1:mod:`wsgiref` --- WSGI Utilities and Reference Implementation
2==============================================================
3
4.. module:: wsgiref
5   :synopsis: WSGI Utilities and Reference Implementation.
6
7.. moduleauthor:: Phillip J. Eby <pje@telecommunity.com>
8.. sectionauthor:: Phillip J. Eby <pje@telecommunity.com>
9
10--------------
11
12The Web Server Gateway Interface (WSGI) is a standard interface between web
13server software and web applications written in Python. Having a standard
14interface makes it easy to use an application that supports WSGI with a number
15of different web servers.
16
17Only authors of web servers and programming frameworks need to know every detail
18and corner case of the WSGI design.  You don't need to understand every detail
19of WSGI just to install a WSGI application or to write a web application using
20an existing framework.
21
22:mod:`wsgiref` is a reference implementation of the WSGI specification that can
23be used to add WSGI support to a web server or framework.  It provides utilities
24for manipulating WSGI environment variables and response headers, base classes
25for implementing WSGI servers, a demo HTTP server that serves WSGI applications,
26and a validation tool that checks WSGI servers and applications for conformance
27to the WSGI specification (:pep:`3333`).
28
29See `wsgi.readthedocs.io <https://wsgi.readthedocs.io/>`_ for more information about WSGI, and links
30to tutorials and other resources.
31
32.. XXX If you're just trying to write a web application...
33
34
35:mod:`wsgiref.util` -- WSGI environment utilities
36-------------------------------------------------
37
38.. module:: wsgiref.util
39   :synopsis: WSGI environment utilities.
40
41
42This module provides a variety of utility functions for working with WSGI
43environments.  A WSGI environment is a dictionary containing HTTP request
44variables as described in :pep:`3333`.  All of the functions taking an *environ*
45parameter expect a WSGI-compliant dictionary to be supplied; please see
46:pep:`3333` for a detailed specification.
47
48
49.. function:: guess_scheme(environ)
50
51   Return a guess for whether ``wsgi.url_scheme`` should be "http" or "https", by
52   checking for a ``HTTPS`` environment variable in the *environ* dictionary.  The
53   return value is a string.
54
55   This function is useful when creating a gateway that wraps CGI or a CGI-like
56   protocol such as FastCGI.  Typically, servers providing such protocols will
57   include a ``HTTPS`` variable with a value of "1", "yes", or "on" when a request
58   is received via SSL.  So, this function returns "https" if such a value is
59   found, and "http" otherwise.
60
61
62.. function:: request_uri(environ, include_query=True)
63
64   Return the full request URI, optionally including the query string, using the
65   algorithm found in the "URL Reconstruction" section of :pep:`3333`.  If
66   *include_query* is false, the query string is not included in the resulting URI.
67
68
69.. function:: application_uri(environ)
70
71   Similar to :func:`request_uri`, except that the ``PATH_INFO`` and
72   ``QUERY_STRING`` variables are ignored.  The result is the base URI of the
73   application object addressed by the request.
74
75
76.. function:: shift_path_info(environ)
77
78   Shift a single name from ``PATH_INFO`` to ``SCRIPT_NAME`` and return the name.
79   The *environ* dictionary is *modified* in-place; use a copy if you need to keep
80   the original ``PATH_INFO`` or ``SCRIPT_NAME`` intact.
81
82   If there are no remaining path segments in ``PATH_INFO``, ``None`` is returned.
83
84   Typically, this routine is used to process each portion of a request URI path,
85   for example to treat the path as a series of dictionary keys. This routine
86   modifies the passed-in environment to make it suitable for invoking another WSGI
87   application that is located at the target URI. For example, if there is a WSGI
88   application at ``/foo``, and the request URI path is ``/foo/bar/baz``, and the
89   WSGI application at ``/foo`` calls :func:`shift_path_info`, it will receive the
90   string "bar", and the environment will be updated to be suitable for passing to
91   a WSGI application at ``/foo/bar``.  That is, ``SCRIPT_NAME`` will change from
92   ``/foo`` to ``/foo/bar``, and ``PATH_INFO`` will change from ``/bar/baz`` to
93   ``/baz``.
94
95   When ``PATH_INFO`` is just a "/", this routine returns an empty string and
96   appends a trailing slash to ``SCRIPT_NAME``, even though empty path segments are
97   normally ignored, and ``SCRIPT_NAME`` doesn't normally end in a slash.  This is
98   intentional behavior, to ensure that an application can tell the difference
99   between URIs ending in ``/x`` from ones ending in ``/x/`` when using this
100   routine to do object traversal.
101
102
103.. function:: setup_testing_defaults(environ)
104
105   Update *environ* with trivial defaults for testing purposes.
106
107   This routine adds various parameters required for WSGI, including ``HTTP_HOST``,
108   ``SERVER_NAME``, ``SERVER_PORT``, ``REQUEST_METHOD``, ``SCRIPT_NAME``,
109   ``PATH_INFO``, and all of the :pep:`3333`\ -defined ``wsgi.*`` variables.  It
110   only supplies default values, and does not replace any existing settings for
111   these variables.
112
113   This routine is intended to make it easier for unit tests of WSGI servers and
114   applications to set up dummy environments.  It should NOT be used by actual WSGI
115   servers or applications, since the data is fake!
116
117   Example usage::
118
119      from wsgiref.util import setup_testing_defaults
120      from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
121
122      # A relatively simple WSGI application. It's going to print out the
123      # environment dictionary after being updated by setup_testing_defaults
124      def simple_app(environ, start_response):
125          setup_testing_defaults(environ)
126
127          status = '200 OK'
128          headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain; charset=utf-8')]
129
130          start_response(status, headers)
131
132          ret = [("%s: %s\n" % (key, value)).encode("utf-8")
133                 for key, value in environ.items()]
134          return ret
135
136      with make_server('', 8000, simple_app) as httpd:
137          print("Serving on port 8000...")
138          httpd.serve_forever()
139
140
141In addition to the environment functions above, the :mod:`wsgiref.util` module
142also provides these miscellaneous utilities:
143
144
145.. function:: is_hop_by_hop(header_name)
146
147   Return ``True`` if 'header_name' is an HTTP/1.1 "Hop-by-Hop" header, as defined by
148   :rfc:`2616`.
149
150
151.. class:: FileWrapper(filelike, blksize=8192)
152
153   A wrapper to convert a file-like object to an :term:`iterator`.  The resulting objects
154   support both :meth:`__getitem__` and :meth:`__iter__` iteration styles, for
155   compatibility with Python 2.1 and Jython. As the object is iterated over, the
156   optional *blksize* parameter will be repeatedly passed to the *filelike*
157   object's :meth:`read` method to obtain bytestrings to yield.  When :meth:`read`
158   returns an empty bytestring, iteration is ended and is not resumable.
159
160   If *filelike* has a :meth:`close` method, the returned object will also have a
161   :meth:`close` method, and it will invoke the *filelike* object's :meth:`close`
162   method when called.
163
164   Example usage::
165
166      from io import StringIO
167      from wsgiref.util import FileWrapper
168
169      # We're using a StringIO-buffer for as the file-like object
170      filelike = StringIO("This is an example file-like object"*10)
171      wrapper = FileWrapper(filelike, blksize=5)
172
173      for chunk in wrapper:
174          print(chunk)
175
176   .. deprecated:: 3.8
177      Support for :meth:`sequence protocol <__getitem__>` is deprecated.
178
179
180:mod:`wsgiref.headers` -- WSGI response header tools
181----------------------------------------------------
182
183.. module:: wsgiref.headers
184   :synopsis: WSGI response header tools.
185
186
187This module provides a single class, :class:`Headers`, for convenient
188manipulation of WSGI response headers using a mapping-like interface.
