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Building a resource

A resource belongs to the presentation layer and is used to build REST APIs. A resource is at the core essentially a Flask Blueprint.

Directory structure

A resource normally split over multiple files. Below is an example of such a module structure:

|-- __init__.py
|-- config.py
`-- resource.py

Resource

A basic resource is created from the Flask-Resources library, and one or more service is injected in addition to a resource config:

# resource.py
from flask import g
from flask_resources import Resource

class ClickResource(Resource):
    def __init__(self, config, service):
        super().__init__(config)
        self.service = service

Resource config

The resource config is used for dependency injection in the resource. The basics is e.g. that we allow modifying the routing for the REST API (i.e. routing is independent of implementation):

# config.py
class ClickResourceConfig(ResourceConfig):
    # Blueprint configuration
    blueprint_name = "click"
    url_prefix = "/click"
    routes = {
        "click": "/", # relative to url_prefix
    }
    # ...

Instantiating a resource

A resource needs to be instantiated first and registered on a Flask application:

service = ...
resource = ClickResource(ClickResourceConfig(), service)

# Register the resource as a blueprint on the Flask application.
app = Flask()
app.register_blueprint(resource.as_blueprint())

Routing

A resource must implement the create_url_rules() method to define the view routing:

# resource.py
from flask_resources import route

class ClickResource(Resource):
    def create_url_rules(self):
        # Get the named routes from the config
        routes = self.config.routes
        # Define the URL rules:
        return [
            route("POST", routes["click"], self.click),
        ]

    def click(self):
        # ... view implementation ...

Response serialization (content negotiation)

Content negotiation allows to support multiple different metadata formats on the same endpoint, which can also be used for versioning the REST API.

Below is an example of how the result item from the service, is return as a dict to the response handler:

# resource.py
from flask_resources import response_handler

class ClickResource(Resource):
    # Decorate the view
    @response_handler()
    def click(self):
        # Call service
        item = self.service.click(g.identity)
        # a Python dictionary is returned to the response handler which will
        # serialize it into the desired format.
        return item.to_dict(), 200  # HTTP 200 status code.

The actual serialization is defined by the config (e.g. we allow users to overwrite the output of the REST API):

# config.py
from flask_resources import response_handler

class ClickResourceConfig(ResourceConfig):
    response_handlers = {
        # Define JSON serializer for "application/json"
        "application/json": ResponseHandler(JSONSerializer())
    }

The JSONSerializer is responsible for turning the Python dictionary (from item.to_dict()) into byte string, and the ResponseHandler is responsible for wrappging the byte string in an HTTP response.

Parameter parsing

Resource request context

A view method in a resource should parse all its parameters and store them on the resource request context. This way we ensure all input data have passed some basic validation.

Parsing the URL query string

Below is an example of parsing a required URL query string parameter q ( e.g. /click?q=...):

# resource.py
class ClickResource(Resource):
    @request_parser(
        {'q': ma.fields.String(required=True)},
        # Other locations include args, view_args, headers.
        location='args',
    )
    @response_handler()
    def click(self):
        # The validated data is now available on the resource request context:
        resource_requestctx.args['q']

Parsing the request body

The HTTP request body can be parsed as well:

class ClickResource(Resource):
    @request_body(
        parsers={
            "application/json": RequestBodyParser(JSONDeserializer())
        }
    )
    @response_handler()
    def click(self):
        # The validated data is now available on the resource request context:
        resource_requestctx.data

Error handling

The resource further allows you to easily map service layer errors to an HTTP error. Below is an example of mapping the AlreadyClickedError to an400`` Bad Request HTTP error:

# resource.py
from flask_resources import Resource, HTTPJSONException, create_error_handler
from ..service.errors import AlreadClickedError

class ClickResource(Resource):
    # Set the error handlers to map service errors to HTTP errors.
    error_handlers = {
        AlreadyClickedError: create_error_handler(
            HTTPJSONException(
                code=400,
                description="Already clicked.",
            )
        )
    }

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