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Ketchup

Ketchup is a simple web app for learning how to build web apps using recent Python technologies with an emphasis on asynchronous I/O (asyncio) programming.

Project Source : https://github.com/rockyburt/Ketchup

Part 1 and 2 Source: : https://github.com/rockyburt/Ketchup/tree/part/1-2

Part 3 Source: : https://github.com/rockyburt/Ketchup/tree/part/3

Prerequisites

  • A Linux or Linux-like work environment (all steps were tested and run on Ubuntu 20.04 inside the WSL environment of Windows 10)
  • A working Python 3.9 installation

NOTE: Theoretically these steps will run (using platform/OS-equivalent steps) on most modern OS's but the developer's mileage may vary.

Quart + Strawberry-GraphQL Tutorial

The following tutorial explains how to use Quart and Strawberry-GraphQL to build a simple web application with a GraphQL-based API. All example code is written to heavily lean on asyncio based programming with a focus on including type hint support in a Python setting.

Requirements: Python 3.9 or higher

Part 1: Getting Started with Quart

Quart is a web framework heavily inspired by the Flask framework. It strives to be API-compatible with Flask with method and class signatures only differing to allow for the Python async/await approach to asynchronous I/O programming.

  1. Install Poetry via https://python-poetry.org/docs/master/#installation

  2. Create new Ketchup project

    poetry new Ketchup
  3. Go into the newly created Ketchup directory and add Quart to Poetry's requirements files. Also include Hypercorn for it's ASGI running expertise.

    cd Ketchup
    poetry add Quart hypercorn

    At the time of writing this doc, the versions installed were:

    • Quart 0.15.1
  4. Setup skeleton web app:

    Create new file Ketchup/ketchup/webapp.py with the following content:

    from quart import Quart
    
    app = Quart(__name__)
    
    @app.route('/')
    async def index():
        return 'Hello World'
    
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        app.run()
  5. Test new application by running the following from inside the Ketchup project directory.

    poetry run python ketchup/webapp.py

    And open up the following in your browser: http://localhost:5000

Part 2: Adding Strawberry

Strawberry is a library for building GraphQL web applications on top of Python and (preferably but not limited to) asyncio web frameworks. The goal is to define GraphQL schema's using the dataclasses package which is part of the Python stdlib.

  1. Add Strawberry-GraphQL to Poetry's requirements files.

    poetry add Strawberry-graphql

    At the time of writing this doc, the versions installed were:

    • Strawberry-graphql 0.77.10
  2. Create a new module at Ketchup/ketchup/gqlschema.py

    import strawberry
    
    
    @strawberry.type
    class Query:
        @strawberry.field
        def upper(self, val: str) -> str:
            return val.upper()
  3. Create new module for embedding the strawberry graphql endpoint as a standard Quart view as Ketchup/ketchup/strawview.py

    import json
    import logging
    import pathlib
    import traceback
    from typing import Any, Union
    
    import strawberry
    from quart import Response, abort, render_template_string, request
    from quart.typing import ResponseReturnValue
    from quart.views import View
    from strawberry.exceptions import MissingQueryError
    from strawberry.file_uploads.utils import replace_placeholders_with_files
    from strawberry.http import (GraphQLHTTPResponse, parse_request_data,
                                process_result)
    from strawberry.schema import BaseSchema
    from strawberry.types import ExecutionResult
    
    logger = logging.getLogger("ketchup")
    
    
    def render_graphiql_page() -> str:
        dir_path = pathlib.Path(strawberry.__file__).absolute().parent
        graphiql_html_file = f"{dir_path}/static/graphiql.html"
    
        html_string = None
    
        with open(graphiql_html_file, "r") as f:
            html_string = f.read()
    
        return html_string.replace("{{ SUBSCRIPTION_ENABLED }}", "false")
    
    
    class GraphQLView(View):
        methods = ["GET", "POST"]
    
