Chris Dent 1440eeb13b Fix (some) tests for modern flask and pep8
Somewhere along the way, WSME and flask/werkzeug have got out of sync
and tests have started failing. Since there aren't regular contributions
to WSME we don't catch these changes, so this may have happened months
or years ago.

I have adjusted tests to attempt to account for what I can, but one test
fails to work so I have marked it as an xfail. It works correctly with
werkzeug 1.13.x but not later. Since WSME is in something worse than
maintenance mode, I'm not inclined to fix this.

pep8/flake8 in python3 is more strict than python. The gate now
runs the pep8 jobs using python3 by default, so the local jobs
should as well. This changes the job and also fixes the new problems it
points out.

There are other failures, but they are present in master as well, so
leaving that for other changes.

Change-Id: I57ae0405e0d6ddba0bb1dac93020fb08a0fc7c89
2018-04-09 13:24:20 +01:00
2016-03-08 11:30:20 +00:00
2015-06-01 13:53:09 +00:00
2015-10-17 22:41:53 +00:00
2015-04-21 16:10:25 +01:00
2015-05-27 23:20:40 +08:00
2015-05-27 23:20:40 +08:00
2017-01-04 14:43:55 +00:00

Web Services Made Easy

Introduction

Web Services Made Easy (WSME) simplifies the writing of REST web services by providing simple yet powerful typing, removing the need to directly manipulate the request and the response objects.

WSME can work standalone or on top of your favorite Python web (micro)framework, so you can use both your preferred way of routing your REST requests and most of the features of WSME that rely on the typing system like:

  • Alternate protocols, including those supporting batch-calls
  • Easy documentation through a Sphinx extension

WSME is originally a rewrite of TGWebServices with a focus on extensibility, framework-independance and better type handling.

How Easy ?

Here is a standalone wsgi example:

from wsme import WSRoot, expose

class MyService(WSRoot):
    @expose(unicode, unicode)  # First parameter is the return type,
                               # then the function argument types
    def hello(self, who=u'World'):
        return u"Hello {0} !".format(who)

ws = MyService(protocols=['restjson', 'restxml', 'soap'])
application = ws.wsgiapp()

With this published at the /ws path of your application, you can access your hello function in various protocols:

URL Returns
http://<server>/ws/hello.json?who=you "Hello you !"
http://<server>/ws/hello.xml <result>Hello World !</result>
http://<server>/ws/api.wsdl A WSDL description for any SOAP client.

Main features

  • Very simple API.
  • Supports user-defined simple and complex types.
  • Multi-protocol : REST+Json, REST+XML, SOAP, ExtDirect and more to come.
  • Extensible : easy to add more protocols or more base types.
  • Framework independence : adapters are provided to easily integrate your API in any web framework, for example a wsgi container, Pecan, TurboGears, Flask, cornice...
  • Very few runtime dependencies: webob, simplegeneric. Optionnaly lxml and simplejson if you need better performances.
  • Integration in Sphinx for making clean documentation with wsmeext.sphinxext.

Install

pip install WSME

or, if you do not have pip on your system or virtualenv

easy_install WSME

Changes

Getting Help

Contribute

Description
Web Service Made Easy (WSME) simplify the writing of REST web services by providing simple yet powerful typing which removes the need to directly manipulate the request and the response objects.
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