189
190
191.. class:: Headers([headers])
192
193   Create a mapping-like object wrapping *headers*, which must be a list of header
194   name/value tuples as described in :pep:`3333`. The default value of *headers* is
195   an empty list.
196
197   :class:`Headers` objects support typical mapping operations including
198   :meth:`__getitem__`, :meth:`get`, :meth:`__setitem__`, :meth:`setdefault`,
199   :meth:`__delitem__` and :meth:`__contains__`.  For each of
200   these methods, the key is the header name (treated case-insensitively), and the
201   value is the first value associated with that header name.  Setting a header
202   deletes any existing values for that header, then adds a new value at the end of
203   the wrapped header list.  Headers' existing order is generally maintained, with
204   new headers added to the end of the wrapped list.
205
206   Unlike a dictionary, :class:`Headers` objects do not raise an error when you try
207   to get or delete a key that isn't in the wrapped header list. Getting a
208   nonexistent header just returns ``None``, and deleting a nonexistent header does
209   nothing.
210
211   :class:`Headers` objects also support :meth:`keys`, :meth:`values`, and
212   :meth:`items` methods.  The lists returned by :meth:`keys` and :meth:`items` can
213   include the same key more than once if there is a multi-valued header.  The
214   ``len()`` of a :class:`Headers` object is the same as the length of its
215   :meth:`items`, which is the same as the length of the wrapped header list.  In
216   fact, the :meth:`items` method just returns a copy of the wrapped header list.
217
218   Calling ``bytes()`` on a :class:`Headers` object returns a formatted bytestring
219   suitable for transmission as HTTP response headers.  Each header is placed on a
220   line with its value, separated by a colon and a space. Each line is terminated
221   by a carriage return and line feed, and the bytestring is terminated with a
222   blank line.
223
224   In addition to their mapping interface and formatting features, :class:`Headers`
225   objects also have the following methods for querying and adding multi-valued
226   headers, and for adding headers with MIME parameters:
227
228
229   .. method:: Headers.get_all(name)
230
231      Return a list of all the values for the named header.
232
233      The returned list will be sorted in the order they appeared in the original
234      header list or were added to this instance, and may contain duplicates.  Any
235      fields deleted and re-inserted are always appended to the header list.  If no
236      fields exist with the given name, returns an empty list.
237
238
239   .. method:: Headers.add_header(name, value, **_params)
240
241      Add a (possibly multi-valued) header, with optional MIME parameters specified
242      via keyword arguments.
243
244      *name* is the header field to add.  Keyword arguments can be used to set MIME
245      parameters for the header field.  Each parameter must be a string or ``None``.
246      Underscores in parameter names are converted to dashes, since dashes are illegal
247      in Python identifiers, but many MIME parameter names include dashes.  If the
248      parameter value is a string, it is added to the header value parameters in the
249      form ``name="value"``. If it is ``None``, only the parameter name is added.
250      (This is used for MIME parameters without a value.)  Example usage::
251
252         h.add_header('content-disposition', 'attachment', filename='bud.gif')
253
254      The above will add a header that looks like this::
255
256         Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="bud.gif"
257
258
259   .. versionchanged:: 3.5
260      *headers* parameter is optional.
261
262
263:mod:`wsgiref.simple_server` -- a simple WSGI HTTP server
264---------------------------------------------------------
265
266.. module:: wsgiref.simple_server
267   :synopsis: A simple WSGI HTTP server.
268
269
270This module implements a simple HTTP server (based on :mod:`http.server`)
271that serves WSGI applications.  Each server instance serves a single WSGI
272application on a given host and port.  If you want to serve multiple
273applications on a single host and port, you should create a WSGI application
274that parses ``PATH_INFO`` to select which application to invoke for each
275request.  (E.g., using the :func:`shift_path_info` function from
276:mod:`wsgiref.util`.)
277
278
279.. function:: make_server(host, port, app, server_class=WSGIServer, handler_class=WSGIRequestHandler)
280
281   Create a new WSGI server listening on *host* and *port*, accepting connections
282   for *app*.  The return value is an instance of the supplied *server_class*, and
283   will process requests using the specified *handler_class*.  *app* must be a WSGI
284   application object, as defined by :pep:`3333`.