        def __init__(self, schema: BaseSchema, graphiql: bool = True):
            self.schema = schema
            self.graphiql = graphiql
    
        async def process_result(self, result: ExecutionResult) -> GraphQLHTTPResponse:
            if result.errors:
                for error in result.errors:
                    err = getattr(error, "original_error", None) or error
                    formatted = "".join(traceback.format_exception(err.__class__, err, err.__traceback__))
                    logger.error(formatted)
    
            return process_result(result)
    
        async def dispatch_request(self, *args: Any, **kwargs: Any) -> Union[ResponseReturnValue, str]:
            if "text/html" in request.headers.get("Accept", ""):
                if not self.graphiql:
                    abort(404)
    
                template = render_graphiql_page()
                return await render_template_string(template)
    
            content_type = str(request.headers.get("content-type", ""))
            if content_type.startswith("multipart/form-data"):
                form = await request.form
                operations = json.loads(form.get("operations", "{}"))
                files_map = json.loads(form.get("map", "{}"))
    
                data = replace_placeholders_with_files(operations, files_map, await request.files)
            else:
                data = await request.get_json()
    
            try:
                request_data = parse_request_data(data)
            except MissingQueryError:
                return Response("No valid query was provided for the request", 400)
    
            context = {"request": request}
    
            result = await self.schema.execute(
                request_data.query,
                variable_values=request_data.variables,
                context_value=context,
                operation_name=request_data.operation_name,
                root_value=None,
            )
    
            response_data = await self.process_result(result)
    
            return Response(
                json.dumps(response_data),
                status=200,
                content_type="application/json",
            )
  4. Modify file Ketchup/ketchup/webapp.py to have the following content:

    import asyncio
    
    from hypercorn.asyncio import serve
    from hypercorn.config import Config
    from quart import Quart
    from strawberry import Schema
    
    from ketchup.gqlschema import Query
    from ketchup.strawview import GraphQLView
    
    app = Quart("ketchup")
    schema = Schema(Query)
    
    
    app.add_url_rule("/graphql", view_func=GraphQLView.as_view("graphql_view", schema=schema))
    
    
    @app.route("/")
    async def index():
        return 'Welcome to Ketchup!  Please see <a href="/graphql">Graph<em>i</em>QL</a> to interact with the GraphQL endpoint.'
    
    
    def hypercorn_serve():
        config = Config()
        config.bind = ["0.0.0.0:5000"]
        config.use_reloader = True
        asyncio.run(serve(app, config, shutdown_trigger=lambda: asyncio.Future()))
    
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        hypercorn_serve()
  5. Test new application by running the following from inside the Ketchup project directory.

    a. Run the updated web app

    poetry run python -m ketchup.webapp

    b. Open up the following in your browser: http://localhost:5000/graphql

    c. Input the following graph query into the left side text area and hit the play button.

    query {
      upper(val: "dude, where's my car?")
    }

    The result should be (on the right side):

    {
    "data": {
        "upper": "DUDE, WHERE'S MY CAR?"
    }    

Bonus Points - Running Tests

  1. Add pytest as a dependency.

    # The ^6.2 version identifier for pytest is required due to other dependencies pulling down older versions of pytest
    poetry add -D "pytest^6.2" pytest-asyncio
  2. Ensure the Ketchup/tests/test_ketchup.py file exists with the following content:

    import pytest
    
    from ketchup import __version__, webapp
    
    
    def test_version():
        assert __version__ == "0.1.0"
    
    
    @pytest.mark.asyncio
    class TestViews:
        async def test_index(self):
            assert "Welcome" in (await webapp.index())
  3. Run the tests by issuing the following from inside the Ketchup directory.

    poetry run pytest

    The result should be something like:

    =============================== test session starts ===============================
    platform linux -- Python 3.9.5, pytest-5.4.3, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1
    rootdir: /home/ubuntu/dev/Ketchup
    plugins: anyio-3.3.1, asyncio-0.15.1
    collected 2 items
    
    tests/test_ketchup.py ..                                                    [100%]
    
    ================================ 2 passed in 0.16s ================================
    

Coding Conventions

It is the author's advice to add the following to help with formatting all code in a standard way.

  • Add some developer dependencies:

    poetry add -D black isort

    The standard Python method for activating these formatters would be to append something like the following to Ketchup/pyproject.toml.

    exclude = '''
    /(
        \.git
      | \.tox
      | \.venv
      | build
      | dist
    )/   
    '''
    line-length = 119  # standard editor width used by github
    
    [tool.isort]
    profile = "black"

Part 3a: Persistence with SQLAlchemy and PostgreSQL

This is where the project actually starts getting useful. We are building a ToDo application that can persist todo records to a PostgreSQL database. The following steps assume you are within the Ketchup directory.

  1. Add SQLAlchemy, alembic, and asyncpg as a dependencies.

    As of the writing of this tutorial, SQLAlchemy 1.4.23 is the most recent ... with SQLAlchemy 1.4.x the first version to include asyncio support. In addition, asyncio support comes only from PostgreSQL and the asyncpg db adapter.

    poetry add sqlalchemy alembic asyncpg
    
    # for anyone using mypy/pylance/pyright/vscode ... adding the following should provide better type hint support
    # but is optional and won't affect the application
    poetry add -D sqlalchemy2.stubs
  2. Initialize the Alembic database migration framework.

    poetry run alembic init --template async alembic
  3. Modify Ketchup/alembic/env.py so that it uses the same postgres db configuration as the rest of the web app. The file should look like this:

    import asyncio
    from logging.config import fileConfig
    
    from sqlalchemy import pool
    from sqlalchemy.ext.asyncio import create_async_engine
    
    from alembic import context
    from ketchup import sqlamodels, base
    
    # this is the Alembic Config object, which provides
    # access to the values within the .ini file in use.
    config = context.config
    
    # Interpret the config file for Python logging.
    # This line sets up loggers basically.
    assert config.config_file_name is not None
    fileConfig(config.config_file_name)
    
    # add your model's MetaData object here
    # for 'autogenerate' support
    # from myapp import mymodel
    # target_metadata = mymodel.Base.metadata
    target_metadata = sqlamodels.mapper_registry.metadata
    
    # other values from the config, defined by the needs of env.py,
    # can be acquired:
    # my_important_option = config.get_main_option("my_important_option")
    # ... etc.
    
    
    def run_migrations_offline():
        """Run migrations in 'offline' mode.
    
        This configures the context with just a URL
        and not an Engine, though an Engine is acceptable
        here as well.  By skipping the Engine creation
        we don't even need a DBAPI to be available.
    
        Calls to context.execute() here emit the given string to the
        script output.
    
        """
        url = config.get_main_option("sqlalchemy.url")
        context.configure(
            url=url,
            target_metadata=target_metadata,
            literal_binds=True,
            dialect_opts={"paramstyle": "named"},
        )
    
        with context.begin_transaction():
            context.run_migrations()
    
    
    def do_run_migrations(connection):
        context.configure(connection=connection, target_metadata=target_metadata)
    
        with context.begin_transaction():
            context.run_migrations()
    
    
    async def run_migrations_online():
        """Run migrations in 'online' mode.
    
        In this scenario we need to create an Engine
        and associate a connection with the context.
    
