ZipLine is a simple asyncronous ASGI web framework for Python. It is designed to be simple and easy to use, while still being powerful and flexible.
- Quick Start
- Example App
- Handlers
- Middleware
- Dependency Injection
- Routing
- Validation
- Static Files
- HTML Templates
from zipline import ZipLine
app = ZipLine()
@app.route("/")
async def home(request):
planet = request.query.get("planet")
return f"Hello, {planet}!"
uvicorn my_awesome_project:app
curl http://localhost:8000/?planet=Earth
a ZipLine handler is a simple async
function that takes a request
object and returns a response, or throws an exception.
A response can be bytes
, str
, dict
, or the ZipeLine Response
object.
If a dict
is returned, it will be serialized to JSON.
If an Exception
is thrown, it will be caught and handled by the framework, returning a basic error response.
Zipline middleware is inspired by Express.js. Any number of handler functions can be added to the middleware stack.
Each middleware function is just another ZipLine Handler
.
Middleware functions are called in the order they are added to the stack, and pass along their context to the next handler.
The first handler in the stack to return something other than a Request
object (including Exception
) will short-circuit the stack and return the response.
Middleware can be can be applied at the application, router, or individual route level.
from zipline import ZipLine, Router, middleware
# middleware functions
def auth_middleware(request):
if request.headers.get("Authorization") == "Bearer 1234":
is_authed = True
else:
is_authed = False
return request, { "is_authed": is_authed }
def auth_guard(request, ctx):
if not ctx.get("is_authed"):
raise Exception("Unauthorized")
def is_user_guard(request, ctx):
if ctx.get("user_id") != request.path_params.get("id"):
raise Exception("Forbidden")
app = ZipLine()
# apply middleware to all routes
app.middleware([auth_middleware])
user_router = Router("/user")
# apply middleware at the router-level
user_router.middleware([auth_guard])
@app.get("/profile")
@middleware([is_user_guard]) # apply middleware to one router
async def user_profile(request):
return "Hello, World!"
Like with middeleware, ZipLine supports dependency injection at the route, router, or application level. In addition, dependencies can be injected into other dependencies. Dependencies are passed to the handler function as keyword arguments.
from zipline import ZipLine, inject
class LoggingService:
def log_request(self, request):
print(f"Request to {request.url}")
class UserService:
def __init__(self):
self.connection = "Connected to database"
def get_user():
return "User"
app = ZipLine()
# available to all routes
app.inject(LoggingService)
@app.route("/")
@inject(UserService, name="user_service")
async def home(request, user_service: UserService, logger: LoggingService):
logger.log_request(request)
return user_service.get_user()
Services can be any class, but Zipline includes a special Service
class. Classes that inherit from Service
have the ability to access all other services in their scope.
Classes that inherit from Service
are expected to have a property name
which is used to identify the service in the dependency injection container. Otherwise, they can be referenced by their class name (like with the @inject
decorator).
from zipline import ZipLine, Service
class LoggingService(Service):
name = "logger"
def error(self, message):
print(f"Error! {message}")
class DBService(Service):
name = "db_service"
def __init__(self, logger: LoggingService):
self.logger = logger
def get_connection(self):
try:
return db.connect()
except Exception as e:
self.logger.error(e)
class UserService(Service):
name = "user_service"
def __init__(self, db_service: DBService, logger: LoggingService):
self.db_service = db_service
self.logger = logger
def get_user(id: str):
conn = self.db_service.get_connection()
try:
return conn.query("SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?", id)
except Exception as e:
self.logger.error(f"User {id} not found")
app = ZipLine()
# inject all services; order doesn't matter
app.inject([LoggingService, DBService, UserService])
@app.route("/user/:id")
async def get_user(request):
user_id = request.path_params.get("id")
return user_service.get_user(user_id)
Like Express.js, ZipLine supports multiple, nested routers.
from zipline import ZipLine, Router
app = ZipLine()
user_router = Router("/user")
@user_router.get("/:id")
async def get_user(request):
return f"User {request.path_params.get('id')}"
app.router(user_router)
Zipline provides powerful decorators for validating query parameters and request bodies, ensuring your endpoints receive correctly formatted data. These decorators help you enforce data types, handle missing parameters, and validate against complex data structures.
To validate query parameters, use the @validate_query
decorator. You can specify each parameter you want to validate by creating a QueryParam
instance, which includes the parameter name, expected type, and whether it is required.
from ziplineio.validation.query import QueryParam, validate_query
from ziplineio.request import Request
@app.get("/")
@validate_query(QueryParam("username", str), QueryParam("age", float))
async def get_user_handler(req: Request):
username = req.query_params.get("username")
age = req.query_params.get("age")
return {"username": username, "age": age}
In this example, the endpoint expects username to be a string and age to be a float. If the parameters are missing or of the wrong type, a validation error is returned.
#### Example: Simple Body Parameter Validation
```python
from ziplineio.validation.body import BodyParam, validate_body
from ziplineio.request import Request
@app.post("/")
@validate_body(BodyParam("username", str), BodyParam("age", float))
async def create_user_handler(req: Request):
username = req.body.get("username")
age = req.body.get("age")
return {"username": username, "age": age}
from pydantic import BaseModel
from ziplineio.validation.body import BodyParam, validate_body
class UserModel(BaseModel):
username: str
age: int
@app.post("/")
@validate_body(BodyParam("user", UserModel))
async def create_user_handler(req: Request):
user = req.body.get("user")
return {"user": user.model_dump()}
By default, all parameters are required. To make a parameter optional, set the required
parameter to False
.
from ziplineio.validation.query import QueryParam, validate_query
@app.get("/")
@validate_query(QueryParam("username", str), QueryParam("age", float, required=False))
async def get_user_handler(req: Request):
username = req.query_params.get("username")
age = req.query_params.get("age")
return {"username": username, "age": age}
ZipLine can serve static files from a directory.
from zipline import ZipLine
app = ZipLine()
# path_prefix is optional; defaults to "/static"
app.static("test/mocks/static", path_prefix="/my_static_url")
ZipLine can render HTML templates using Jinja2.
The jinja
decorator takes a Jinja2 Environment
object and a template name to be rendered by the handler. Rather than a regular response, the handler should return a dictionary of context variables to be passed to the template.
from jinja2 import Environment, PackageLoader, select_autoescape
from ziplineio. import ZipLine
from ziplineio.html.jinja import jinja
env = Environment(loader=PackageLoader("myapp"), autoescape=select_autoescape())
app = ZipLine()
app.static("static_files")
@app.get("/")
@jinja(env, "home.html")
def home(req):
return {"message": "Hello, world!"}