The Application Context

New in version 0.9.

One of the design ideas behind Flask is that there are at least two different “states” in which code is executed:

1. The application setup state, in which the application implicitly is on the module level.

This state starts when the Flask object is instantiated, and it implicitly ends when the first request comes in. While the application is in this state, a few assumptions are true:

  • the programmer can modify the application object safely.
  • no request handling happened so far
  • you have to have a reference to the application object in order to modify it, there is no magic proxy that can give you a reference to the application object you’re currently creating or modifying.

2. In contrast, in the request handling state, a couple of other rules exist:

  • while a request is active, the context local objects (flask.request and others) point to the current request.
  • any code can get hold of these objects at any time.

3. There is also a third state somewhere in between ‘module-level’ and ‘request-handling’:

Sometimes you are dealing with an application in a way that is similar to how you interact with applications during request handling, but without there being an active request. Consider, for instance, that you’re sitting in an interactive Python shell and interacting with the application, or a command line application.

The application context is what powers the current_app context local.

Purpose of the Application Context

The main reason for the application’s context existence is that in the past a bunch of functionality was attached to the request context for lack of a better solution. Since one of the pillars of Flask’s design is that you can have more than one application in the same Python process.

So how does the code find the “right” application? In the past we recommended passing applications around explicitly, but that caused issues with libraries that were not designed with that in mind.

A common workaround for that problem was to use the current_app proxy later on, which was bound to the current request’s application reference. Since creating such a request context is an unnecessarily expensive operation in case there is no request around, the application context was introduced.

Creating an Application Context

There are two ways to make an application context. The first one is implicit: whenever a request context is pushed, an application context will be created alongside if this is necessary. As a result, you can ignore the existence of the application context unless you need it.

The second way is the explicit way using the app_context() method:

from flask import Flask, current_app

app = Flask(__name__)
with app.app_context():
    # within this block, current_app points to app.
    print current_app.name

The application context is also used by the url_for() function in case a SERVER_NAME was configured. This allows you to generate URLs even in the absence of a request.

If no request context has been pushed and an application context has not been explicitly set, a RuntimeError will be raised.

RuntimeError: Working outside of application context.

Locality of the Context

The application context is created and destroyed as necessary. It never moves between threads and it will not be shared between requests. As such it is the perfect place to store database connection information and other things. The internal stack object is called flask._app_ctx_stack. Extensions are free to store additional information on the topmost level, assuming they pick a sufficiently unique name and should put their information there, instead of on the flask.g object which is reserved for user code.

For more information about that, see Flask Extension Development.

Context Usage

The context is typically used to cache resources that need to be created on a per-request or usage case. For instance, database connections are destined to go there. When storing things on the application context unique names should be chosen as this is a place that is shared between Flask applications and extensions.

The most common usage is to split resource management into two parts:

  1. an implicit resource caching on the context.
  2. a context teardown based resource deallocation.

Generally there would be a get_X() function that creates resource X if it does not exist yet and otherwise returns the same resource, and a teardown_X() function that is registered as teardown handler.

This is an example that connects to a database:

import sqlite3
from flask import g

def get_db():
    db = getattr(g, '_database', None)
    if db is None:
        db = g._database = connect_to_database()
    return db

@app.teardown_appcontext
def teardown_db(exception):
    db = getattr(g, '_database', None)
    if db is not None:
        db.close()

The first time get_db() is called the connection will be established. To make this implicit a LocalProxy can be used:

from werkzeug.local import LocalProxy
db = LocalProxy(get_db)

That way a user can directly access db which internally calls get_db().