        """
    
        connectable = create_async_engine(
            base.config.DB_URI,
            future=True,
            poolclass=pool.NullPool,
        )
    
        async with connectable.connect() as connection:
            await connection.run_sync(do_run_migrations)
    
    
    if context.is_offline_mode():
        run_migrations_offline()
    else:
        asyncio.run(run_migrations_online())
  4. Setup the initial SQLAlchemy models by creating Ketchup/ketchup/sqlamodels.py.

    import asyncio
    import dataclasses
    import datetime
    import typing
    from contextlib import asynccontextmanager
    
    from sqlalchemy import Column, DateTime, Integer, Table, Text
    from sqlalchemy.ext.asyncio import (
        AsyncSession,
        async_scoped_session,
        create_async_engine,
    )
    from sqlalchemy.orm import registry, sessionmaker
    
    from ketchup import base
    
    mapper_registry = registry()
    
    _async_engine = create_async_engine(base.config.DB_URI, future=True)
    _async_session_factory = sessionmaker(_async_engine, class_=AsyncSession, expire_on_commit=False)  # type: ignore - having some pyright issues
    
    _get_session = async_scoped_session(_async_session_factory, scopefunc=asyncio.current_task)
    
    
    @asynccontextmanager
    async def atomic_session() -> typing.AsyncIterator[AsyncSession]:
        async with _get_session() as session:
            try:
                yield session
                await session.commit()
            except Exception:
                await session.rollback()
                raise
    
    
    @mapper_registry.mapped
    @dataclasses.dataclass
    class Todo:
        __table__ = Table(
            "ketchup_todo",
            mapper_registry.metadata,
            Column(
                "id",
                Integer,
                primary_key=True,
                autoincrement=True,
                nullable=False,
            ),
            Column("text", Text(), nullable=False),
            Column("created", DateTime(True), nullable=False),
            Column("completed", DateTime(True), nullable=True),
        )
    
        id: int = dataclasses.field(init=False)
        text: str
        created: datetime.datetime = dataclasses.field(
            default_factory=lambda: datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc)
        )
        completed: typing.Optional[datetime.datetime] = None
  5. Create new Ketchup/ketchup/base.py file with the following contents for configuration.

    import os
    import typing
    
    
    class Config:
        DB_URI: str = "postgresql+asyncpg://localhost/ketchup"
    
        def __init__(self, prefix: str = "KETCHUP_"):
            for name, type_ in typing.get_type_hints(self).items():
                envname = prefix + name
                if envname in os.environ:
                    setattr(self, name, type_(os.environ[envname]))
    
    
    config = Config()
  6. At this point, make sure PostgreSQL has beeng configured properly with an empty database setup and referenced by either config.DB_URI or by setting os env variable KETCHUP_DB_URI. Once that's been done, use Alembic to auto-generate the first revision migration file.

    poetry run alembic revision --autogenerate -m "New ketchup_todos table"
  7. Run the following to setup the necessary database schema.

    poetry run alembic upgrade head

Part 3b: Making the GraphQL schema useful

  1. Modify Ketchup/ketchup/gqlschema.py to have basic CRUD access via Query and Mutation.

    import datetime
    import typing
    
    import strawberry
    from sqlalchemy.future import select
    
    from ketchup import sqlamodels
    
    strawberry.type(sqlamodels.Todo)
    
    
    @strawberry.type
    class Query:
        todos: list[sqlamodels.Todo]
    
        @strawberry.field(name="todos")
        async def _todos_resolver(self) -> list[sqlamodels.Todo]:
            async with sqlamodels.atomic_session() as session:
                items = (await session.execute(select(sqlamodels.Todo))).scalars()
            todos = typing.cast(list[sqlamodels.Todo], items)
            return todos
    
    
    @strawberry.type(description="Standard CRUD operations for todo's")
    class TodoOps:
        @strawberry.mutation
        async def add_todo(self, text: str) -> sqlamodels.Todo:
            todo = sqlamodels.Todo(text=text)
            async with sqlamodels.atomic_session() as session:
                session.add(todo)
            return todo
    
