Great article on Python super, __mro__, and attributes

I highly recommend reading this excellent writeup on Python super(), python __mro__, python attributes, and more.

It is Copyright © 2005-2009 Shalabh Chaturvedi

http://www.cafepy.com/article/python_attributes_and_methods/python_attributes_and_methods.html#method-resolution-order

Python 3 bytes indexing returns integers!

While converting a bunch of werkzeug code to Python 3.1, I ran into an issue with one of the bytes objects that was previously a string.

The line of code in question was originally this:

if value and value[0] == value[-1] == b'"':
   ...

If value is something, and the first and last characters are a quote character, then…

However, as it turns out, the bytes object is actually a list of integers in the range of 0-255.

So when you use an indexing operation on a byte, you actually get an integer back. For example:

>>> x = b'Hello World'
>>> x[0]
72

>>> x = 'Hello World'
>>> x[0]
'H'

Big difference, eh?

Example Automated MySQL Backup Script

Rather than use --all-databases, which will prevent you from being able to selectively restore any single database, consider the following:

Ideally, you should have a daily backup, with some history. It should be bulletproof (--force), it should be logged (>> ...log), it should be compressed (| gzip), it should keep separate copies of each database, and it should automatically pick up any databases that are added.

Consider, rather, a shell script like this:

#!/bin/bash

Host=server.domain.com
BDir=/home/backup/backup/mysql

Dump="/usr/bin/mysqldump --skip-extended-insert --force"
MySQL=/usr/bin/mysql

Today=$(date "+%a")

# Get a list of all databases
Databases=$(echo "SHOW DATABASES" | $MySQL -h $Host)

for db in $Databases; do
        date=`date`
        file="$BDir/$Host-$db-$Today.sql.gz"
        echo "Backing up '$db' from '$Host' on '$date' to: "
        echo "   $file"
        $Dump -h $Host $db | gzip > $file
done

Which is assuming that you have a file ~/.my.cnf (chmod 600), that has:

[client]
user = "BACKUP"
password = "SOMEPASS8342783492"

Make sure that whatever user you are using for BACKUP has this grant statement:

GRANT
  SELECT, SHOW VIEW ON *.*
  TO BACKUP@localhost
  IDENTIFIED BY 'SOMEPASS8342783492';

So simply add this to a nightly cronjob, and you have a daily backup that rotates each 7 days week.

0 3 * * *   backup-mysql >> backup-mysql.log 2>> backup-mysql.log

The backup directory then contains:

-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup 2217482184 Sep  3 13:35 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-20090903.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup 2505876287 Dec 25 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Fri.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup 2500384029 Dec 21 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Mon.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup 2506849331 Dec 26 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Sat.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup 2499859469 Dec 20 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Sun.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup 2505046147 Dec 24 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Thu.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup 2502277743 Dec 22 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Tue.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup 2504169910 Dec 23 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_0-Wed.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 25 00:49 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Fri.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 21 00:49 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Mon.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 26 00:49 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Sat.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 20 00:48 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Sun.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 24 00:49 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Thu.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 22 00:49 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Tue.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup   76983829 Dec 23 00:49 base.appcove.net-VOS4_Mail_0-Wed.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup  304803726 Dec 25 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Fri.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup  303480087 Dec 21 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Mon.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup  304710121 Dec 26 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Sat.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup  303791294 Dec 20 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Sun.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup  305315415 Dec 24 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Thu.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup  302516217 Dec 22 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Tue.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup  303314217 Dec 23 00:49 base.appcove.net-WeSell_0-Wed.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 25 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Fri.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 21 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Mon.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 26 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Sat.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 20 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Sun.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 24 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Thu.sql.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 22 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Tue.sql.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 backup backup     135301 Dec 23 00:30 dc40.appcove.net-mysql-Wed.sql.gz

How to Author a *simple* jQuery plugin

I use jQuery as the JavaScript library for most projects. It’s terribly convenient for selecting elements and processing them.

