(This package will be renamed in the future.)
Python framework for building plugin‑based HTTP API servers.
Table of Contents
This package provides the framework for a plugin-based Python API server. Plugins can implement endpoints and services.
(This package will not be specific to Nextline or GraphQL and will be renamed in the future.)
The section shows how to run the Nextline backend API server. How to run the frontend web app is described elsewhere.
Docker images of the Nextline backend API server are created as ghcr.io/nextline-dev/nextline-graphql. These images are created by the Dockerfile. No external plugins are included in the images.
Use, for example, the following command to run as a Docker container.
docker run -p 8080:8000 ghcr.io/nextline-dev/nextline-graphqlIf you access to the API server with a web browser, you will see the GraphQL IDE: http://localhost:8080/.
To include external plugins, you can create a new Docker image with ghcr.io/nextline-dev/nextline-graphql as the base image. For example, nextline-rdb shows how to create a new Docker image with nextline-rdb as an external plugin.
You can create a virtual environment, install packages, and run the API server as follows.
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install nextline-graphql
pip install uvicorn
uvicorn --lifespan on --factory --port 8080 nextline_graphql:create_appCheck with a web browser at http://localhost:8080/.
If you check out external plugins, nextline-graphql automatically detects them as plugins. An example can be described in nextline-rdb.
nextline-graphql uses dynaconf for configuration management. The nextline-graphql framework itself has configuration for CORS and logging. The internal plugins have configurations. External plugins can extend the configuration.
These CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing) settings will be given to
allow_origin and allow_headers of Starlette's
CORSMiddleware.
| Environment variable | Default value | Description |
|---|---|---|
NEXTLINE_CORS__ALLOW_ORIGINS |
['*'] |
A list of allowed origins, e.g., ["http://example.com:8080"]. The default value ("*") allows any origins. |
NEXTLINE_CORS__ALLOW_HEADERS |
['*'] |
A list of allowed HTTP request headers. For example, ['remote-user', 'remote-name', 'remote-email'] can be appropriate values if Authelia is used. Some headers such as Content-Type are always allowed (See the Starlette doc). The default value ("*") allows any headers. |
NEXTLINE_CORS__ALLOW_CREDENTIALS |
false |
Whether to support cookies. If true, the wildcard ("*") cannot be used for NEXTLINE_CORS__ALLOW_ORIGINS or NEXTLINE_CORS__ALLOW_HEADERS. They need to be listed explicitly. |
See default.toml.
| Environment variable | Default value | Description |
|---|---|---|
NEXTLINE_GRAPHQL__MUTATION_ALLOW_ORIGINS |
[*] |
A list of allowed origins for GraphQL Mutations. The default value ("*") allows any origins.* |
- In addition to the CORS settings above, this setting provides further access control for GraphQL Mutations. With this setting, you can allow only GraphQL Queries and Subscriptions from certain origins while prohibiting Mutations.
| Environment variable | Default value | Description |
|---|---|---|
NEXTLINE_CTRL__TRACE_MODULES |
false |
By default (false), Nextline only traces the main Python script. If true, Nextline traces execution of imported Python modules as well. |
NEXTLINE_CTRL__TRACE_THREADS |
false |
By default (false), Nextline only traces the main thread. If true, Nextline traces execution of other threads as well. |
How to check out code from GitHub for development:
git clone git@github.com:nextline-dev/nextline-graphql.git
cd nextline-graphql/
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -e ./"[tests,dev]"To run
uvicorn --port 8080 --lifespan on --factory --reload nextline_graphql:create_app