Chris Dent 78d6b89d18 Enable real testing of python 3.4
The gate 34 tests were not running any tests because there was no
tox target. This changes tox-tmpl.ini (and the resulting tox.ini) to
add support for python 34 and remove support for anything that is
not py34 or py27-based.

To make the python3 tox environments work, the remote zip of a suds
fork has been replaced with suds-jurko, a relatively modern fork of
the original suds that supports python2 and 3.

Some tests needed to be fixed to deal with two main problems:

* reponse bodies being bytes
* Exceptions not having a .message attribute (.args[0] is used
  instead)
* the test_flask tests were not being run for python3, they are now
* wsmeext/sphinxext.py intermittently fails due to the dictionary
  changing size in flight, getting the keys prior to iteration fixes
  it

Both 27 and 34 should be running 420 tests as of this commit.

Change-Id: I837c249714fd957790ea84aa2fd9ad994a39c5ea
2015-04-28 14:59:33 +01:00
2014-11-29 15:19:43 +01:00
2015-04-28 14:59:33 +01:00
2015-04-28 14:59:33 +01:00
2015-04-28 14:59:33 +01:00
2013-08-20 14:41:06 -04:00
2015-04-21 16:10:25 +01:00
2014-10-01 09:36:11 -04:00
2015-04-28 14:59:33 +01:00
2015-04-28 14:59:33 +01:00

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

Report issues

WSME issue tracker

Source code

git clone https://github.com/stackforge/wsme/

Gerrit

https://review.openstack.org/#/q/project:stackforge/wsme,n,z/

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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