285
286   Example usage::
287
288      from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server, demo_app
289
290      with make_server('', 8000, demo_app) as httpd:
291          print("Serving HTTP on port 8000...")
292
293          # Respond to requests until process is killed
294          httpd.serve_forever()
295
296          # Alternative: serve one request, then exit
297          httpd.handle_request()
298
299
300.. function:: demo_app(environ, start_response)
301
302   This function is a small but complete WSGI application that returns a text page
303   containing the message "Hello world!" and a list of the key/value pairs provided
304   in the *environ* parameter.  It's useful for verifying that a WSGI server (such
305   as :mod:`wsgiref.simple_server`) is able to run a simple WSGI application
306   correctly.
307
308
309.. class:: WSGIServer(server_address, RequestHandlerClass)
310
311   Create a :class:`WSGIServer` instance.  *server_address* should be a
312   ``(host,port)`` tuple, and *RequestHandlerClass* should be the subclass of
313   :class:`http.server.BaseHTTPRequestHandler` that will be used to process
314   requests.
315
316   You do not normally need to call this constructor, as the :func:`make_server`
317   function can handle all the details for you.
318
319   :class:`WSGIServer` is a subclass of :class:`http.server.HTTPServer`, so all
320   of its methods (such as :meth:`serve_forever` and :meth:`handle_request`) are
321   available. :class:`WSGIServer` also provides these WSGI-specific methods:
322
323
324   .. method:: WSGIServer.set_app(application)
325
326      Sets the callable *application* as the WSGI application that will receive
327      requests.
328
329
330   .. method:: WSGIServer.get_app()
331
332      Returns the currently-set application callable.
333
334   Normally, however, you do not need to use these additional methods, as
335   :meth:`set_app` is normally called by :func:`make_server`, and the
336   :meth:`get_app` exists mainly for the benefit of request handler instances.
337
338
339.. class:: WSGIRequestHandler(request, client_address, server)
340
341   Create an HTTP handler for the given *request* (i.e. a socket), *client_address*
342   (a ``(host,port)`` tuple), and *server* (:class:`WSGIServer` instance).
343
344   You do not need to create instances of this class directly; they are
345   automatically created as needed by :class:`WSGIServer` objects.  You can,
346   however, subclass this class and supply it as a *handler_class* to the
347   :func:`make_server` function.  Some possibly relevant methods for overriding in
348   subclasses:
349
350
351   .. method:: WSGIRequestHandler.get_environ()
352
353      Returns a dictionary containing the WSGI environment for a request.  The default
354      implementation copies the contents of the :class:`WSGIServer` object's
355      :attr:`base_environ` dictionary attribute and then adds various headers derived
356      from the HTTP request.  Each call to this method should return a new dictionary
357      containing all of the relevant CGI environment variables as specified in
358      :pep:`3333`.
359
360
361   .. method:: WSGIRequestHandler.get_stderr()
362
363      Return the object that should be used as the ``wsgi.errors`` stream. The default
364      implementation just returns ``sys.stderr``.
365
366
367   .. method:: WSGIRequestHandler.handle()
368
369      Process the HTTP request.  The default implementation creates a handler instance
370      using a :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` class to implement the actual WSGI application
371      interface.
372
373
374:mod:`wsgiref.validate` --- WSGI conformance checker
375----------------------------------------------------
376
377.. module:: wsgiref.validate
378   :synopsis: WSGI conformance checker.
379
380
381When creating new WSGI application objects, frameworks, servers, or middleware,
382it can be useful to validate the new code's conformance using
383:mod:`wsgiref.validate`.  This module provides a function that creates WSGI
384application objects that validate communications between a WSGI server or
385gateway and a WSGI application object, to check both sides for protocol
386conformance.
