Paste Script ============ :author: Ian Bicking :revision: $Rev$ :date: $LastChangedDate$ Contents: .. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 news developer license Warning ------- Paste Script is being maintained on life support. That means that critical bugs will be fixed, and support for new versions of Python will be handled, but other than that new features are not being considered. Development has moved to `GitHub `_. Introduction ------------ If you are developer, see the `Developer Documentation `_; this will tell you how to add commands and templates to ``paster``. For a list of updates see the `news file `_. Paste Script is released under the `MIT license `_. Status ------ Paste Script has passed version 1.0. Paste Script is in maintenance mode. Bugs will be fixed, new features are not being considered. ``paster create`` ----------------- This creates the skeleton for new projects. Many different kinds of projects have created skeletons for their projects (Pylons, TurboGears, ZopeSkel, and others). For a tutorial for making new skeletons, see `this tutorial from Lucas Szybalski `_. It also discusses creating new subcommands for paster. ``paster serve`` ---------------- The one useful command you may want to know about for ``paster`` is ``paster serve``. This serves an application described in a `Paste Deploy `_ configuration file. Configuration ------------- A quickstart (and example), if not complete explanation:: [app:main] use = egg:PasteEnabledPackage option1 = foo option2 = bar [server:main] use = egg:PasteScript#wsgiutils host = 127.0.0.1 port = 80 ``egg:PasteEnabledPackage`` refers to some package that has been prepared for use with paste.deploy, and options given to that package. If you are starting out with some framework, you'll have to reference some documentation for that framework to paste-deploy-ify your application (or read the paste.deploy documentation). In the same file is a server description. ``egg:PasteScript#wsgiutils`` is a server (named ``wsgiutils``) provided by this package, based on `WSGIUtils `_. And we pass various options particular to that server. Other packages can provide servers, but currently Paste Script includes glue for these: ``wsgiutils``: A `SimpleHTTPServer `_ based threaded HTTP server, using `WSGIUtils `_. ``flup_(scgi|fcgi|ajp)_(thread|fork)``: This set of servers supports `SCGI `_, `FastCGI `_ and `AJP `_ protocols, for connection an external web server (like Apache) to your application. Both threaded and forking versions are available. This is based on `flup `_. There is the start of support for `twisted.web2 `_ in ``paste.script.twisted_web2_server``; patches welcome. Running the Server ------------------ ``paster serve --help`` gives useful output:: usage: /usr/local/bin/paster serve [options] CONFIG_FILE [start|stop|restart|status] Serve the described application If start/stop/restart is given, then it will start (normal operation), stop (--stop-daemon), or do both. You probably want ``--daemon`` as well for stopping. Options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -v, --verbose -q, --quiet -nNAME, --app-name=NAME Load the named application (default main) -sSERVER_TYPE, --server=SERVER_TYPE Use the named server. --server-name=SECTION_NAME Use the named server as defined in the configuration file (default: main) --daemon Run in daemon (background) mode --pid-file=FILENAME Save PID to file (default to paster.pid if running in daemon mode) --log-file=LOG_FILE Save output to the given log file (redirects stdout) --reload Use auto-restart file monitor --reload-interval=RELOAD_INTERVAL Seconds between checking files (low number can cause significant CPU usage) --status Show the status of the (presumably daemonized) server --user=USERNAME Set the user (usually only possible when run as root) --group=GROUP Set the group (usually only possible when run as root) --stop-daemon Stop a daemonized server (given a PID file, or default paster.pid file) Basically you give it a configuration file. If you don't do anything else, it'll serve the ``[app:main]`` application with the ``[server:main]`` server. You can pass in ``--server-name=foo`` to serve the ``[server:foo]`` section (or even ``--server-name=config:foo.ini`` to use a separate configuration file). Similarly you can use ``--app-name=foo`` to serve ``[app:foo]``. ``--daemon`` will run the server in the backgroup, ``--user`` and ``--group`` will set the user, as you might want to do from a start script (run as root). If you don't give a ``--pid-file`` it will write the pid to ``paster.pid`` (in the current directory). ``--stop-daemon`` will stop the daemon in ``paster.pid`` or whatever ``--pid-file`` you give. ``--log-file`` will redirect stdout and stderr to that file. ``--reload`` will start the reload monitor, and restart the server whenever a file is edited. This can be a little expensive, but is very useful during development. #! Scripts ---------- On Posix (Linux, Unix, etc) systems you can turn your configuration files into executable scripts. First make the file executable (``chmod +x config_file.ini``). The you should add a line like this to the top of the file:: #!/usr/bin/env paster You can include a command and command-line options in an ``[exe]`` section, like:: [exe] command = serve daemon = true user = nobody group = nobody (use ``true`` and ``false`` for options that don't take an argument). If you use ``daemon = true`` then you'll be able to use the script as an rc script, so you can do:: $ sudo ./config_file.ini start $ sudo ./config_file.ini restart and so forth. Note that this is a little wonky still on some platforms and shells (notably it doesn't work under `csh `_). If you get an error about "Command config_file.ini not known" then this probably won't work for you. In the future an additional script to ``paster`` will be added just for this purpose.