# CostaPy Python Web Framework. Build with CherryPy and Mako. ## Requirement & Installation You need this libraries to use CostaPy: - cherrypy - mako - mysql-connector - bcrypt You can install it with run this command sh install.sh ## Usage Use this command to start the web service python costa.py For an example like this python3 costa.py localhost 80 My_Service You can use nohup too and running it in the background like this nohup python3 costa.py localhost 80 My_Service & ## Configuration ### Server (config/server.py) tools.sessions.on
Default: True
Description: Enable sessions
engine.autoreload.on
Default: False
Description: Auto Reload when source code change. Don't use it in production.
request.show_tracebacks
Default: False
Description: Show traceback for debugging in development purposes.
### Global Variable (config/globalvar.py) `directory.py` is the place for storing your Global Variable. GV_base_url
Is the variable for your base URL (without `/` in the end). GV_title
Is the variable for your web title. ### Directory (config/directory.py) `directory.py` is the place for storing your path. It is useful to calling the path more efficiently. there is 2 method that you can store your path. store it in variable for templating configuration, and store it as object for routing the url. This is example that use for templating html_user = "static/pages-user" template_user = "static/template-user" And this is example that use for routing the url dirconfig = { '/' : { 'tools.sessions.on' : True , 'tools.staticdir.root' : os.path.abspath(os.getcwd()) , }, '/your_dir' : { 'tools.staticdir.on' : True , 'tools.staticdir.dir' : './static/your-dir' , }, } ### Templating (config/template.py) Templating is useful when you had more than 1 website template for difference use case. For an example, when you had user and admin in the use case, the website for user have a navbar and footer, and the website for admin have a navbar and sidebar. Before you create a template, make sure your `directory` configuration is ready for storing templates and pages. For an example: html_user = "static/pages-user" template_user = "static/template-user" To create the template, you need to insert this code in `def __init__(self)` self.html_pages_user = html.main.get_html(directory.html_user) self.html_template_user = html.main.get_html(directory.template_user) if you had admin template, you just need to add the code. for the example like this self.html_pages_user = html.main.get_html(directory.html_user) self.html_template_user = html.main.get_html(directory.template_user) self.html_pages_admin = html.main.get_html(directory.html_admin) self.html_template_admin = html.main.get_html(directory.template_admin) and then you need create function for each of your template in main class like this def user(self, page): params_list = { "template" : self.html_template_user ["user.html" ] , "topnav" : self.html_template_user ["user-topnav.html" ] , "container" : self.html_pages_user [page+".html" ] } return params_list ### Database (config/database.py) This is the sample template for configure it db_default = { 'host' : 'localhost', 'user' : 'root', 'password' : '', 'database' : 'your_db', 'autocommit' : True, } You also can make more than 1 database configuration like this db_default = { 'host' : 'localhost', 'user' : 'root', 'password' : '', 'database' : 'your_db', 'autocommit' : True, } db_other = { 'host' : 'localhost', 'user' : 'root', 'password' : '', 'database' : 'other_db', 'autocommit' : True, } ## Handling the modules Handling the module is in `handler.py`.