:mod:`repoze.bfg` Introduction
==============================
:mod:`repoze.bfg` is a Python web application framework. It is
inspired by Zope, and uses :term:`Zope` libraries to do much of its
work. However, it simpler than any than any released version of Zope.
:mod:`repoze.bfg` uses the :term:`WSGI` protocol to handle requests
and responses.
Similarities with Other Frameworks
----------------------------------
:mod:`repoze.bfg` was inspired by Zope, Django, and Pylons.
:mod:`repoze.bfg` traversal is inspired by Zope. :mod:`repoze.bfg`
uses the Zope Component Architecture ("CA") internally, as do Zope 2,
Zope 3, and Grok. Developers don't interact with the CA very much
during typical development, however; it's mostly used by the framework
developer rather than the application developer. :mod:`repoze.bfg`
developers use :term:`ZCML` (an XML dialect) or decorators to perform
various configuration tasks; in particular, as in Zope3, one more more
:term:`view` functions is associated with a :term:`model` type via
ZCML or a decorator.
Like Pylons, :mod:`repoze.bfg` is mostly policy-free. It makes no
assertions about which database you should use, and its built-in
templating facilities are only for convenience. In essence, it only
supplies a mechanism to map URLs to :term:`view` code, along with a
convention for calling those views. You are free to use third-party
components in your application that fit your needs. Also like Pylons,
:mod:`repoze.bfg` is heavily dependent on WSGI.
The Django docs state that Django is an "MTV" framework in their `FAQ
`_. This also
happens to be true for :mod:`repoze.bfg`::
Django appears to be a MVC framework, but you call the Controller
the "view", and the View the "template". How come you don't use the
standard names?
Well, the standard names are debatable.
In our interpretation of MVC, the "view" describes the data that
gets presented to the user. It's not necessarily how the data looks,
but which data is presented. The view describes which data you see,
not how you see it. It's a subtle distinction.
So, in our case, a "view" is the Python callback function for a
particular URL, because that callback function describes which data
is presented.
Furthermore, it's sensible to separate content from presentation -
which is where templates come in. In Django, a "view" describes
which data is presented, but a view normally delegates to a
template, which describes how the data is presented.
Where does the "controller" fit in, then? In Django's case, it's
probably the framework itself: the machinery that sends a request to
the appropriate view, according to the Django URL configuration.
If you're hungry for acronyms, you might say that Django is a "MTV"
framework - that is, "model", "template", and "view." That breakdown
makes much more sense.
The skeleton code generator of :mod:`repoze.bfg` generates a directory
layout very simliar to the directory layout suggested by the `Django
Book `_ . Additionally, as suggested
above, the concepts of :term:`view`, :term:`model` and
:term:`template` are used by :mod:`repoze.bfg` as they would be by
Django.
To learn more about the concepts used by :mod:`repoze.bfg`, visit the
:ref:`glossary` for a listing of definitions.
Why?
----
*Familiarity*: As web developers, we've become accustomed to working
in very particular ways (primarily using Zope 2) over the years. This
framework is a canonization of practices that "fit our brains".
*Simplicity*: :mod:`repoze.bfg` attempts to be a *"pay only for what
you eat"* framework in which you can be productive quickly with
partial knowledge, in contrast to *"pay up front for what anyone might
eventually want to eat"* frameworks, which tend to expect you to
understand a great many concepts and technologies fully before you can
be truly productive. :mod:`repoze.bfg` doesn't force you to use any
particular technology to get your application written, and we try to
keep the core set of concepts you need to understand to a minimum.
We've thrown out all the cruft.
*Minimalism*: :mod:`repoze.bfg` provides only the very basics: *URL to
code mapping*, *templating*, and *security*. There is not much more
to the framework than these pieces: you are expected to provide the
rest.
*Documentation*: Because :mod:`repoze.bfg` is so minimal, it's
relatively easy to keep its documentation up-to-date, which is helpful
to bring new developers up to speed. It's our goal that nothing
remain undocumented about :mod:`repoze.bfg`.
*Speed*: :mod:`repoze.bfg` is meant to be fast, capable of serving on
the order of 100-1000 requests per second on today's commodity
hardware for views that do "real work" given proper application
implementation. The *hardware is cheap* mantra has its limits when
you're responsible for managing a great many machines: the fewer you
need, the less pain you'll have.
It's Tested
-----------
*If it ain't tested, it's broke.* We strive to test :mod:`repoze.bfg`
completely. Below a run of the ``nosetests`` command configured to
show code coverage information (run against the :mod:`repoze.bfg`
trunk just before the 0.6.3 release).
.. code-block:: bash
[chrism@vitaminf trunk]$ python setup.py nosetests
running nosetests
running egg_info
writing requirements to repoze.bfg.egg-info/requires.txt
writing repoze.bfg.egg-info/PKG-INFO
writing namespace_packages to repoze.bfg.egg-info/namespace_packages.txt
writing top-level names to repoze.bfg.egg-info/top_level.txt
writing dependency_links to repoze.bfg.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
writing entry points to repoze.bfg.egg-info/entry_points.txt
writing manifest file 'repoze.bfg.egg-info/SOURCES.txt'
running build_ext
............................................................................
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Name Stmts Exec Cover Missing
----------------------------------------------------------------------
repoze.bfg 1 1 100%
repoze.bfg.chameleon_genshi 44 44 100%
repoze.bfg.chameleon_text 48 48 100%
repoze.bfg.chameleon_zpt 44 44 100%
repoze.bfg.events 18 18 100%
repoze.bfg.functional 17 15 88% 99-100
repoze.bfg.includes 0 0 100%
repoze.bfg.interfaces 64 64 100%
repoze.bfg.location 42 42 100%
repoze.bfg.log 9 9 100%
repoze.bfg.path 12 12 100%
repoze.bfg.push 16 16 100%
repoze.bfg.registry 57 55 96% 98-100
repoze.bfg.router 95 95 100%
repoze.bfg.security 163 163 100%
repoze.bfg.settings 26 26 100%
repoze.bfg.template 10 10 100%
repoze.bfg.templating 17 17 100%
repoze.bfg.testing 204 204 100%
repoze.bfg.tests 0 0 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.fixtureapp 0 0 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.fixtureapp.models 3 3 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.fixtureapp.views 5 4 80% 4
repoze.bfg.tests.grokkedapp 5 5 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_chameleon_genshi 157 157 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_chameleon_text 172 172 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_chameleon_zpt 161 161 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_events 59 59 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_integration 127 127 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_location 83 83 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_log 11 11 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_push 29 29 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_registry 79 79 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_router 566 566 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_security 550 550 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_settings 98 98 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_template 73 73 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_templating 45 45 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_testing 365 365 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_traversal 324 324 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_url 112 112 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_urldispatch 92 92 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_view 448 448 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_wsgi 20 20 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_xslt 191 191 100%
repoze.bfg.tests.test_zcml 468 468 100%
repoze.bfg.traversal 96 96 100%
repoze.bfg.url 65 65 100%
repoze.bfg.urldispatch 51 51 100%
repoze.bfg.view 73 73 100%
repoze.bfg.wsgi 8 8 100%
repoze.bfg.xslt 57 57 100%
repoze.bfg.zcml 137 135 98% 162-163
----------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL 5617 5610 99%
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 312 tests in 11.693s
OK