387
388Note that this utility does not guarantee complete :pep:`3333` compliance; an
389absence of errors from this module does not necessarily mean that errors do not
390exist.  However, if this module does produce an error, then it is virtually
391certain that either the server or application is not 100% compliant.
392
393This module is based on the :mod:`paste.lint` module from Ian Bicking's "Python
394Paste" library.
395
396
397.. function:: validator(application)
398
399   Wrap *application* and return a new WSGI application object.  The returned
400   application will forward all requests to the original *application*, and will
401   check that both the *application* and the server invoking it are conforming to
402   the WSGI specification and to :rfc:`2616`.
403
404   Any detected nonconformance results in an :exc:`AssertionError` being raised;
405   note, however, that how these errors are handled is server-dependent.  For
406   example, :mod:`wsgiref.simple_server` and other servers based on
407   :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` (that don't override the error handling methods to do
408   something else) will simply output a message that an error has occurred, and
409   dump the traceback to ``sys.stderr`` or some other error stream.
410
411   This wrapper may also generate output using the :mod:`warnings` module to
412   indicate behaviors that are questionable but which may not actually be
413   prohibited by :pep:`3333`.  Unless they are suppressed using Python command-line
414   options or the :mod:`warnings` API, any such warnings will be written to
415   ``sys.stderr`` (*not* ``wsgi.errors``, unless they happen to be the same
416   object).
417
418   Example usage::
419
420      from wsgiref.validate import validator
421      from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
422
423      # Our callable object which is intentionally not compliant to the
424      # standard, so the validator is going to break
425      def simple_app(environ, start_response):
426          status = '200 OK'  # HTTP Status
427          headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain')]  # HTTP Headers
428          start_response(status, headers)
429
430          # This is going to break because we need to return a list, and
431          # the validator is going to inform us
432          return b"Hello World"
433
434      # This is the application wrapped in a validator
435      validator_app = validator(simple_app)
436
437      with make_server('', 8000, validator_app) as httpd:
438          print("Listening on port 8000....")
439          httpd.serve_forever()
440
441
442:mod:`wsgiref.handlers` -- server/gateway base classes
443------------------------------------------------------
444
445.. module:: wsgiref.handlers
446   :synopsis: WSGI server/gateway base classes.
447
448
449This module provides base handler classes for implementing WSGI servers and
450gateways.  These base classes handle most of the work of communicating with a
451WSGI application, as long as they are given a CGI-like environment, along with
452input, output, and error streams.
453
454
455.. class:: CGIHandler()
456
457   CGI-based invocation via ``sys.stdin``, ``sys.stdout``, ``sys.stderr`` and
458   ``os.environ``.  This is useful when you have a WSGI application and want to run
459   it as a CGI script.  Simply invoke ``CGIHandler().run(app)``, where ``app`` is
460   the WSGI application object you wish to invoke.
461
462   This class is a subclass of :class:`BaseCGIHandler` that sets ``wsgi.run_once``
463   to true, ``wsgi.multithread`` to false, and ``wsgi.multiprocess`` to true, and
464   always uses :mod:`sys` and :mod:`os` to obtain the necessary CGI streams and
465   environment.
466
467
468.. class:: IISCGIHandler()
469
470   A specialized alternative to :class:`CGIHandler`, for use when deploying on
471   Microsoft's IIS web server, without having set the config allowPathInfo
472   option (IIS>=7) or metabase allowPathInfoForScriptMappings (IIS<7).
473
474   By default, IIS gives a ``PATH_INFO`` that duplicates the ``SCRIPT_NAME`` at
475   the front, causing problems for WSGI applications that wish to implement
476   routing. This handler strips any such duplicated path.
477
478   IIS can be configured to pass the correct ``PATH_INFO``, but this causes
479   another bug where ``PATH_TRANSLATED`` is wrong. Luckily this variable is
480   rarely used and is not guaranteed by WSGI. On IIS<7, though, the
481   setting can only be made on a vhost level, affecting all other script
482   mappings, many of which break when exposed to the ``PATH_TRANSLATED`` bug.