        @strawberry.mutation
        async def remove_todo(self, id: int) -> bool:
            async with sqlamodels.atomic_session() as session:
                item = (await session.execute(select(sqlamodels.Todo).where(sqlamodels.Todo.id == id))).scalars().first()
                todo = typing.cast(typing.Optional[sqlamodels.Todo], item)
    
                if todo is None:
                    return False
    
                await session.delete(todo)
            return True
    
        @strawberry.mutation
        async def set_todo_completed(self, id: int, flag: bool = True) -> typing.Optional[sqlamodels.Todo]:
            async with sqlamodels.atomic_session() as session:
                item = (await session.execute(select(sqlamodels.Todo).where(sqlamodels.Todo.id == id))).scalars().first()
                todo = typing.cast(typing.Optional[sqlamodels.Todo], item)
    
                if todo is None:
                    return None
    
                todo.completed = datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc) if flag else None
            return todo
    
        @strawberry.mutation
        async def modify_todo_text(self, id: int, text: str) -> typing.Optional[sqlamodels.Todo]:
            async with sqlamodels.atomic_session() as session:
                item = (await session.execute(select(sqlamodels.Todo).where(sqlamodels.Todo.id == id))).scalars().first()
                todo = typing.cast(typing.Optional[sqlamodels.Todo], item)
    
                if todo is None:
                    return None
    
                todo.text = text
            return todo
    
    
    @strawberry.type
    class Mutation:
        todos: TodoOps
    
        @strawberry.field(name="todos")
        def _todos_resolver(self) -> TodoOps:
            return TodoOps()
    
    
    schema = strawberry.Schema(query=Query, mutation=Mutation)
  2. The ``Ketchup/ketchup/webapp.py` file will need to be updated to accomodate the SQLAlchemy database access as well as the new mutation support.

    import asyncio
    
    from hypercorn.asyncio import serve
    from hypercorn.config import Config as HypercornConfig
    from quart import Quart
    
    from ketchup import base
    from ketchup.gqlschema import schema
    from ketchup.strawview import GraphQLView
    
    app = Quart("ketchup")
    app.config.from_object(base.config)
    
    
    app.add_url_rule("/graphql", view_func=GraphQLView.as_view("graphql_view", schema=schema))
    
    
    @app.route("/")
    async def index():
        return 'Welcome to Ketchup!  Please see <a href="/graphql">Graph<em>i</em>QL</a> to interact with the GraphQL endpoint.'
    
    
    def hypercorn_serve():
        hypercorn_config = HypercornConfig()
        hypercorn_config.bind = ["0.0.0.0:5000"]
        hypercorn_config.use_reloader = True
        asyncio.run(serve(app, hypercorn_config, shutdown_trigger=lambda: asyncio.Future()))
    
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        hypercorn_serve()
  3. At this point it should be possible to restart the web application and start playing with the actual graphql queries.

    poetry run python -m ketchup.webapp

    And the go to http://localhost:5000/graphql to test queries/mutations. Some examples are:

    # Query #1
    # The following will show all todos persisted to the database .. upon first query it should return an empty
    # result set
    query {
      todos {
        id
        text
        created
        completed
      }
    }
    # Mutation #1
    # This will create our first todo record and show ups the generated ID.  After running this at least once
    # it should be possible to re-run "Query #1" above and see data that was created and saved.
    mutation {
      todos {
        addTodo(text: "Hello World") {
          id
        }
      }
    }
    

Bonus Points - Adding Query Tests

  1. Add new Ketchup/tests/conftest.py file to setup pytest fixtures.

    import asyncio
    import uuid
    from urllib.parse import urlparse, urlunparse
    
    import pytest
    from sqlalchemy import pool, text
    from sqlalchemy.ext.asyncio import (
        AsyncSession,
        async_scoped_session,
        create_async_engine,
    )
    from sqlalchemy.orm import close_all_sessions, sessionmaker
    
    from ketchup import __version__, base, sqlamodels
    
    
    def test_version():
        assert __version__ == "0.1.0"
    
    
    @pytest.fixture(scope="session")
    def event_loop():
        loop = asyncio.get_event_loop_policy().new_event_loop()
        yield loop
        loop.close()
    
    
    @pytest.fixture(scope="session")
    def session_monkeypatch():
        mpatch = pytest.MonkeyPatch()
        yield mpatch
        mpatch.undo()
    
