# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """ flask.signals ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Implements signals based on blinker if available, otherwise falls silently back to a noop :copyright: (c) 2011 by Armin Ronacher. :license: BSD, see LICENSE for more details. """ signals_available = False try: from blinker import Namespace signals_available = True except ImportError: class Namespace(object): def signal(self, name, doc=None): return _FakeSignal(name, doc) class _FakeSignal(object): """If blinker is unavailable, create a fake class with the same interface that allows sending of signals but will fail with an error on anything else. Instead of doing anything on send, it will just ignore the arguments and do nothing instead. """ def __init__(self, name, doc=None): self.name = name self.__doc__ = doc def _fail(self, *args, **kwargs): raise RuntimeError('signalling support is unavailable ' 'because the blinker library is ' 'not installed.') send = lambda *a, **kw: None connect = disconnect = has_receivers_for = receivers_for = \ temporarily_connected_to = connected_to = _fail del _fail # the namespace for code signals. If you are not flask code, do # not put signals in here. Create your own namespace instead. _signals = Namespace() # core signals. For usage examples grep the sourcecode or consult # the API documentation in docs/api.rst as well as docs/signals.rst template_rendered = _signals.signal('template-rendered') request_started = _signals.signal('request-started') request_finished = _signals.signal('request-finished') request_tearing_down = _signals.signal('request-tearing-down') got_request_exception = _signals.signal('got-request-exception')