Metadata-Version: 1.0
Name: Flask-Failsafe
Version: 0.2
Summary: A failsafe for the Flask reloader
Home-page: http://github.com/mgood/flask-failsafe
Author: Matt Good
Author-email: matt@matt-good.net
License: BSD
Description: Flask-Failsafe
        ==============
        
        A failsafe for the Flask reloader.
        
        .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/mgood/flask-failsafe.png
           :target: https://travis-ci.org/mgood/flask-failsafe
        
        The Flask reloader works great until you make a syntax error and it fails
        importing your app. This extension helps keep you working smoothly by catching
        errors during the initialization of your app, and provides a failsafe fallback
        app to display those startup errors instead.
        
        To use it, run your app via a small script script with a factory function to
        initialize your app::
        
          from flask_failsafe import failsafe
        
          @failsafe
          def create_app():
            # note that the import is *inside* this function so that we can catch
            # errors that happen at import time
            from myapp import app
            return app
        
          if __name__ == "__main__":
            create_app().run()
        
        
        The ``@failsafe`` decorator catches any errors calling ``create_app()`` and
        returns a fallback app that will instead display the Flask error debugger.
        
        If you use `Flask-Script <http://flask-script.readthedocs.org>`_, you can pass
        the same ``@failsafe``-decorated factory function to the ``Manager()`` class::
        
          from flask.ext.script import Manager, Server
          from flask_failsafe import failsafe
        
          @failsafe
          def create_app():
            from myapp import app
            return app
        
          manager = Manager(create_app)
          manager.add_command("runserver", Server())
        
          if __name__ == "__main__":
            manager.run()
        
        
        Changes
        =======
        
        0.2 (2014-01-03)
        ----------------
        
        Python 3 support (thanks to Asger Drewsen for the help)
        
        0.1 (2012-09-14)
        ----------------
        
        Initial release
        
Platform: any
