based development with Werkzeug is by using it to generate an SSL certificate and private key and storing that somewhere and to then put it there. For the certificate you need to provide the name of your server on generation or a CN.

  1. Generate an SSL key and store it somewhere:

    >>> from werkzeug.serving import make_ssl_devcert
    >>> make_ssl_devcert('/path/to/the/key', host='localhost')
    ('/path/to/the/key.crt', '/path/to/the/key.key')
    
  2. Now this tuple can be passed as ssl_context to the run_simple() method:

    run_simple('localhost', 4000, application,
               ssl_context=('/path/to/the/key.crt',
                            '/path/to/the/key.key'))
    

You will have to acknowledge the certificate in your browser once then.

Loading Contexts by Hand

You can use a ssl.SSLContext object instead of a tuple for full control over the TLS configuration.

import ssl
ctx = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER)
ctx.load_cert_chain('ssl.cert', 'ssl.key')
run_simple('localhost', 4000, application, ssl_context=ctx)

Generating Certificates

A key and certificate can be created in advance using the openssl tool instead of the make_ssl_devcert(). This requires that you have the openssl command installed on your system:

$ openssl genrsa 1024 > ssl.key
$ openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -sha1 -days 365 -key ssl.key > ssl.cert

Adhoc Certificates

The easiest way to enable SSL is to start the server in adhoc-mode. In that case Werkzeug will generate an SSL certificate for you:

run_simple('localhost', 4000, application,
           ssl_context='adhoc')

The downside of this of course is that you will have to acknowledge the certificate each time the server is reloaded. Adhoc certificates are discouraged because modern browsers do a bad job at supporting them for security reasons.

This feature requires the cryptography library to be installed.

Unix Sockets

The dev server can bind to a Unix socket instead of a TCP socket. run_simple() will bind to a Unix socket if the hostname parameter starts with 'unix://'.

from werkzeug.serving import run_simple
run_simple('unix://example.sock', 0, app)

© 2007–2021 Pallets
Licensed under the BSD 3-clause License.
https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/en/2.0.x/serving/