483   For this reason IIS<7 is almost never deployed with the fix (Even IIS7
484   rarely uses it because there is still no UI for it.).
485
486   There is no way for CGI code to tell whether the option was set, so a
487   separate handler class is provided.  It is used in the same way as
488   :class:`CGIHandler`, i.e., by calling ``IISCGIHandler().run(app)``, where
489   ``app`` is the WSGI application object you wish to invoke.
490
491   .. versionadded:: 3.2
492
493
494.. class:: BaseCGIHandler(stdin, stdout, stderr, environ, multithread=True, multiprocess=False)
495
496   Similar to :class:`CGIHandler`, but instead of using the :mod:`sys` and
497   :mod:`os` modules, the CGI environment and I/O streams are specified explicitly.
498   The *multithread* and *multiprocess* values are used to set the
499   ``wsgi.multithread`` and ``wsgi.multiprocess`` flags for any applications run by
500   the handler instance.
501
502   This class is a subclass of :class:`SimpleHandler` intended for use with
503   software other than HTTP "origin servers".  If you are writing a gateway
504   protocol implementation (such as CGI, FastCGI, SCGI, etc.) that uses a
505   ``Status:`` header to send an HTTP status, you probably want to subclass this
506   instead of :class:`SimpleHandler`.
507
508
509.. class:: SimpleHandler(stdin, stdout, stderr, environ, multithread=True, multiprocess=False)
510
511   Similar to :class:`BaseCGIHandler`, but designed for use with HTTP origin
512   servers.  If you are writing an HTTP server implementation, you will probably
513   want to subclass this instead of :class:`BaseCGIHandler`.
514
515   This class is a subclass of :class:`BaseHandler`.  It overrides the
516   :meth:`__init__`, :meth:`get_stdin`, :meth:`get_stderr`, :meth:`add_cgi_vars`,
517   :meth:`_write`, and :meth:`_flush` methods to support explicitly setting the
518   environment and streams via the constructor.  The supplied environment and
519   streams are stored in the :attr:`stdin`, :attr:`stdout`, :attr:`stderr`, and
520   :attr:`environ` attributes.
521
522   The :meth:`~io.BufferedIOBase.write` method of *stdout* should write
523   each chunk in full, like :class:`io.BufferedIOBase`.
524
525
526.. class:: BaseHandler()
527
528   This is an abstract base class for running WSGI applications.  Each instance
529   will handle a single HTTP request, although in principle you could create a
530   subclass that was reusable for multiple requests.
531
532   :class:`BaseHandler` instances have only one method intended for external use:
533
534
535   .. method:: BaseHandler.run(app)
536
537      Run the specified WSGI application, *app*.
538
539   All of the other :class:`BaseHandler` methods are invoked by this method in the
540   process of running the application, and thus exist primarily to allow
541   customizing the process.
542
543   The following methods MUST be overridden in a subclass:
544
545
546   .. method:: BaseHandler._write(data)
547
548      Buffer the bytes *data* for transmission to the client.  It's okay if this
549      method actually transmits the data; :class:`BaseHandler` just separates write
550      and flush operations for greater efficiency when the underlying system actually
551      has such a distinction.
552
553
554   .. method:: BaseHandler._flush()
555
556      Force buffered data to be transmitted to the client.  It's okay if this method
557      is a no-op (i.e., if :meth:`_write` actually sends the data).
558
559
560   .. method:: BaseHandler.get_stdin()
561
562      Return an input stream object suitable for use as the ``wsgi.input`` of the
563      request currently being processed.
564
565
566   .. method:: BaseHandler.get_stderr()
567
568      Return an output stream object suitable for use as the ``wsgi.errors`` of the
569      request currently being processed.
570
571
572   .. method:: BaseHandler.add_cgi_vars()
573
574      Insert CGI variables for the current request into the :attr:`environ` attribute.
575
576   Here are some other methods and attributes you may wish to override. This list
577   is only a summary, however, and does not include every method that can be
578   overridden.  You should consult the docstrings and source code for additional
579   information before attempting to create a customized :class:`BaseHandler`
580   subclass.