However, jQuery is not JavaScript, and there is a lot of things it cannot do. Rather than writing a separate set of functionality outside of jQuery, why not simply extend it on an application-per-application basis? It really is that easy. Perhaps if you get some functionality that is good enough, you will want to convert them into a formal plugin and post it to http://plugins.jquery.com/

Here is the document that explains, in depth, how to author plugins.
http://docs.jquery.com/Plugins/Authoring

Here is an example at a very simple plugin that I whipped together while learning about plugins… It’s designed to accept an object of data, and apply it to any of the elements whose name attribute match the key of the data.

jQuery.fn.populate = function(Data) {
   this.each(function() {
      if (this.name in Data)
      {
         switch(this.type)
         {
            case 'text': this.value = Data[this.name]; break;
            case 'checkbox': this.checked = Data[this.name]; break
         }
      }
   });
   return this;
};

To call it… Select all input elements of the #Login form, and populate them with the passed data.

$('#Login :input').populate({ FirstName: 'sammy', LastName: 'jones' });

The .fn attribute of the jQuery object is where you attach new methods. The this member of those functions is set to the current jQuery object. The function must return the current jQuery object (self) unless explicitly stated otherwise.

Iterating through the elements of the current jQuery object should be done with this.each(…).

All in all, it’s very simple, and very powerful to be able to nest custom functionality into the jQuery object within a given application.

Read more at:

jQuery mouseout vs. mouseleave

Hello!

jQuery has a mouseout and a mouseleave event. The main difference is in how they handle child elements. Mouseout fires when the pointer moves into or out from child element, while mouseleave doesn’t.

This was causing a slight problem of having some menu’s close when the mouse encountered a link or other child element within the menu, it was triggering the mouseout event of the menu.

The fix, was to convert to mouseleave.

   $("#Nav1_Content > p").mouseleave(CloseTopMenuArea);

http://docs.jquery.com/Events/mouseout

Python has keyword only parameters!

Maybe I should have known this about Python by now, but…

Little did I know (was wishing for it today), but there IS a way to specify that arguments MUST be keyword only.

>>> def foo(a,b,*,c,d):
...     print(a,b,c,d)
...
>>> foo(1,2,3,4)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: foo() takes exactly 2 positional arguments (4 given)
In this case, everything after the * is required to be keyword only. This means that you can safely amend the function definition to re-order or even add keyword arguments.
Likewise, the following requires ALL keyword arguments.
>>> def foo(*,a,b):
...     print(a,b)
...
>>> foo(1,2)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: foo() takes exactly 0 positional arguments (2 given)

>>> foo(a=1, b=2)
1 2


Read more about it at:

http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3102/

A brief introduction to AppStruct

Have been very busy at work lately.  We made the decision about a month ago to switch (most|all) new projects over to use Python 3 with Apache, mod_wsgi, and AppStruct.  You may know what the first 3 are, but the 4th??

Special thanks goes to Graham Dumpleton behind mod_wsgi, and James William Pye behind Python>>Postgresql.   They are not involved or affiliated with AppCove or AppStruct (aside from great mailing list support) BUT if it were not for them, this framework would not exist.

AppStruct is a component of Shank, a meta-framework.  A stand-alone component in it’s own right, it represents the AppCove approach to web-application development.  Most of it is in planning, but the parts that have materialized are really, really cool.

Briefly, I’ll cover the two emerging areas of interest:

AppStruct.WSGI

This is a very pythonic (in my opinion) web application framework targeted toward Python 3.1 (a challenge in itself at this point).  We really wanted to base new development on Python 3.1+, as well as PostgreSQL using the excellent Python3/PostgreSQL library at http://python.projects.postgresql.org/.  However, none of the popular frameworks that I am aware of support Python 3, and most (if not all) of them have a lot of baggage I do not want to bring to the party.

Werkzeug was the most promising, but alas, I could not find Python 3 support for it either.  In fact, I intend to utilize a good bit of code from Werkzeug in finishing off AppStruct.WSGI.  (Don’t you just love good OSS licences?  AppStruct will be released under one of those also).

HTTP is just not that complicated.  It dosen’t need bundled up into n layers of indecipherable framework upon framework layers.   It doesn’t need abstracted to death.  I just needs to be streamlined a bit (with regard to request routing, reading headers, etc…).

Python is an amazing OO language.  It’s object model (or data model) is one of (if not the) most well conceived of any similar language, ever.  I want to use that to our advantage…

Inheritance, including multiple inheritance, has very simple rules in Python.  Want to use that as well.

Wish to provide developers with access to the low level guts they need for 2% of the requests, but not make them do extra work for the 98% of requests.

Speed is of the essence.  Servers are not cheap, and if you can increase your throughput by 5x, then that’s a lot less servers you need to pay for.

