Installing Flask installs the flask
script, a Click command line interface, in your virtualenv. Executed from the terminal, this script gives access to built-in, extension, and application-defined commands. The --help
option will give more information about any commands and options.
The flask
command is installed by Flask, not your application; it must be told where to find your application in order to use it. The FLASK_APP
environment variable is used to specify how to load the application.
Unix Bash (Linux, Mac, etc.):
$ export FLASK_APP=hello $ flask run
Windows CMD:
> set FLASK_APP=hello > flask run
Windows PowerShell:
> $env:FLASK_APP = "hello" > flask run
While FLASK_APP
supports a variety of options for specifying your application, most use cases should be simple. Here are the typical values:
The file wsgi.py
is imported, automatically detecting an app (app
). This provides an easy way to create an app from a factory with extra arguments.
FLASK_APP=hello
The name is imported, automatically detecting an app (app
) or factory (create_app
).
FLASK_APP
has three parts: an optional path that sets the current working directory, a Python file or dotted import path, and an optional variable name of the instance or factory. If the name is a factory, it can optionally be followed by arguments in parentheses. The following values demonstrate these parts:
FLASK_APP=src/hello
Sets the current working directory to src
then imports hello
.
FLASK_APP=hello.web
Imports the path hello.web
.
FLASK_APP=hello:app2
Uses the app2
Flask instance in hello
.
FLASK_APP="hello:create_app('dev')"
The create_app
factory in hello
is called with the string 'dev'
as the argument.
If FLASK_APP
is not set, the command will try to import “app” or “wsgi” (as a “.py” file, or package) and try to detect an application instance or factory.
Within the given import, the command looks for an application instance named app
or application
, then any application instance. If no instance is found, the command looks for a factory function named create_app
or make_app
that returns an instance.
When calling an application factory, if the factory takes an argument named script_info
, then the ScriptInfo
instance is passed as a keyword argument. If the application factory takes only one argument and no parentheses follow the factory name, the ScriptInfo
instance is passed as a positional argument. If parentheses follow the factory name, their contents are parsed as Python literals and passes as arguments to the function. This means that strings must still be in quotes.
The run
command will start the development server. It replaces the Flask.run()
method in most cases.
$ flask run * Serving Flask app "hello" * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
Warning
Do not use this command to run your application in production. Only use the development server during development. The development server is provided for convenience, but is not designed to be particularly secure, stable, or efficient. See Deployment Options for how to run in production.
To explore the data in your application, you can start an interactive Python shell with the shell
command. An application context will be active, and the app instance will be imported.
$ flask shell Python 3.6.2 (default, Jul 20 2017, 03:52:27) [GCC 7.1.1 20170630] on linux App: example Instance: /home/user/Projects/hello/instance >>>
Use shell_context_processor()
to add other automatic imports.
New in version 1.0.
The environment in which the Flask app runs is set by the FLASK_ENV
environment variable. If not set it defaults to production
. The other recognized environment is development
. Flask and extensions may choose to enable behaviors based on the environment.
If the env is set to development
, the flask
command will enable debug mode and flask run
will enable the interactive debugger and reloader.
$ FLASK_ENV=development flask run * Serving Flask app "hello" * Environment: development * Debug mode: on * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit) * Restarting with inotify reloader * Debugger is active! * Debugger PIN: 223-456-919
When using development mode, the reloader will trigger whenever your Python code or imported modules change. The reloader can watch additional files with the --extra-files
option, or the FLASK_RUN_EXTRA_FILES
environment variable. Multiple paths are separated with :
, or ;
on Windows.
$ flask run --extra-files file1:dirA/file2:dirB/ # or $ export FLASK_RUN_EXTRA_FILES=file1:dirA/file2:dirB/ $ flask run * Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/ * Detected change in '/path/to/file1', reloading
Debug mode will be enabled when FLASK_ENV
is development
, as described above. If you want to control debug mode separately, use FLASK_DEBUG
. The value 1
enables it, 0
disables it.
Rather than setting FLASK_APP
each time you open a new terminal, you can use Flask’s dotenv support to set environment variables automatically.
If python-dotenv is installed, running the flask
command will set environment variables defined in the files .env
and .flaskenv
. This can be used to avoid having to set FLASK_APP
manually every time you open a new terminal, and to set configuration using environment variables similar to how some deployment services work.
Variables set on the command line are used over those set in .env
, which are used over those set in .flaskenv
. .flaskenv
should be used for public variables, such as FLASK_APP
, while .env
should not be committed to your repository so that it can set private variables.
Directories are scanned upwards from the directory you call flask
from to locate the files. The current working directory will be set to the location of the file, with the assumption that that is the top level project directory.
The files are only loaded by the flask
command or calling run()
. If you would like to load these files when running in production, you should call load_dotenv()
manually.
Click is configured to load default values for command options from environment variables. The variables use the pattern FLASK_COMMAND_OPTION
. For example, to set the port for the run command, instead of flask run --port 8000
:
$ export FLASK_RUN_PORT=8000 $ flask run * Running on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
These can be added to the .flaskenv
file just like FLASK_APP
to control default command options.
The flask
command will show a message if it detects dotenv files but python-dotenv is not installed.
$ flask run * Tip: There are .env files present. Do "pip install python-dotenv" to use them.
You can tell Flask not to load dotenv files even when python-dotenv is installed by setting the FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV
environment variable. This can be useful if you want to load them manually, or if you’re using a project runner that loads them already. Keep in mind that the environment variables must be set before the app loads or it won’t configure as expected.