581
582   Attributes and methods for customizing the WSGI environment:
583
584
585   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_multithread
586
587      The value to be used for the ``wsgi.multithread`` environment variable.  It
588      defaults to true in :class:`BaseHandler`, but may have a different default (or
589      be set by the constructor) in the other subclasses.
590
591
592   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_multiprocess
593
594      The value to be used for the ``wsgi.multiprocess`` environment variable.  It
595      defaults to true in :class:`BaseHandler`, but may have a different default (or
596      be set by the constructor) in the other subclasses.
597
598
599   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_run_once
600
601      The value to be used for the ``wsgi.run_once`` environment variable.  It
602      defaults to false in :class:`BaseHandler`, but :class:`CGIHandler` sets it to
603      true by default.
604
605
606   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.os_environ
607
608      The default environment variables to be included in every request's WSGI
609      environment.  By default, this is a copy of ``os.environ`` at the time that
610      :mod:`wsgiref.handlers` was imported, but subclasses can either create their own
611      at the class or instance level.  Note that the dictionary should be considered
612      read-only, since the default value is shared between multiple classes and
613      instances.
614
615
616   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.server_software
617
618      If the :attr:`origin_server` attribute is set, this attribute's value is used to
619      set the default ``SERVER_SOFTWARE`` WSGI environment variable, and also to set a
620      default ``Server:`` header in HTTP responses.  It is ignored for handlers (such
621      as :class:`BaseCGIHandler` and :class:`CGIHandler`) that are not HTTP origin
622      servers.
623
624      .. versionchanged:: 3.3
625         The term "Python" is replaced with implementation specific term like
626         "CPython", "Jython" etc.
627
628   .. method:: BaseHandler.get_scheme()
629
630      Return the URL scheme being used for the current request.  The default
631      implementation uses the :func:`guess_scheme` function from :mod:`wsgiref.util`
632      to guess whether the scheme should be "http" or "https", based on the current
633      request's :attr:`environ` variables.
634
635
636   .. method:: BaseHandler.setup_environ()
637
638      Set the :attr:`environ` attribute to a fully-populated WSGI environment.  The
639      default implementation uses all of the above methods and attributes, plus the
640      :meth:`get_stdin`, :meth:`get_stderr`, and :meth:`add_cgi_vars` methods and the
641      :attr:`wsgi_file_wrapper` attribute.  It also inserts a ``SERVER_SOFTWARE`` key
642      if not present, as long as the :attr:`origin_server` attribute is a true value
643      and the :attr:`server_software` attribute is set.
644
645   Methods and attributes for customizing exception handling:
646
647
648   .. method:: BaseHandler.log_exception(exc_info)
649
650      Log the *exc_info* tuple in the server log.  *exc_info* is a ``(type, value,
651      traceback)`` tuple.  The default implementation simply writes the traceback to
652      the request's ``wsgi.errors`` stream and flushes it.  Subclasses can override
653      this method to change the format or retarget the output, mail the traceback to
654      an administrator, or whatever other action may be deemed suitable.
655
656
657   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.traceback_limit
658
659      The maximum number of frames to include in tracebacks output by the default
660      :meth:`log_exception` method.  If ``None``, all frames are included.
661
662
663   .. method:: BaseHandler.error_output(environ, start_response)
664
665      This method is a WSGI application to generate an error page for the user.  It is
666      only invoked if an error occurs before headers are sent to the client.
667
668      This method can access the current error information using ``sys.exc_info()``,
669      and should pass that information to *start_response* when calling it (as
670      described in the "Error Handling" section of :pep:`3333`).
671
672      The default implementation just uses the :attr:`error_status`,
673      :attr:`error_headers`, and :attr:`error_body` attributes to generate an output
674      page.  Subclasses can override this to produce more dynamic error output.
