Getting Started¶
Warning: This document has only just been started. It’s not going to get you very far right now.
Nevow is a reasonably large library and can be quite daunting at first. This document’s aim is to guide the first time user in building a Nevow application.
Our First Application¶
Let’s dive straight in, here’s the code for our first (very, very
simple) application. Create the following module, helloworld.py
:
1 2 3 4 5 6 | from nevow import loaders, rend
class HelloWorld(rend.Page):
addSlash = True
docFactory = loaders.xmlfile('helloworld.html')
|
It looks quite simple but let’s walk through it anyway.
First, we import two Nevow modules. nevow.loaders
contains template
loaders of which the two most useful are xmlfile
and stan
.
xmlfile
can load any well-formed XML (i.e. XHTML) file; stan
loads a stan tree (more on these later). The other module,
nevow.rend
, contains all Nevow’s standard renders, many of which
we’ll meet in this document.
We then define the HelloWorld
class that subclasses rend.Page
,
Nevow’s main resource class. HelloWorld
has two class attributes.
addSlash
tells rend.Page
to redirect to a version of the request
URL that ends in a /
if necessary. You generally want to set this to
True
for the root resource. docFactory
tells the page instance
where to get the template from. In this case we’re providing a loader
that parses an HTML file (not shown) from disk.
Hmm, ok I hear you say but how do I see it. Well, Twisted provides a
good web server which we can use. Twisted also includes a clever little
application for starting Twisted applications. Here’s the helloworld.tac
file, a Twisted Application Configuration:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 | from twisted.application import internet
from twisted.application import service
from nevow import appserver
import helloworld
application = service.Application('helloworld')
site = appserver.NevowSite(helloworld.HelloWorld())
webServer = internet.TCPServer(8080, site)
webServer.setServiceParent(application)
|
Give it a go, run the following and connect to http://localhost:8080/ to see your application:
twistd -ny helloworld.tac
You’ll probably notice that you get log output on the console. This is just one of the good things that twistd does. It can also daemonize the application, shed privileges if run as root, etc.
TAC files are covered in more detail in the Twisted documentation but let’s quickly explain what all this does anyway.
When twistd
starts up it loads the .tac
file (it’s just Python)
and looks for the attribute called application
. When twistd
is
all ready to go it starts the application
.
The application is not much use unless it actually does something so the
next thing we do is create a NevowSite
instance, site
, and pass
it a root resource, a HelloWorld
instance. Finally, we create a TCP
server that makes the site available on port 8080 and bind the server to
the application to ensure the server is started when the application is
started.