Static Resources ================ :app:`Pyramid` makes it possible to serve up "static" (non-dynamic) resources from a directory on a filesystem. This chapter describes how to configure :app:`Pyramid` to do so. .. index:: single: add_static_view .. _static_resources_section: Serving Static Resources ------------------------ Use the :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` to instruct :app:`Pyramid` to serve static resources such as JavaScript and CSS files. This mechanism makes static files available at a name relative to the application root URL, e.g. ``/static``. Note that the ``path`` provided to :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` may be a fully qualified :term:`resource specification` or an *absolute path*. Here's an example of a use of :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` that will serve files up under the ``/static`` URL from the ``/var/www/static`` directory of the computer which runs the :app:`Pyramid` application using an absolute path. .. code-block:: python :linenos: # config is an instance of pyramid.configuration.Configurator config.add_static_view(name='static', path='/var/www/static') Here's an example of :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` that will serve files up under the ``/static`` URL from the ``a/b/c/static`` directory of the Python package named ``some_package`` using a fully qualified :term:`resource specification`. .. code-block:: python :linenos: # config is an instance of pyramid.configuration.Configurator config.add_static_view(name='static', path='some_package:a/b/c/static') Whether you use for ``path`` a fully qualified resource specification, or an absolute path, when you place your static files on the filesystem in the directory represented as the ``path`` of the directive, you will then be able to view the static files in this directory via a browser at URLs prefixed with the directive's ``name``. For instance if the ``static`` directive's ``name`` is ``static`` and the static directive's ``path`` is ``/path/to/static``, ``http://localhost:6543/static/foo.js`` will return the file ``/path/to/static/dir/foo.js``. The static directory may contain subdirectories recursively, and any subdirectories may hold files; these will be resolved by the static view as you would expect. While the ``path`` argument can be a number of different things, the ``name`` argument of the call to :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` can also be one of a number of things: a *view name* or a *URL*. The above examples have shown usage of the ``name`` argument as a view name. When ``name`` is a *URL* (or any string with a slash (``/``) in it), static resources can be served from an external webserver. In this mode, the ``name`` is used as the URL prefix when generating a URL using :func:`pyramid.url.static_url`. .. note:: Using :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` in conjunction with a :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` makes it possible to put static media on a separate webserver during production (if the ``name`` argument to :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` is a URL), while keeping static media package-internal and served by the development webserver during development (if the ``name`` argument to :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` is a view name). To create such a circumstance, we suggest using the :attr:`pyramid.registry.Registry.settings` API in conjunction with a setting in the application ``.ini`` file named ``media_location``. Then set the value of ``media_location`` to either a view name or a URL depending on whether the application is being run in development or in production (use a different `.ini`` file for production than you do for development). This is just a suggestion for a pattern; any setting name other than ``media_location`` could be used. For example, :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` may be fed a ``name`` argument which is ``http://example.com/images``: .. code-block:: python :linenos: # config is an instance of pyramid.configuration.Configurator config.add_static_view(name='http://example.com/images', path='mypackage:images') Because :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` is provided with a ``name`` argument that is the URL prefix ``http://example.com/images``, subsequent calls to :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` with paths that start with the ``path`` argument passed to :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` will generate a URL something like ``http://example.com/logo.png``. The external webserver listening on ``example.com`` must be itself configured to respond properly to such a request. The :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` API is discussed in more detail later in this chapter. The :ref:`static_directive` ZCML directive offers an declarative equivalent to :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view`. Use of the :ref:`static_directive` ZCML directive is completely equivalent to using imperative configuration for the same purpose. .. index:: single: generating static resource urls single: static resource urls .. _generating_static_resource_urls: Generating Static Resource URLs ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When a :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` method is used to register a static resource directory, a special helper API named :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` can be used to generate the appropriate URL for a package resource that lives in one of the directories