Book Image

Building RESTful Python Web Services

By : Gaston C. Hillar
Book Image

Building RESTful Python Web Services

By: Gaston C. Hillar

Overview of this book

Python is the language of choice for millions of developers worldwide, due to its gentle learning curve as well as its vast applications in day-to-day programming. It serves the purpose of building great web services in the RESTful architecture. This book will show you the best tools you can use to build your own web services. Learn how to develop RESTful APIs using the popular Python frameworks and all the necessary stacks with Python, Django, Flask, and Tornado, combined with related libraries and tools. We will dive deep into each of these frameworks to build various web services, and will provide use cases and best practices on when to use a particular framework to get the best results. We will show you everything required to successfully develop RESTful APIs with the four frameworks such as request handling, URL mapping, serialization, validation, authentication, authorization, versioning, ORMs, databases, custom code for models and views, and asynchronous callbacks. At the end of each framework, we will add authentication and security to the RESTful APIs and prepare tests for it. By the end of the book, you will have a deep understanding of the stacks needed to build RESTful web services.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Building RESTful Python Web Services
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Summary


In this chapter, we designed a RESTful API to interact with slow sensors and actuators. We defined the requirements for our API, understood the tasks performed by each HTTP method, and set up a virtual environment with Tornado.

We created the classes that represent a drone and wrote code to simulate slow I/O operations that are called for each HTTP request method, wrote classes that represent request handlers and process the different HTTP requests, and configured the URL patterns to route URLs to request handlers and their methods.

Finally, we started Tornado development server, used command-line tools to compose and send HTTP requests to our RESTful API, and analyzed how each HTTP requests was processed in our code. We also worked with GUI tools to compose and send HTTP requests.

Now that we understand the basics of Tornado to create RESTful APIs, we will take advantage of the non-blocking features combined with asynchronous operations in Tornado in a new version for the API, which...