Template loader for embedded python runtimes, e.g., PyOxidizer or PyInstaller.
The main problem with the current PackageLoader is that it can only load templates from packages which are installed and materialized as directories. However, when using a bundler from above, the resources, i.e., templates, are embedded into the executable. Thus, the PackageLoader
will throw the following exception: The package was not installed in a way that PackageLoader understands
.
The EmbeddedPackageLoader
from this package fixes this problem and required minimal changes. Under the hood, we utilize the Loader
and ResourceReader
implementation of the package provided through importlib. Thereby, the EmbeddedPackageLoader
will work when the package is normally installed as directory and in an embedded environment.
Two changes are necessary. First, change PackageLoader
to EmbeddedPackageLoader
:
from jinja2 import Environment, PackageLoader
from jinja2_embedded import EmbeddedPackageLoader
# before
env = Environment(
loader=PackageLoader('my_package', 'templates'),
autoescape=True,
...
)
# after
env = Environment(
loader=EmbeddedPackageLoader('my_package.templates'),
autoescape=True, # default False, but FastAPI uses True as default
extensions=[],
)
# with FastAPI
from fastapi.templating import Jinja2Templates
templates = Jinja2Templates(env=env)
Second, declare the templates directory as a module by adding a __init__.py
file:
my_package
├── __init__.py
├── main.py
└── templates
├── __init__.py # required
├── bar
│ ├── __init__.py # not required
│ └── test.html.jinja2
├── foo
│ └── test.html
└── test.html
The subdirectories inside the templates directory can be declared as modules (here my_package.templates.bar
), but this is not required. The EmbeddedPackageLoader
works with either or mixed configuration.
The EmbeddedPackageLoader
will first try to locate the template with the ResourceReader
from my_package.templates
. From our example above, the ResourceReader
is able to see:
>>> from importlib.util import find_spec
>>> package = 'my_package.templates'
>>> loader = find_spec(package).loader
>>> resource_reader = loader.get_resource_reader(package)
>>> contents = resource_reader.contents()
>>> print(list(contents))
['foo/test.html', 'test.html']
So we can use the provided resource_reader
to read either of those files:
>>> with resource_reader.open_resource('foo/test.html') as file:
... content = file.read()
>>> print(content.decode('utf-8'))
FOO
Since, bar
is declared as module (directory contains a __init__.py
file), we need to use the ResourceReader
of the respective module:
>>> resource_reader = loader.get_resource_reader('my_package.templates.bar')
>>> contents = resource_reader.contents()
>>> print(list(contents))
['test.html.jinja2']
The EmbeddedPackageLoader
will first try to find the resource in the ResourceReader
of the main package and then fallback to the ResourceReader
of the submodule (if it is declared as such).
Install rye, then run rye sync
. This creates a venv with all necessary dependencies. Run pytest
to run all tests.
To run the tests in a embedded Python version created with PyOxidizer, run pyoxidizer run
in the root directory. After the executable has been build, the tests will run automatically.
This repository used ruff to enforce style standards. The formatting is automatically done for you via pre-commit. Install pre-commit with pre-commit install
.