So, how does it work?

Well, those details can wait for another post.  But at this point the library is < 1000 lines of code, and does a lot of interesting things.

  • A fully compliant WSGI application object
  • 1 to 1 request routing to Python packages/modules/classes
  • All request classes derived from AppStruct.WSGI.Request

The application maps requests like /some/path/here to objects, like Project.WSGI.some.path.here.  If there is a trailing slash, then the application assumes that the class is named Index.  The object that is found is verified to be a subclass of AppStruct.WSGI.Request, and then…

Wait!  What about security?

Yes, yes, very important.  A couple things to point out.  First, the URLs are passed through a regular expression that ensures that they adhere to only the characters that may be used in valid python identifiers (not starting with _), delimited by “/”.  Second, the import and attribute lookup verify that any object (eg class) found is a subclass of the right thing.  And so on and so forth…

But you may say “wait, what about my/fancy-shmancy/urls/that-i-am-used-to-seeing?  Ever hear of mod_rewrite?  Yep.  Not trying to re-invent the wheel.  Use apache for what it was made for, not just a dumb request handler.

What about these request objects?

They are quite straightforward.  There are several attributes which represent request data, the environment, query string variables, post variables, and more.  There is a .Response attribute which maps to a very lightweight response object.

Speaking of it — it has only 4 attributes: [Status, Header, Iterator, Length].  As you see, it’s pretty low-level-wsgi-stuff.  But the developer would rarely interact with it, other than to call a method like .Response.Redirect(‘http://somewhere-else.com&#8217;, 302)

Once the application finds the class responsible for handling the URL, it simply does this (sans exception catching code):

RequestObject = Request(...)
with RequestObject:
   RequestObject.Code()
   RequestObject.Data()
return RequestObject.Response

Wow, that’s simple.  Let me point out one more detail.  The default implementation of Data() does this:

def Data(self):
   self.Response.Iterator = [self.Text()]
   self.Response.Length = len(self.Response.Iterator[0])

So the only thing really required of this Request class is to override Text() and return some text?  Yep, that simple.

But typically, you would at some point mixin a template class that would do something like this:

class GoodLookingLayout:
   def Text(self):
      return ( 
         """<html><head>...</head><body><menu>""" +
         self.Menu() +
         """</menu><div>""" +
         self.Body() +
         """</div></body></html>"""
         )

And then it would be up to the developer to override Menu and Body (each returning the appropriate content for the page).

Ohh, you may say.  What about templating engine X?  Well, it didn’t support Python 3, and I probabally didn’t want it anyway (for 9 reasons)…  If it’s really, really good and fits this structure, drop me a line, please.

What about that Code() method?

Yeah, that’s the place that any “logic” of UI interaction should go.  I’m not advocating mixing logic and content here, but you could do that if you wanted.  You will find in our code, a seperate package for application business logic and data access that the request classes will call upon.  But again, if you are writing a one page wonder, why go to all the trouble?

The only requirement for the Code() method is that it calls super().Code() at the top.  Since the idea is that the class .Foo.Bar.Baz.Index will inherit from the class .Foo.Bar.Index, this gives you a very flexible point of creating .htaccess style initialization/access-control code in one place.  So in /Admin/Index, you could put a bit of code in Code() which ensures the user is logged in.  This code will be run by all sub-pages, therefore ensuring that access control is maintained.  Relative imports are important for this task.

from .. import Index as PARENT
from AppStruct.WSGI.Util import *
class Index(PARENT):
   def Code(self):
      super().Code()
      self.Name = self.Post.FirstName + " " + self.Post.LastName
      # some other init stuff
   def Body(self):
      return "Hello there " + HS(self.Name) + "!"

Summary of AppStruct.WSGI…

To get up and running with a web-app using this library:

  1. A couple mod_wsgi lines in httpd.conf
  2. A .wsgi file that has 1 import and 1 line of code
  3. A request class in a package that matches an expected URI (myproject.wsgi.admin.foo ==  /admin/foo)

Speed?

With no database calls, it’s pushing over 2,000 requests per second on a dev server.  With a couple PostgreSQL calls, it is pushing out ~ 800 per second.

