What SSL variable are you talking about?

> On 27 May 2020, at 3:59 am, Mitt Frag <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi Graham. Really sorry about the late reply here. I am missing a variable 
> related to SSL. I ran the app locally using 'python server.py' and the output 
> says it is running as a https server however the SSL variable that is 
> normally there isn't there in local development. I'm not sure if it's related 
> to the http requests I'm making from the frontend? I make the same calls in 
> production with the same protocol and I can see that SSL variable though. 
> 
> On Friday, May 15, 2020 at 12:14:10 AM UTC+1, Graham Dumpleton wrote:
> If you are using Flask, you can run the Flask development server. This is a 
> WSGI server still, and the per request WSGI environ should still be present.
> 
> What in the WSGI environ are you expecting to see if you are already doing 
> that and something isn't present?
> 
>> On 15 May 2020, at 6:54 am, Mitt Frag <mseducat...@ <>gmail.com 
>> <http://gmail.com/>> wrote:
>> 
>> I currently have a setup where my React client interacts with a Flask 
>> backend which is daemonized with WSGI through Apache. The problem I have now 
>> is that to develop this way I have to rebuild the client which can take 1-2 
>> minutes each time, Apache then picks up the build files. The reason I am 
>> forced to do this is because I cannot run my main server.py file just via 
>> the command line via 
>> python server.py
>> 
>> because this file now relies on request.environ() which I assume is 
>> exclusive to WSGI. Ideally, I would be able to run my React application in 
>> development mode (takes no time at all to start-up) and would be able to run 
>> my server.py file using WSGI locally as opposed to via daemonizing it via 
>> the Apache config. Is there a way I can run WSGI locally like this? From my 
>> initial research it seems that I might want to download modwsgi-standalone 
>> and then make use of modwsgi-express?
> 
> You only need 'mod_wsgi-standalone' if for some reason you can use the system 
> Apache (runtime+dev packages installed). If the system Apache exists (with 
> those dev header files and apxs), then you can 'pip install mod_wsgi' to get 
> mod_wsgi-express. In other words, the 'mod_wsgi-standalone' package also 
> installs an Apache instance, which you don't need if you have system Apache 
> installed anyway.
> 
> Graham
> 
> 
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