Source Code: https://github.com/fastapi/fastapi-cli
Run and manage FastAPI apps from the command line with FastAPI CLI. π
FastAPI CLI is a command line program fastapi
that you can use to serve your FastAPI app, manage your FastAPI project, and more.
When you install FastAPI (e.g. with pip install "fastapi[standard]"
), it includes a package called fastapi-cli
, this package provides the fastapi
command in the terminal.
To run your FastAPI app for development, you can use the fastapi dev
command:
$ fastapi dev main.py
FastAPI Starting development server π
Searching for package file structure from directories with __init__.py files
Importing from /home/user/code/awesomeapp
module π main.py
code Importing the FastAPI app object from the module with the following code:
from main import app
app Using import string: main:app
server Server started at http://127.0.0.1:8000
server Documentation at http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs
tip Running in development mode, for production use: fastapi run
Logs:
INFO Will watch for changes in these directories: ['/home/user/code/awesomeapp']
INFO Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit)
INFO Started reloader process [4106097] using WatchFiles
INFO Started server process [4106120]
INFO Waiting for application startup.
INFO Application startup complete.
That command line program called fastapi
is FastAPI CLI.
FastAPI CLI takes the path to your Python program and automatically detects the variable with the FastAPI (commonly named app
) and how to import it, and then serves it.
For production you would use fastapi run
instead. π
Internally, FastAPI CLI uses Uvicorn, a high-performance, production-ready, ASGI server. π
When you run fastapi dev
, it will run on development mode.
By default, it will have auto-reload enabled, so it will automatically reload the server when you make changes to your code. This is resource intensive and could be less stable than without it, you should only use it for development.
By default it will listen on the IP address 127.0.0.1
, which is the IP for your machine to communicate with itself alone (localhost
).
When you run fastapi run
, it will run on production mode by default.
It will have auto-reload disabled by default.
It will listen on the IP address 0.0.0.0
, which means all the available IP addresses, this way it will be publicly accessible to anyone that can communicate with the machine. This is how you would normally run it in production, for example, in a container.
In most cases you would (and should) have a "termination proxy" handling HTTPS for you on top, this will depend on how you deploy your application, your provider might do this for you, or you might need to set it up yourself. You can learn more about it in the FastAPI Deployment documentation.
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.