I'm trying to set an application up which takes a template HTML file and modifies it live. It's working to an extent, but the images and CSS on the pages aren't being served, and there are HTTP 500 errors on the console when they are requested.
This is my directory structure
Server/
assets/
css/
img/
jquery.css
kickstart.css
zellner.css
js/
jquery.min.js
kickstart.js
style.css
tb_404.png
tbrun1.png
tbservers.png
403.html
404.html
500.html
appid
index.html
maintenance.html
server.log
server.py
This is how I set up the routing in server.py:
@error(403)
def error403(error):
return static_file("403.html")
@error(404)
def error404(error):
return static_file("404.html")
@error(500)
def error500(error):
return static_file("500.html")
@route('assets/<filepath:path>')
def server_static(filepath):
return static_file(filepath, root='assets')
And in my html files, the files are linked like this:
<script type="text/javascript" src="assets/js/jquery.snippet.min.js"></script>
Could it be due to the statics being in subdirectories in assets/? Or have I completely misunderstood how to use static_file?
This is the type of error I get on the Python console:
[07/May/2012 10:51:05] "GET /tempus/23 HTTP/1.1" 200 4501 <h1>Critical error while processing request: /tempus/assets/js/jquery.snippet.min.js</h1>
I don't understand why it's routing to /tempus/assets/ ...
Any help? Thanks!
I also had problems with serving static files. Here is my solution:
@route('/static/:filename#.*#')
def send_static(filename):
return static_file(filename, root='./static/')
and when you want to access a static file eg. a template file:
@route('/')
def index():
output = template('static/index.tpl')
return output