https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45845872/running-a-dash-app-within-a-flask-app
The underlying Flask app is available at
app.server
.import dash app = dash.Dash(__name__) server = app.server
You can also pass your own Flask app instance into Dash:
import flask server = flask.Flask(__name__) app = dash.Dash(__name__, server=server)
Now that you have the Flask instance, you can add whatever routes and other functionality you need.
@server.route('/hello')
def hello():
return 'Hello, World!'
To the more general question "how can I serve two Flask instances next to each other", assuming you don't end up using one instance as in the above Dash answer, you would use DispatcherMiddleware
to mount both applications.
dash_app = Dash(__name__)
flask_app = Flask(__name__)
application = DispatcherMiddleware(flask_app, {'/dash': dash_app.server})
from dash import Dash
from werkzeug.wsgi import DispatcherMiddleware
import flask
from werkzeug.serving import run_simple
import dash_html_components as html
server = flask.Flask(__name__)
dash_app1 = Dash(__name__, server = server, url_base_pathname='/dashboard' )
dash_app2 = Dash(__name__, server = server, url_base_pathname='/reports')
dash_app1.layout = html.Div([html.H1('Hi there, I am app1 for dashboards')])
dash_app2.layout = html.Div([html.H1('Hi there, I am app2 for reports')])
@server.route('/')
@server.route('/hello')
def hello():
return 'hello world!'
@server.route('/dashboard')
def render_dashboard():
return flask.redirect('/dash1')
@server.route('/reports')
def render_reports():
return flask.redirect('/dash2')
app = DispatcherMiddleware(server, {
'/dash1': dash_app1.server,
'/dash2': dash_app2.server
})
run_simple('0.0.0.0', 8080, app, use_reloader=True, use_debugger=True)
or app.run('0.0.0.0', 8080, use_reloader=True, use_debugger=True)