Quickstart: Deploy a Python (Django or Flask) web app to Azure App Service
Note
Beginning June 1, 2024, all newly created App Service apps will have the option to create a unique default hostname with a naming convention of <app-name>
-<random-hash>
.<region>
.azurewebsites.net
. The names of existing apps will not change.
Example: myapp-ds27dh7271aah175.westus-01.azurewebsites.net
For more information, refer to Unique Default Hostname for App Service Resource.
In this quickstart, you'll deploy a Python web app (Django or Flask) to Azure App Service. Azure App Service is a fully managed web hosting service that supports Python apps hosted in a Linux server environment.
To complete this quickstart, you need:
- An Azure account with an active subscription. Create an account for free.
- Python 3.9 or higher installed locally.
Note
This article contains current instructions on deploying a Python web app using Azure App Service. Python on Windows is no longer supported.
1 - Sample application
This quickstart can be completed using either Flask or Django. A sample application in each framework is provided to help you follow along with this quickstart. Download or clone the sample application to your local workstation.
To run the application locally:
Go to the application folder:
cd msdocs-python-flask-webapp-quickstart
Create a virtual environment for the app:
py -m venv .venv .venv\scripts\activate
Install the dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Run the app:
flask run
Browse to the sample application at
http://localhost:5000
in a web browser.
Having issues? Let us know.
2 - Create a web app in Azure
To host your application in Azure, you need to create Azure App Service web app in Azure. You can create a web app using the Azure CLI, VS Code, Azure Tools extension pack, or Azure portal.
Azure CLI commands can be run on a computer with the Azure CLI installed.
Azure CLI has a command az webapp up
that will create the necessary resources and deploy your application in a single step.
If necessary, login to Azure using az login.
az login
Create the webapp and other resources, then deploy your code to Azure using az webapp up.
az webapp up --runtime PYTHON:3.9 --sku B1 --logs
- The
--runtime
parameter specifies what version of Python your app is running. This example uses Python 3.9. To list all available runtimes, use the commandaz webapp list-runtimes --os linux --output table
. - The
--sku
parameter defines the size (CPU, memory) and cost of the app service plan. This example uses the B1 (Basic) service plan, which will incur a small cost in your Azure subscription. For a full list of App Service plans, view the App Service pricing page. - The
--logs
flag configures default logging required to enable viewing the log stream immediately after launching the webapp. - You can optionally specify a name with the argument
--name <app-name>
. If you don't provide one, then a name will be automatically generated. - You can optionally include the argument
--location <location-name>
where<location_name>
is an available Azure region. You can retrieve a list of allowable regions for your Azure account by running theaz account list-locations
command.
The command may take a few minutes to complete. While the command is running, it provides messages about creating the resource group, the App Service plan, and the app resource, configuring logging, and doing ZIP deployment. It then gives the message, "You can launch the app at http://<app-name>.azurewebsites.net", which is the app's URL on Azure.
The webapp '<app-name>' doesn't exist Creating Resource group '<group-name>' ... Resource group creation complete Creating AppServicePlan '<app-service-plan-name>' ... Creating webapp '<app-name>' ... Configuring default logging for the app, if not already enabled Creating zip with contents of dir /home/cephas/myExpressApp ... Getting scm site credentials for zip deployment Starting zip deployment. This operation can take a while to complete ... Deployment endpoint responded with status code 202 You can launch the app at http://<app-name>.azurewebsites.net { "URL": "http://<app-name>.azurewebsites.net", "appserviceplan": "<app-service-plan-name>", "location": "centralus", "name": "<app-name>", "os": "<os-type>", "resourcegroup": "<group-name>", "runtime_version": "python|3.9", "runtime_version_detected": "0.0", "sku": "FREE", "src_path": "<your-folder-location>" }
Note
The az webapp up
command does the following actions:
Create a default resource group.
Create a default App Service plan.
Create an app with the specified name.
Zip deploy all files from the current working directory, with build automation enabled.