    
    @pytest.fixture(scope="session")
    async def empty_db(session_monkeypatch: pytest.MonkeyPatch):
        parsed = urlparse(base.config.DB_URI)
        dbname = parsed.path[1:] + "_test_" + uuid.uuid4().hex
    
        newuri = urlunparse([parsed[0], parsed[1], "/template1", parsed[3], parsed[4], parsed[5]])
    
        anony_engine = create_async_engine(
            newuri,
            future=True,
            poolclass=pool.NullPool,
            isolation_level="AUTOCOMMIT",
        )
    
        async with anony_engine.connect() as conn:
            await (await conn.execution_options(isolation_level="AUTOCOMMIT")).execute(text(f"CREATE DATABASE {dbname}"))
    
        async_engine = None
        async_session_factory = None
        make_session = None
        try:
            newuri = urlunparse([parsed[0], parsed[1], "/" + dbname, parsed[3], parsed[4], parsed[5]])
            async_engine = create_async_engine(newuri, future=True)
            async_session_factory = sessionmaker(async_engine, class_=AsyncSession, expire_on_commit=False)  # type: ignore - having some pyright issues
            make_session = async_scoped_session(async_session_factory, scopefunc=asyncio.current_task)
            session_monkeypatch.setattr(sqlamodels, "make_session", make_session)
    
            async with async_engine.begin() as conn:
                await conn.run_sync(sqlamodels.mapper_registry.metadata.create_all)
    
            yield
        finally:
            close_all_sessions()
            if async_engine is not None:
                try:
                    await async_engine.dispose()
                except Exception:
                    ...
            async with anony_engine.connect() as conn:
                await (await conn.execution_options(isolation_level="AUTOCOMMIT")).execute(text(f"DROP DATABASE {dbname}"))
  2. Update the Ketchup/tests/test_ketchup.py file to have the following content.

    import pytest
    
    from ketchup import __version__, gqlschema, webapp
    
    
    def test_version():
        assert __version__ == "0.1.0"
    
    
    @pytest.mark.asyncio
    class TestViews:
        async def test_index(self):
            assert "Welcome" in (await webapp.index())
    
    
    @pytest.mark.asyncio
    @pytest.mark.usefixtures("empty_db")
    class TestGraphQuery:
        async def _create(self, text: str) -> int:
            result = await gqlschema.schema.execute('mutation { todos { addTodo(text: "hello world") { id } } }')
            assert result.data is not None
            assert "id" in result.data["todos"]["addTodo"]
    
            newid = result.data["todos"]["addTodo"]["id"]
            return newid
    
        async def test_create_remove(self):
            newid = await self._create("hello world")
            result = await gqlschema.schema.execute("mutation { todos { removeTodo(id: %s) } }" % newid)
            assert result.data is not None
            assert result.data["todos"]["removeTodo"] == True
  3. Run the tests by issuing the following from inside the Ketchup directory.

    poetry run pytest

    The result should be something like:

    =============================== test session starts ===============================
    platform linux -- Python 3.9.5, pytest-5.4.3, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1
    rootdir: /home/ubuntu/dev/Ketchup
    plugins: anyio-3.3.1, asyncio-0.15.1
    collected 3 items
    
    tests/test_ketchup.py ...                                                   [100%]
    
    ================================ 3 passed in 0.36s ================================
    

Frameworks/Components Reference

Quart : An asynchronous I/O (asyncio) based web framework inspired by Flask

Strawberry GraphQL : A GraphQL library for Python enabling the building of GraphQL web apps using Python dataclasses

SQLAlchemy : Python ORM mapper (with asyncio support as of v1.4).

asyncpg : A PostgreSQL client library for Python using asyncio.

Alembic : A database migration tool for SQLAlchemy.

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A very basic web application and tutorial for demonstrating usage of the Quart and Strawberry GraphQL frameworks/libraries.

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