AppStruct.Database.PostgreSQL

This is not nearly as deep as the WSGI side of AppStruct, but still really cool.  To start off, I’d like to say that James William Pye has created an amazing Postgresql connection library in Python 3.  I mean just amazing.  In fact, almost so amazing that I didn’t want to change it (but then again…)

What we did here was subclass the Connection, PreparedStatement, and Row classes.  (well, actually replaced the Row class).

Once these were subclassed, we simply added a couple useful features.  Keep in mind that all of the great functionality of the underlying library is retained.

Connection.CachePrepare(SQL)
Connection._PS_Cache

Simply a dictionary of {SQL: PreparedStatementObject} that resides on the connection object.  When you directly or indirectly invoke CachePrepare, it says “if this SQL is in the cache, return the associated object.  Otherwise, prepare it, cache it, and return it”.  This approach really simplifies the storing of prepared statement objects in a multi-threaded environment, where there is really no good place to store them (and be thread safe, connection-failure safe, etc…)

Connection.Value(SQL, *args, **kwargs)
Connection.Row(SQL, *args, **kwargs)

These simple functions take (SQL, *args, **kwargs) and return either a single value or a single row.  They will raise an exception is != 1 row is found.  They make use of CachePrepare(), so you get the performance benefits of prepared statements without the hassle.  More on *args, **kwargs later under PrePrepare()

Connection.ValueList(SQL, *args, **kwargs)
Connection.RowList(SQL, *args, **kwargs)

Same as above, except returns an iterator (or list, not sure) of  zero or more values or rows.

Row class

Simply a dictionary that also supports attribute style access of items.  After evaluating the Tuple that behaves like a mapping, I decided for our needs, a simple dict would be a better representation of a row.

Connection.PrePreprepare(SQL, args, kwargs) -> (SQL, args)

Ok, so what’s the big deal?  Well, the big deal is that we don’t like positional parameters.  They are confusing to write, read, analyze, and see what the heck is going on when you get about 30 fields in an insert statement.  Feel free to argue, but maybe I’m not as young as I once was.

We do like keyword parameters.  But postgresql prepared statement api uses numeric positional parameters.  Not changing that…

The most simple use case is to pass SQL and keyword arguments.

"SELECT a,b,c FROM table WHERE id = $id AND name = $name"
dict(id=100, name='joe')

It returns

"SELECT a,b,c FROM table WHERE id = $1 AND name = $2"
(100, "joe")

Which is suitable for passing directly into the Connection.prepare() method that came with the underlying library.

I don’t know about you, but we find this to be very, very useful.

If you pass tuples of (field, value) as positional arguments, then they will replace [Field][Value], and [Field=Value] (in the SQL) with lists of fields, lists of values (eg $1, $2), or lists of field=values (eg name=$1, age=$2).  That really takes the verbosity out of INSERT and UPDATE statements with long field lists.

Conclusion

This is just in the early stages, and has a good deal of polishing to be done (especially on the WSGI side).  My purpose here was to introduce you to what you can expect to get with AppStruct, some of the rationale behind it, and that it’s really not that hard to take the bull by the horns and make software do what you want it to (especially if you use python).

Feel free to comment.

What is a tuple?

I get asked this from time to time, so for the fun of it, I’ll post this:

Tuples are immutable lists in python (and other languages).  Very lightweight, unchangable arrays.  They are used for storing multiple values in one variable (usually a fixed number of values).

x = (1, 2, 3, 'abc')
x[0]
-> 1
x[1] 
-> 2
x[2] 
-> 3

x[3] 
-> abc
x["bob"]
-> TypeError: tuple indices must be integers, not str

Tuples are immutable lists in python (and other languages).  Very lightweight, unchangable arrays.
x = (1,2,3)
x[0] == 1
x[1] == 2
x[2] == 3
x[“bob”] == “tuple indices must be integers”

A common example is storing x,y coordinances.  You could use a tuple for that:

point = (12,38)

Python can unpack tuples also.

x,y = (12,38)
x
-> 12
y
-> 38

Enjoy.

Great post on PHP’s preg_match regular expressions

Over at smashing magazine, they have a great post on PHP’s preg_match() regular expressions.  They cover a number of advanced topics in light detail, including:

1. Greediness/Laziness

2. Back Referencing

3. Named Groups

4. Word Boundaries

5. Atomic Groups

6. Recursion

7. Callbacks

8. Commenting

See it here!

http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/06/introduction-to-advanced-regular-expressions/