Flask-Spyne

A Flask extension, provides support for Spyne.


Keywords
flask, spyne, soap, wsdl, wsgi, zeromq, rest, rpc, json, http, msgpack, xml, werkzeug, yaml
License
SSPL-1.0
Install
pip install Flask-Spyne==0.3.1

Documentation

Flask-Spyne

Flask-Spyne is a Flask extension which provides Spyne (formerly known as soaplib) support. Includes SOAP, WSDL, JSON, XML, YAML and other transports and protocols. Inspired by unofficial Flask-Enterprise extension (a wrapper on top of outdated soaplib).

Installation

pip install flask-spyne

Please check list of additional requirements you might need to install.

Server example

from flask import Flask
from flask.ext.spyne import Spyne
from spyne.protocol.soap import Soap11
from spyne.model.primitive import Unicode, Integer
from spyne.model.complex import Iterable

app = Flask(__name__)
spyne = Spyne(app)

class SomeSoapService(spyne.Service):
    __service_url_path__ = '/soap/someservice'
    __in_protocol__ = Soap11(validator='lxml')
    __out_protocol__ = Soap11()

    @spyne.srpc(Unicode, Integer, _returns=Iterable(Unicode))
    def echo(str, cnt):
        for i in range(cnt):
            yield str

if __name__ == '__main__':
    app.run(host = '127.0.0.1')

Client example

from suds.client import Client as SudsClient

url = 'http://127.0.0.1:5000/soap/someservice?wsdl'
client = SudsClient(url=url, cache=None)
r = client.service.echo(str='hello world', cnt=3)
print r

WS-Security

Starting from v0.2 flask-spyne supports basics of WS-Security for SOAP services.

Specify __wsse_conf__ dict with following fields:

username (str, required)
password (str, required)
password-digest (bool, optional)
nonce-freshness-time (int, optional)
reject-empty-nonce-creation (bool, optional)
reject-stale-tokens (bool, optional)
reject-expiry-limit (int, optional)

See server_auth.py/client_auth.py in examples for more details.

Written by Robert Ayrapetyan (robert.ayrapetyan@gmail.com).

No copyright. This work is dedicated to the public domain. For full details, see https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

The third-party libraries have their own licenses, as detailed in their source files.