Just be aware of one thing. Flask by default stores sessions in cookies. They have a limit of 4K. This means sessions get corrupted or disappear if you have large sessions or other cookies from the same domain. So if you need sessions I recommend you store them in db.
Massimo On Tuesday, 17 March 2015 09:02:12 UTC-5, Júlia Rizza wrote: > > Jorge, since the front-end migrated to Angular and decided to do most of > the app services on his side, I just wanted to use something smaller and > simpler, like a micro-framework, considering that I wouldn't need most of > the web2py tools. Nothing particular with the framework, just a personal > choice. > > Em segunda-feira, 16 de março de 2015 23:35:44 UTC-3, JorgeH escreveu: >> >> why did you choose to migrate to flask? >> >> On Monday, March 16, 2015 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-5, Júlia Rizza wrote: >>> >>> Hello, >>> >>> I'm migrating an app from web2py to Flask and I want to use Werkzeug >>> Security to manage the users passwords, but there is a conflict between the >>> passwords hashes of web2py and Werkzeug. >>> >>> Werzeug hash: >>> >>> pbkdf2:sha512:1000$salt$hash >>> >>> Web2py hash: >>> >>> pbkdf2(1000, 20, sha512)$salt$hash >>> >>> I can't find a way to migrate the hashes and make Werkzeug understand >>> them. >>> >>> Can anybody help me? >>> >> -- Resources: - http://web2py.com - http://web2py.com/book (Documentation) - http://github.com/web2py/web2py (Source code) - https://code.google.com/p/web2py/issues/list (Report Issues) --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "web2py-users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to web2py+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.