Difference between revisions of "Mulib/Examples"
< Mulib
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Which Linden (talk | contribs) (New page: = Mulib Examples = These are some short examples to give a flavor of using mulib. == hello world == The following program will bring up a webserver listening on port 8080 which can resp...) |
Which Linden (talk | contribs) m (link'd) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
= Mulib Examples = | = Mulib Examples = | ||
These are some short examples to give a flavor of using mulib. | These are some short examples to give a flavor of using [[mulib]]. | ||
== hello world == | == hello world == |
Revision as of 15:14, 24 August 2007
Mulib Examples
These are some short examples to give a flavor of using mulib.
hello world
The following program will bring up a webserver listening on port 8080 which can respond to a single request, "GET /", with the response "hello, world":
from mulib import mu from eventlet import api, httpd class HelloWorld(mu.Resource): def handle_get(self, req): req.write("hello, world\n") root = HelloWorld() httpd.server( api.tcp_listener(('0.0.0.0', 8080)), mu.SiteMap(root))
stacked
Stacked is a pure REST server, and you can use it to traverse native python objects like dicts
.
from mulib import mu from eventlet import api, httpd root = {:'hello, world\n', 'other':"hello, other\n"} httpd.server(api.tcp_listener(('0.0.0.0', 8080)), mu.SiteMap(root))
You can then access this dictionary as a REST resource, e.g.
> curl http://localhost:8080/ hello, world > curl http://localhost:8080/other hello, other > curl -X PUT -d "the new data" http://localhost:8080/third > curl http://localhost:8080/third the new data
Mu/stacked can do content negotiation:
> curl -X PUT -H "Content-type: application/json" -d '{"hi": "there"}' http://localhost:8080/fourth > curl http://localhost:8080/fourth/hi there > curl -H "Accept: application/json" http://localhost:8080/fourth {'hi': 'there'}
Note: This means that anyone who has access to your stacked web service can modify the data in your process! In the future we might have a 'read-only' implementation.