675
676      Note, however, that it's not recommended from a security perspective to spit out
677      diagnostics to any old user; ideally, you should have to do something special to
678      enable diagnostic output, which is why the default implementation doesn't
679      include any.
680
681
682   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.error_status
683
684      The HTTP status used for error responses.  This should be a status string as
685      defined in :pep:`3333`; it defaults to a 500 code and message.
686
687
688   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.error_headers
689
690      The HTTP headers used for error responses.  This should be a list of WSGI
691      response headers (``(name, value)`` tuples), as described in :pep:`3333`.  The
692      default list just sets the content type to ``text/plain``.
693
694
695   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.error_body
696
697      The error response body.  This should be an HTTP response body bytestring. It
698      defaults to the plain text, "A server error occurred.  Please contact the
699      administrator."
700
701   Methods and attributes for :pep:`3333`'s "Optional Platform-Specific File
702   Handling" feature:
703
704
705   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.wsgi_file_wrapper
706
707      A ``wsgi.file_wrapper`` factory, or ``None``.  The default value of this
708      attribute is the :class:`wsgiref.util.FileWrapper` class.
709
710
711   .. method:: BaseHandler.sendfile()
712
713      Override to implement platform-specific file transmission.  This method is
714      called only if the application's return value is an instance of the class
715      specified by the :attr:`wsgi_file_wrapper` attribute.  It should return a true
716      value if it was able to successfully transmit the file, so that the default
717      transmission code will not be executed. The default implementation of this
718      method just returns a false value.
719
720   Miscellaneous methods and attributes:
721
722
723   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.origin_server
724
725      This attribute should be set to a true value if the handler's :meth:`_write` and
726      :meth:`_flush` are being used to communicate directly to the client, rather than
727      via a CGI-like gateway protocol that wants the HTTP status in a special
728      ``Status:`` header.
729
730      This attribute's default value is true in :class:`BaseHandler`, but false in
731      :class:`BaseCGIHandler` and :class:`CGIHandler`.
732
733
734   .. attribute:: BaseHandler.http_version
735
736      If :attr:`origin_server` is true, this string attribute is used to set the HTTP
737      version of the response set to the client.  It defaults to ``"1.0"``.
738
739
740.. function:: read_environ()
741
742   Transcode CGI variables from ``os.environ`` to :pep:`3333` "bytes in unicode"
743   strings, returning a new dictionary.  This function is used by
744   :class:`CGIHandler` and :class:`IISCGIHandler` in place of directly using
745   ``os.environ``, which is not necessarily WSGI-compliant on all platforms
746   and web servers using Python 3 -- specifically, ones where the OS's
747   actual environment is Unicode (i.e. Windows), or ones where the environment
748   is bytes, but the system encoding used by Python to decode it is anything
749   other than ISO-8859-1 (e.g. Unix systems using UTF-8).
750
751   If you are implementing a CGI-based handler of your own, you probably want
752   to use this routine instead of just copying values out of ``os.environ``
753   directly.
754
755   .. versionadded:: 3.2
756
757
758Examples
759--------
760
761This is a working "Hello World" WSGI application::
762
763   from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
764
765   # Every WSGI application must have an application object - a callable
766   # object that accepts two arguments. For that purpose, we're going to
767   # use a function (note that you're not limited to a function, you can
768   # use a class for example). The first argument passed to the function
769   # is a dictionary containing CGI-style environment variables and the
770   # second variable is the callable object.
771   def hello_world_app(environ, start_response):
772       status = '200 OK'  # HTTP Status
773       headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain; charset=utf-8')]  # HTTP Headers
774       start_response(status, headers)
775
776       # The returned object is going to be printed
777       return [b"Hello World"]
778
779   with make_server('', 8000, hello_world_app) as httpd:
780       print("Serving on port 8000...")
781
782       # Serve until process is killed
783       httpd.serve_forever()
784
785
786Example of a WSGI application serving the current directory, accept optional
787directory and port number (default: 8000) on the command line:
788
789.. literalinclude:: ../../Tools/scripts/serve.py
790