named by the static registration ``path`` attribute. For example, let's assume you create a set of static declarations like so: .. code-block:: python :linenos: config.add_static_view(name='static1', path='mypackage:resources/1') config.add_static_view(name='static2', path='mypackage:resources/2') These declarations create URL-accessible directories which have URLs which begin, respectively, with ``/static1`` and ``/static2``. The resources in the ``resources/1`` directory of the ``mypackage`` package are consulted when a user visits a URL which begins with ``/static1``, and the resources in the ``resources/2`` directory of the ``mypackage`` package are consulted when a user visits a URL which begins with ``/static2``. You needn't generate the URLs to static resources "by hand" in such a configuration. Instead, use the :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` API to generate them for you. For example: .. code-block:: python :linenos: from pyramid.url import static_url from pyramid.chameleon_zpt import render_template_to_response def my_view(request): css_url = static_url('mypackage:resources/1/foo.css', request) js_url = static_url('mypackage:resources/2/foo.js', request) return render_template_to_response('templates/my_template.pt', css_url = css_url, js_url = js_url) If the request "application URL" of the running system is ``http://example.com``, the ``css_url`` generated above would be: ``http://example.com/static1/foo.css``. The ``js_url`` generated above would be ``http://example.com/static2/foo.js``. One benefit of using the :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` function rather than constructing static URLs "by hand" is that if you need to change the ``name`` of a static URL declaration, the generated URLs will continue to resolve properly after the rename. URLs may also be generated by :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` to static resources that live *outside* the :app:`Pyramid` application. This will happen when the :meth:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_static_view` API associated with the path fed to :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` is a *URL* instead of a view name. For example, the ``name`` argument may be ``http://example.com`` while the the ``path`` given may be ``mypackage:images``: .. code-block:: python :linenos: config.add_static_view(name='static1', path='mypackage:images') Under such a configuration, the URL generated by ``static_url`` for resources which begin with ``mypackage:images`` will be prefixed with ``http://example.com/images``: .. code-block:: python static_url('mypackage:images/logo.png', request) # -> http://example.com/images/logo.png .. index:: single: static resource view Advanced: Serving Static Resources Using a View Callable -------------------------------------------------------- For more flexibility, static resources can be served by a :term:`view callable` which you register manually. For example, you may want static resources to only be available when the :term:`context` of the view is of a particular type, or when the request is of a particular type. The :class:`pyramid.view.static` helper class is used to perform this task. This class creates an object that is capable acting as a :app:`Pyramid` view callable which serves static resources from a directory. For instance, to serve files within a directory located on your filesystem at ``/path/to/static/dir`` mounted at the URL path ``/static`` in your application, create an instance of the :class:`pyramid.view.static` class inside a ``static.py`` file in your application root as below. .. ignore-next-block .. code-block:: python :linenos: from pyramid.view import static static_view = static('/path/to/static/dir') .. note:: the argument to :class:`pyramid.view.static` can also be a relative pathname, e.g. ``my/static`` (meaning relative to the Python package of the module in which the view is being defined). It can also be a :term:`resource specification` (e.g. ``anotherpackage:some/subdirectory``) or it can be a "here-relative" path (e.g. ``some/subdirectory``). If the path is "here-relative", it is relative to the package of the module in which the static view is defined. Subsequently, you may wire this view up to be accessible as ``/static`` using the :mod:`pyramid.configuration.Configurator.add_view` method in your application's startup code against either the class or interface that represents your root object. .. code-block:: python :linenos: config.add_view('mypackage.static.static_view', name='static', context='mypackage.models.Root') In this case, ``mypackage.models.Root`` refers to the class of which your :app:`Pyramid` application's root object is an instance. You can also omit the ``context`` argument if you want the name ``static`` to be accessible as the static view against any model. This will also allow ``/static/foo.js`` to work, but it will allow for ``/anything/static/foo.js`` too, as long as ``anything`` itself is resolvable. Note that you cannot use the :func:`pyramid.url.static_url` API to generate URLs against resources made accessible by registering a custom static view. .. warning:: To ensure that model objects contained in the root don't "shadow" your static view (model objects take precedence during traversal), or to ensure that your root object's ``__getitem__`` is never called when a static resource is requested, you can refer to your static resources as registered above in URLs as, e.g. ``/@@static/foo.js``. This is completely equivalent to ``/static/foo.js``. See :ref:`traversal_chapter` for information about "goggles" (``@@``).