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uwsgiconf

https://github.com/idlesign/uwsgiconf

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Description

Configure uWSGI from your Python code

If you think you know uWSGI you're probably wrong. It is always more than you think it is. There are so many subsystems and options (800+) it is difficult to even try to wrap your mind around.

uwsgiconf allowing to define uWSGI configurations in Python tries to improve things the following ways:

  • It structures options for various subsystems using classes and methods;
  • It uses docstrings and sane naming to facilitate navigation;
  • It ships some useful presets to reduce boilerplate code;
  • It encourages configuration reuse;
  • It comes with CLI to facilitate configuration;
  • It features easy to use and documented uwsgi stub Python module;
  • It offers runtime package, similar to uwsgidecorators, but with more abstractions;
  • It features integration with Django Framework;
  • It is able to generate configuration files for Systemd, Upstart.
  • It can use pyuwsgi.

Consider using IDE with autocompletion and docstings support to be more productive with uwsgiconf.

By that time you already know that uwsgiconf is just another configuration method. Why?

Overview

Static configuration

Let's make uwsgicfg.py. There we configure uWSGI using nice PythonSection preset to run our web app.

from uwsgiconf.config import configure_uwsgi
from uwsgiconf.presets.nice import PythonSection


def get_configurations():
    """This should return one or more Section or Configuration objects.
    In such a way you can configure more than one uWSGI instance in the same place.

    Here we'll define just one configuration section, which
    will instruct uWSGI to serve WSGI application (from wsgi.py module)
    on http://127.0.0.1:8000. We use .bootstrap shortcut method
    to construct our configuration section object.

    """
    return PythonSection.bootstrap('http://127.0.0.1:8000', wsgi_module='/home/idle/myapp/wsgi.py')


# Almost done. One more thing:
configure_uwsgi(get_configurations)
  1. Now if you want to generate myconf.ini file and use it for uWSGI manually you can do it with:

    $ uwsgiconf compile > myconf.ini
    $ uwsgi myconf.ini
  2. Or use uwsgiconf to automatically spawn uWSGI processes for configurations defined in your module:

    $ uwsgiconf run

Note: uwsgiconf CLI requires click package available (can be installed with uwsgiconf).

Runtime configuration

uwsgiconf comes with runtime package which is similar to uwsgidecorators but offers different abstractions to provide useful shortcuts and defaults.

These abstractions will also use a stub uwsgi module when the real one is not available.

A couple of examples:

from uwsgiconf.runtime.locking import lock
from uwsgiconf.runtime.scheduling import register_timer_rb

@register_timer_rb(10, repeat=2)
def repeat_twice():
    """This function will be called twice with 10 seconds interval
    using red-black tree based timer.

    """
    with lock():
        # Code under this context manager will be locked.
        do_something()

Allows for runtime access to:

  • Alarms
  • Caches
  • Locks
  • Logging
  • Monitoring
  • Mules
  • RPC
  • Scheduling
  • Signals
  • Websockets
  • and more

Third parties support

Django

Run your Django-based project on uWSGI using manage command:

$ ./manage.py uwsgi_run
$ ./manage.py uwsgi_reload --force
  • Other commands are available.
  • uWSGI summary and statistics are also available from Admin interface.

System configs

Compile system service config (e.g systemd) to run your uWSGI-powered project:

$ uwsgiconf sysinit systemd

Documentation

More information can be found at http://uwsgiconf.readthedocs.org/