Cache the parameters locally in the .azure/config file so that you don't need to specify them again when deploying later with
az webapp up
or otheraz webapp
commands from the project folder. The cached values are used automatically by default.
Having issues? Let us know.
3 - Deploy your application code to Azure
Azure App service supports multiple methods to deploy your application code to Azure including support for GitHub Actions and all major CI/CD tools. This article focuses on how to deploy your code from your local workstation to Azure.
Since the az webapp up
command created the necessary resources and deployed your application in a single step, you can move on to 4 - Browse to the app.
Having issues? Refer first to the Troubleshooting guide, otherwise, let us know.
4 - Browse to the app
Browse to the deployed application in your web browser at the URL http://<app-name>.azurewebsites.net
. If you see a default app page, wait a minute and refresh the browser.
The Python sample code is running a Linux container in App Service using a built-in image.
Congratulations! You've deployed your Python app to App Service.
Having issues? Refer first to the Troubleshooting guide, otherwise, let us know.
5 - Stream logs
Azure App Service captures all messages output to the console to assist you in diagnosing issues with your application. The sample apps include print()
statements to demonstrate this capability.
@app.route('/')
def index():
print('Request for index page received')
return render_template('index.html')
@app.route('/favicon.ico')
def favicon():
return send_from_directory(os.path.join(app.root_path, 'static'),
'favicon.ico', mimetype='image/vnd.microsoft.icon')
@app.route('/hello', methods=['POST'])
def hello():
name = request.form.get('name')
if name:
print('Request for hello page received with name=%s' % name)
return render_template('hello.html', name = name)
else:
print('Request for hello page received with no name or blank name -- redirecting')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
The contents of the App Service diagnostic logs can be reviewed using the Azure CLI, VS Code, or Azure portal.
First, you need to configure Azure App Service to output logs to the App Service filesystem using the az webapp log config command.
az webapp log config \
--web-server-logging filesystem \
--name $APP_SERVICE_NAME \
--resource-group $RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME
To stream logs, use the az webapp log tail command.
az webapp log tail \
--name $APP_SERVICE_NAME \
--resource-group $RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME
Refresh the home page in the app or attempt other requests to generate some log messages. The output should look similar to the following.
Starting Live Log Stream ---
2021-12-23T02:15:52.740703322Z Request for index page received
2021-12-23T02:15:52.740740222Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:15:52 +0000] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 1360 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/hello" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
2021-12-23T02:15:52.841043070Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:15:52 +0000] "GET /static/bootstrap/css/bootstrap.min.css HTTP/1.1" 200 0 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
2021-12-23T02:15:52.884541951Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:15:52 +0000] "GET /static/images/azure-icon.svg HTTP/1.1" 200 0 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
2021-12-23T02:15:53.043211176Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:15:53 +0000] "GET /favicon.ico HTTP/1.1" 404 232 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
2021-12-23T02:16:01.304306845Z Request for hello page received with name=David
2021-12-23T02:16:01.304335945Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:16:01 +0000] "POST /hello HTTP/1.1" 200 695 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
2021-12-23T02:16:01.398399251Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:16:01 +0000] "GET /static/bootstrap/css/bootstrap.min.css HTTP/1.1" 304 0 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/hello" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
2021-12-23T02:16:01.430740060Z 169.254.130.1 - - [23/Dec/2021:02:16:01 +0000] "GET /static/images/azure-icon.svg HTTP/1.1" 304 0 "https://msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart-123.azurewebsites.net/hello" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:95.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/95.0"
Having issues? Refer first to the Troubleshooting guide, otherwise, let us know.
Clean up resources
When you're finished with the sample app, you can remove all of the resources for the app from Azure. It will not incur extra charges and keep your Azure subscription uncluttered. Removing the resource group also removes all resources in the resource group and is the fastest way to remove all Azure resources for your app.
Delete the resource group by using the az group delete command.
az group delete \
--name msdocs-python-webapp-quickstart \
--no-wait
The --no-wait
argument allows the command to return before the operation is complete.
Having issues? Let us know.
Next steps
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