$ export FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV=1 $ flask run
If you do not want to install dotenv support, you can still set environment variables by adding them to the end of the virtualenv’s activate
script. Activating the virtualenv will set the variables.
Unix Bash, venv/bin/activate
:
$ export FLASK_APP=hello
Windows CMD, venv\Scripts\activate.bat
:
> set FLASK_APP=hello
It is preferred to use dotenv support over this, since .flaskenv
can be committed to the repository so that it works automatically wherever the project is checked out.
The flask
command is implemented using Click. See that project’s documentation for full information about writing commands.
This example adds the command create-user
that takes the argument name
.
import click from flask import Flask app = Flask(__name__) @app.cli.command("create-user") @click.argument("name") def create_user(name): ...
$ flask create-user admin
This example adds the same command, but as user create
, a command in a group. This is useful if you want to organize multiple related commands.
import click from flask import Flask from flask.cli import AppGroup app = Flask(__name__) user_cli = AppGroup('user') @user_cli.command('create') @click.argument('name') def create_user(name): ... app.cli.add_command(user_cli)
$ flask user create demo
See Testing CLI Commands for an overview of how to test your custom commands.
If your application uses blueprints, you can optionally register CLI commands directly onto them. When your blueprint is registered onto your application, the associated commands will be available to the flask
command. By default, those commands will be nested in a group matching the name of the blueprint.
from flask import Blueprint bp = Blueprint('students', __name__) @bp.cli.command('create') @click.argument('name') def create(name): ... app.register_blueprint(bp)
$ flask students create alice
You can alter the group name by specifying the cli_group
parameter when creating the Blueprint
object, or later with app.register_blueprint(bp, cli_group='...')
. The following are equivalent:
bp = Blueprint('students', __name__, cli_group='other') # or app.register_blueprint(bp, cli_group='other')
$ flask other create alice
Specifying cli_group=None
will remove the nesting and merge the commands directly to the application’s level:
bp = Blueprint('students', __name__, cli_group=None) # or app.register_blueprint(bp, cli_group=None)
$ flask create alice
Commands added using the Flask app’s cli
command()
decorator will be executed with an application context pushed, so your command and extensions have access to the app and its configuration. If you create a command using the Click command()
decorator instead of the Flask decorator, you can use with_appcontext()
to get the same behavior.
import click from flask.cli import with_appcontext @click.command() @with_appcontext def do_work(): ... app.cli.add_command(do_work)
If you’re sure a command doesn’t need the context, you can disable it:
@app.cli.command(with_appcontext=False) def do_work(): ...
Flask will automatically load commands specified in the flask.commands
entry point. This is useful for extensions that want to add commands when they are installed. Entry points are specified in setup.py
from setuptools import setup setup( name='flask-my-extension', ..., entry_points={ 'flask.commands': [ 'my-command=flask_my_extension.commands:cli' ], }, )
Inside flask_my_extension/commands.py
you can then export a Click object:
import click @click.command() def cli(): ...
Once that package is installed in the same virtualenv as your Flask project, you can run flask my-command
to invoke the command.
When you are using the app factory pattern, it may be more convenient to define your own Click script. Instead of using FLASK_APP
and letting Flask load your application, you can create your own Click object and export it as a console script entry point.
Create an instance of FlaskGroup
and pass it the factory:
import click from flask import Flask from flask.cli import FlaskGroup def create_app(): app = Flask('wiki') # other setup return app @click.group(cls=FlaskGroup, create_app=create_app) def cli(): """Management script for the Wiki application."""
Define the entry point in setup.py
:
from setuptools import setup setup( name='flask-my-extension', ..., entry_points={ 'console_scripts': [ 'wiki=wiki:cli' ], }, )
Install the application in the virtualenv in editable mode and the custom script is available. Note that you don’t need to set FLASK_APP
.
$ pip install -e . $ wiki run
Errors in Custom Scripts
When using a custom script, if you introduce an error in your module-level code, the reloader will fail because it can no longer load the entry point.
The flask
command, being separate from your code, does not have this issue and is recommended in most cases.
PyCharm Professional provides a special Flask run configuration. For the Community Edition, we need to configure it to call the flask run
CLI command with the correct environment variables. These instructions should be similar for any other IDE you might want to use.
In PyCharm, with your project open, click on Run from the menu bar and go to Edit Configurations. You’ll be greeted by a screen similar to this:
There’s quite a few options to change, but once we’ve done it for one command, we can easily copy the entire configuration and make a single tweak to give us access to other commands, including any custom ones you may implement yourself.
Click the + (Add New Configuration) button and select Python. Give the configuration a name such as “flask run”. For the flask run
command, check “Single instance only” since you can’t run the server more than once at the same time.
Select Module name from the dropdown (A) then input flask
.
The Parameters field (B) is set to the CLI command to execute (with any arguments). In this example we use run
, which will run the development server.
You can skip this next step if you’re using Environment Variables From dotenv. We need to add an environment variable (C) to identify our application. Click on the browse button and add an entry with FLASK_APP
on the left and the Python import or file on the right (hello
for example). Add an entry with FLASK_ENV
and set it to development
.
Next we need to set the working directory (D) to be the folder where our application resides.
If you have installed your project as a package in your virtualenv, you may untick the PYTHONPATH options (E). This will more accurately match how you deploy the app later.
Click Apply to save the configuration, or OK to save and close the window. Select the configuration in the main PyCharm window and click the play button next to it to run the server.
Now that we have a configuration which runs flask run
from within PyCharm, we can copy that configuration and alter the Script argument to run a different CLI command, e.g. flask shell
.
© 2007–2020 Pallets
Licensed under the BSD 3-clause License.
https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/1.1.x/cli/