This question likely betrays a misconception, but I'm curious what the "Tomcat" of the Python world is.
All of my web programming experience is in Java (or Groovy) so I think in Java terms. And when I think of making a basic web-app, I think of writing some servlets, building a WAR file, and deploying it in Tomcat or another servlet container.
In Python, suppose I wrote some code that was capable of responding to HTTP requests, what would I do with it? How would I deploy it?
Specifically: What is the most commonly used container in Python? And is there an equivalent of a WAR file, a standard packaging of a web-app into one file that works in the various containers?
There are different approaches which have one thing in common: They usually communicate via WSGI with their "container" (the server receiving the HTTP requests before they go to your Python code).
There are various containers:
That's nice, but irrelevant. That's just a Java-ism, and doesn't apply very widely outside Java.
That depends.
There isn't one.
There isn't one.
HTTP is a protocol for producing a response to a request. That's it. It's really a very small thing.
You have CGI scripts which can respond to a request. The Python
cgi
library can do that. http://docs.python.org/library/cgi.html.This is relatively inefficient because the simple CGI rule is "fire off a new process for each request." It can also be insecure if the script allows elevated privileges or badly planned-out uploads.
You have the
mod_wsgi
framework to connect Apache to Python. This can behave like CGI, or it can have a dedicated Python "daemon" running at the end of a named pipe.The WSGI standard defines a format for request and response processing that's very handy and very extensible. Most of the frameworks -- in one way or another -- are WSGI compatible.
Finally, there are more complete frameworks that include class definitions for requests and responses, URL parsing, Authentication, Authorization, etc., etc.
Here's a list: http://wiki.python.org/moin/WebFrameworks
There are many web-servers available for python. Some of the webservers like CherryPy was written in Python itself. The most coolest part of the answer is that tomcat server itself support Python-based applications.
For further details look into this site: https://wiki.python.org/moin/WebServers
Maybe 'uwsgi' will help. Here is the link:http://projects.unbit.it/uwsgi/