API Reference
=============
This page documents Responder's public Python API. For usage examples
and explanations, see the :doc:`quickstart` and :doc:`tour`.
The API Class
-------------
The central object of every Responder application. It holds your routes,
middleware, templates, and configuration. Create one at the top of your
module and use it to define your entire web service.
Quick example::
import responder
api = responder.API(
title="My Service", # OpenAPI title
version="1.0", # OpenAPI version
openapi="3.0.2", # enable OpenAPI
docs_route="/docs", # Swagger UI at /docs
cors=True, # enable CORS
secret_key="change-me", # session signing key
allowed_hosts=["example.com"],
)
.. module:: responder
.. autoclass:: API
:inherited-members:
Request
-------
The request object is passed into every view as the first argument. It
gives you access to everything the client sent — headers, query
parameters, the request body, cookies, and more.
Most properties are synchronous, but reading the body requires ``await``
because it involves I/O.
Common patterns::
# Headers (case-insensitive)
token = req.headers.get("Authorization")
# Query parameters: /search?q=python&page=2
query = req.params["q"]
# JSON body
data = await req.media()
# Form data
form = await req.media("form")
# File uploads
files = await req.media("files")
# Client info
ip, port = req.client
is_https = req.is_secure
.. autoclass:: Request
:inherited-members:
Response
--------
The response object is passed into every view as the second argument.
Mutate it to control what gets sent back to the client — the body,
status code, headers, and cookies.
Common patterns::
resp.text = "plain text" # text/plain
resp.html = "
Hello
" # text/html
resp.media = {"key": "value"} # application/json
resp.content = b"raw bytes" # application/octet-stream
resp.file("path/to/file.pdf") # auto content-type
resp.stream_file("large/export.csv") # streamed
resp.status_code = 201
resp.headers["X-Custom"] = "value"
resp.cookies["session"] = "abc123"
.. autoclass:: Response
:inherited-members:
Route Groups
------------
Group related routes under a shared URL prefix — useful for API versioning
and organizing large applications::
v1 = api.group("/v1")
@v1.route("/users")
def list_users(req, resp):
resp.media = []
.. autoclass:: responder.api.RouteGroup
:members:
Background Queue
----------------
Run tasks in background threads without blocking the response. Available
as ``api.background``::
@api.route("/submit")
async def submit(req, resp):
data = await req.media()
@api.background.task
def process(data):
# runs in a thread pool
...
process(data)
resp.media = {"status": "accepted"}
.. autoclass:: responder.background.BackgroundQueue
:members:
Query Dict
----------
A dictionary subclass for query string parameters with multi-value support.
Behaves like a normal dict for single values, but supports ``getlist()``
for parameters that appear multiple times (e.g. ``?tag=a&tag=b``).
.. autoclass:: responder.models.QueryDict
:members:
Rate Limiter
------------
In-memory token bucket rate limiter. Limits requests per client IP address
and returns ``429 Too Many Requests`` when exceeded::
from responder.ext.ratelimit import RateLimiter
limiter = RateLimiter(requests=100, period=60) # 100 req/min
limiter.install(api)
Response headers: ``X-RateLimit-Limit``, ``X-RateLimit-Remaining``,
and ``Retry-After`` (when limited).
.. autoclass:: responder.ext.ratelimit.RateLimiter
:members:
Status Code Helpers
-------------------
Convenience functions for checking which category a status code falls
into. Useful in middleware and after-request hooks::
from responder.status_codes import is_200, is_400, is_500
@api.after_request()
def log_errors(req, resp):
if is_400(resp.status_code) or is_500(resp.status_code):
print(f"Error: {req.method} {req.url.path} -> {resp.status_code}")
.. autofunction:: responder.status_codes.is_100
.. autofunction:: responder.status_codes.is_200
.. autofunction:: responder.status_codes.is_300
.. autofunction:: responder.status_codes.is_400
.. autofunction:: responder.status_codes.is_500