[Web-SIG] Entry points and import maps (was Re: Scarecrow deployment config
Chris McDonough
chrism at plope.com
Mon Jul 25 08:40:49 CEST 2005
BTW, a simple example that includes proposed solutions for all of these
requirements would go a long way towards helping me (and maybe others)
understand how all the pieces fit together. Maybe something like:
- Define two simple WSGI components: a WSGI middleware and a WSGI
application.
- Describe how to package each as an indpendent egg.
- Describe how to configure an instance of the application.
- Describe how to configure an instance of the middleware
- Describe how to string them together into a pipeline.
- C
On Mon, 2005-07-25 at 02:33 -0400, Chris McDonough wrote:
> Thanks...
>
> I'm still confused about high level requirements so please try to be
> patient with me as I try get back on track.
>
> These are the requirements as I understand them:
>
> 1. We want to be able to distribute WSGI applications and middleware
> (presumably in a format supported by setuptools).
>
> 3. We want to be able to configure a WSGI application in order
> to create an application instance.
>
> 2. We want a way to combine configured instances of those
> applications into pipelines and start an "instance" of a pipeline.
>
> Are these requirements the ones being discussed? If so, which of the
> config file formats we've been discussing matches which requirement?
>
> Thanks,
>
> - C
>
> On Sun, 2005-07-24 at 22:24 -0400, Phillip J. Eby wrote:
> > At 08:35 PM 7/24/2005 -0400, Chris McDonough wrote:
> > >Sorry, I think I may have lost track of where we were going wrt the
> > >deployment spec. Specifically, I don't know how we got to using eggs
> > >(which I'd really like to, BTW, they're awesome conceptually!) from
> > >where we were in the discussion about configuring a WSGI pipeline. What
> > >is a "feature"? What is an "import map"? "Entry point"? Should I just
> > >get more familiar with eggs to understand what's being discussed here or
> > >did I miss a few posts?
> >
> > I suggest this post as the shortest architectural introduction to the whole
> > egg thang:
> >
> > http://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2005-June/004652.html
> >
> > It explains pretty much all of the terminology I'm currently using, except
> > for the new terms invented today...
> >
> > Entry points are a new concept, invented today by Ian and myself. Ian
> > proposed having a mapping file (which I dubbed an "import map") included in
> > an egg's metadata, and then referring to named entries from a pipeline
> > descriptor, so that you don't have to know or care about the exact name to
> > import. The application or middleware factory name would be looked up in
> > the egg's import map in order to find the actual factory object.
> >
> > I took Ian's proposal and did two things:
> >
> > 1) Generalized the idea to a concept of "entry points". An entry point is
> > a name that corresponds to an import specification, and an optional list of
> > "extras" (see terminology link above) that the entry point may
> > require. Entry point names exist in a namespace called an "entry point
> > group", and I implied that the WSGI deployment spec would define two such
> > groups: wsgi.applications and wsgi.middleware, but a vast number of other
> > possibilities for entry points and groups exist. In fact, I went ahead and
> > implemented them in setuptools today, and realized I could use them to
> > register setup commands with setuptools, making it extensible by any
> > project that registers entry points in a 'distutils.commands' group.
> >
> > 2) I then proposed that we extend our deployment descriptor (.wsgi file)
> > syntax so that you can do things like:
> >
> > [foo from SomeProject]
> > # configuration here
> >
> > What this does is tell the WSGI deployment API to look up the "foo" entry
> > point in either the wsgi.middleware or wsgi.applications entry point group
> > for the named project, according to whether it's the last item in the .wsgi
> > file. It then invokes the factory as before, with the configuration values
> > as keyword arguments.
> >
> > This proposal is of course an *extension*; it should still be possible to
> > use regular dotted names as section headings, if you haven't yet drunk the
> > setuptools kool-aid. But, it makes for interesting possibilities because
> > we could now have a tool that reads a WSGI deployment descriptor and runs
> > easy_install to find and download the right projects. So, you could
> > potentially just write up a descriptor that lists what you want and the
> > server could install it, although I think I personally would want to run a
> > tool explicitly; maybe I'll eventually add a --wsgi=FILENAME option to
> > EasyInstall that would tell it to find out what to install from a WSGI
> > deployment descriptor.
> >
> > That would actually be pretty cool, when you realize it means that all you
> > have to do to get an app deployed across a bunch of web servers is to copy
> > the deployment descriptor and tell 'em to install stuff. You can always
> > create an NFS-mounted cache directory where you put pre-built eggs, and
> > EasyInstall would just fetch and extract them in that case.
> >
> > Whew. Almost makes me wish I was back in my web apps shop, where this kind
> > of thing would've been *really* useful to have.
> >
>
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