A Flask extension that provides integration with MongoEngine. For more information on MongoEngine please check out the MongoEngine Documentation.
It handles connection management for your app. You can also use WTForms as model forms for your models.
Install with pip:
pip install flask-mongoengine
Basic setup is easy, just fetch the extension:
from flask import Flask from flask_mongoengine import MongoEngine app = Flask(__name__) app.config.from_pyfile('the-config.cfg') db = MongoEngine(app)
Or, if you are setting up your database before your app is initialized, as is the case with application factories:
from flask import Flask from flask_mongoengine import MongoEngine db = MongoEngine() ... app = Flask(__name__) app.config.from_pyfile('the-config.cfg') db.init_app(app)
By default, Flask-MongoEngine assumes that the :program:`mongod` instance is running on localhost on port 27017, and you wish to connect to the database named test.
If MongoDB is running elsewhere, you should provide the :attr:`host` and :attr:`port` settings in the 'MONGODB_SETTINGS' dictionary wih app.config.:
app.config['MONGODB_SETTINGS'] = { 'db': 'project1', 'host': '192.168.1.35', 'port': 12345 }
If the database requires authentication, the :attr:`username` and :attr:`password` arguments should be provided 'MONGODB_SETTINGS' dictionary wih app.config.:
app.config['MONGODB_SETTINGS'] = { 'db': 'project1', 'username':'webapp', 'password':'pwd123' }
Uri style connections are also supported, just supply the uri as the :attr:`host` in the 'MONGODB_SETTINGS' dictionary with app.config. Note that database name from uri has priority over name. If uri presents and doesn't contain database name db setting entirely ignore and db name set to 'test'.
app.config['MONGODB_SETTINGS'] = { 'db': 'project1', 'host': 'mongodb://localhost/database_name' }
Connection settings may also be provided individually by prefixing the setting with 'MONGODB_' in the app.config.:
app.config['MONGODB_DB'] = 'project1' app.config['MONGODB_HOST'] = '192.168.1.35' app.config['MONGODB_PORT'] = 12345 app.config['MONGODB_USERNAME'] = 'webapp' app.config['MONGODB_PASSWORD'] = 'pwd123'
By default flask-mongoengine open the connection when extension is instanciated but you can configure it
to open connection only on first database access by setting the MONGODB_SETTINGS['connect']
parameter
or its MONGODB_CONNECT
flat equivalent to False
:
app.config['MONGODB_SETTINGS'] = { 'host': 'mongodb://localhost/database_name', 'connect': False, } # or app.config['MONGODB_CONNECT'] = False
flask-mongoengine attaches the following methods to Mongoengine's default QuerySet:
- get_or_404: works like .get(), but calls abort(404) if the object DoesNotExist.
- first_or_404: same as above, except for .first().
- paginate: paginates the QuerySet. Takes two arguments, page and per_page.
- paginate_field: paginates a field from one document in the QuerySet. Arguments: field_name, doc_id, page, per_page.
Examples:
# 404 if object doesn't exist def view_todo(todo_id): todo = Todo.objects.get_or_404(_id=todo_id) .. # Paginate through todo def view_todos(page=1): paginated_todos = Todo.objects.paginate(page=page, per_page=10) # Paginate through tags of todo def view_todo_tags(todo_id, page=1): todo = Todo.objects.get_or_404(_id=todo_id) paginated_tags = todo.paginate_field('tags', page, per_page=10)
Properties of the pagination object include: iter_pages, next, prev, has_next, has_prev, next_num, prev_num.
In the template:
{# Display a page of todos #} <ul> {% for todo in paginated_todos.items %} <li>{{ todo.title }}</li> {% endfor %} </ul> {# Macro for creating navigation links #} {% macro render_navigation(pagination, endpoint) %} <div class=pagination> {% for page in pagination.iter_pages() %} {% if page %} {% if page != pagination.page %} <a href="{{ url_for(endpoint, page=page) }}">{{ page }}</a> {% else %} <strong>{{ page }}</strong> {% endif %} {% else %} <span class=ellipsis>…</span> {% endif %} {% endfor %} </div> {% endmacro %} {{ render_navigation(paginated_todos, 'view_todos') }}
flask-mongoengine automatically generates WTForms from MongoEngine models:
from flask_mongoengine.wtf import model_form class User(db.Document): email = db.StringField(required=True) first_name = db.StringField(max_length=50) last_name = db.StringField(max_length=50) class Content(db.EmbeddedDocument): text = db.StringField() lang = db.StringField(max_length=3) class Post(db.Document): title = db.StringField(max_length=120, required=True, validators=[validators.InputRequired(message=u'Missing title.'),]) author = db.ReferenceField(User) tags = db.ListField(db.StringField(max_length=30)) content = db.EmbeddedDocumentField(Content) PostForm = model_form(Post) def add_post(request): form = PostForm(request.POST) if request.method == 'POST' and form.validate(): # do something redirect('done') return render_template('add_post.html', form=form)
For each MongoEngine field, the most appropriate WTForm field is used. Parameters allow the user to provide hints if the conversion is not implicit:
PostForm = model_form(Post, field_args={'title': {'textarea': True}})
Supported parameters:
For fields with choices:
- multiple to use a SelectMultipleField
- radio to use a RadioField
For StringField:
- password to use a PasswordField
- textarea to use a TextAreaField
(By default, a StringField is converted into a TextAreaField if and only if it has no max_length.)
- StringField
- BinaryField
- URLField
- EmailField
- IntField
- FloatField
- DecimalField
- BooleanField
- DateTimeField
- ListField (using wtforms.fields.FieldList )
- SortedListField (duplicate ListField)
- EmbeddedDocumentField (using wtforms.fields.FormField and generating inline Form)
- ReferenceField (using wtforms.fields.SelectFieldBase with options loaded from QuerySet or Document)
- DictField
- ObjectIdField
- GeoLocationField
- GenericReferenceField
To use MongoEngine as your session store simple configure the session interface:
from flask_mongoengine import MongoEngine, MongoEngineSessionInterface app = Flask(__name__) db = MongoEngine(app) app.session_interface = MongoEngineSessionInterface(db)

If you use the Flask-DebugToolbar you can add 'flask_mongoengine.panels.MongoDebugPanel' to the DEBUG_TB_PANELS config list and then it will automatically track your queries:
from flask import Flask from flask_debugtoolbar import DebugToolbarExtension app = Flask(__name__) app.config['DEBUG_TB_PANELS'] = ['flask_mongoengine.panels.MongoDebugPanel'] db = MongoEngine(app) toolbar = DebugToolbarExtension(app)
ListFieldPagination order of arguments have been changed to be more logical:
# Old order ListFieldPagination(self, queryset, field_name, doc_id, page, per_page, total) # New order ListFieldPagination(self, queryset, doc_id, field_name, page, per_page, total)
Inspired by two repos: