
BlackSheep
BlackSheep is an asynchronous web framework to build event based web
applications with Python. It is inspired by
Flask, ASP.NET
Core, and the work by Yury
Selivanov.
pip install blacksheep
from datetime import datetime, timezone
from blacksheep import Application, get
app = Application()
@get("/")
async def home():
return f"Hello, World! {datetime.now(timezone.utc).isoformat()}"
Getting started using the CLI ✨
BlackSheep offers a CLI to bootstrap new projects rapidly.
To try it, first install the blacksheep-cli package:
pip install blacksheep-cli
Then use the blacksheep create command to bootstrap a project
using one of the supported templates.

The CLI includes a help, and supports custom templates, using the
same sources supported by Cookiecutter.
Dependencies
Before version 2.3.1, BlackSheep only supported running with CPython and
always depended on httptools. Starting with version 2.3.1, the framework
supports running on PyPy and makes httptools an
optional dependency.
Since version 2.5.0, the BlackSheep HTTP Client includes HTTP/2 support and
requires h11 and h2 libraries.
For slightly better performance in URL parsing when running on CPython,
it is recommended to install httptools (optional).
[!TIP]
The best performance can be achieved using PyPy runtime, and
Socketify or Granian, (see
#539 for more information).
Getting started with the documentation
The documentation offers getting started tutorials:
These project templates can be used to start new applications faster:
Requirements
Python: any version listed in the project's
classifiers. The current list is:

BlackSheep belongs to the category of
ASGI web frameworks, so it requires
an ASGI HTTP server to run, such as uvicorn,
hypercorn or
granian.
For example, to use it with uvicorn:
$ pip install uvicorn
To run an application like in the example above, use the methods provided by
the ASGI HTTP Server:
$ uvicorn server:app
To run for production, refer to the documentation of the chosen ASGI server
(i.e. for uvicorn).
Automatic bindings and dependency injection
BlackSheep supports automatic binding of values for request handlers, by type
annotation or by conventions. See more
here.
from dataclasses import dataclass
from blacksheep import Application, FromJSON, FromQuery, get, post
app = Application()
@dataclass
class CreateCatInput:
name: str
@post("/api/cats")
async def example(data: FromJSON[CreateCatInput]):
...
@get("/:culture_code/:area")
async def home(culture_code, area):
return f"Request for: {culture_code} {area}"
@get("/api/products")
def get_products(
page: int = 1,
size: int = 30,
search: str = "",
):
...
@get("/api/products2")
def get_products2(
page: FromQuery[int] = FromQuery(1),
size: FromQuery[int] = FromQuery(30),
search: FromQuery[str] = FromQuery(""),
):
...
It also supports dependency
injection, a
feature that provides a consistent and clean way to use dependencies in request
handlers.
Generation of OpenAPI Documentation
Generation of OpenAPI Documentation.
Strategies to handle authentication and authorization
BlackSheep implements strategies to handle authentication and authorization.
These features are documented here:
app.use_authentication()\
.add(ExampleAuthenticationHandler())
app.use_authorization()\
.add(AdminsPolicy())
@auth("admin")
@get("/")
async def only_for_admins():
...
@auth()
@get("/")
async def only_for_authenticated_users():
...
BlackSheep provides:
Meaning that it is easy to integrate with services such as:
Since version 2.4.2, it also offers built-in support for Basic authentication,
API Key authentication, JWT Bearer authentication using symmetric encryption,
and automatic generation of OpenAPI Documentation for security schemes when using
built-in classes for authentication. It supports defining custom authentication handlers
and custom mappers for OpenAPI Documentation.
Refer to the documentation and to BlackSheep-Examples
for more details and examples.
Web framework features
Client features
BlackSheep includes an HTTP Client with native HTTP/2 support (since version 2.5.0).
The client automatically detects and uses HTTP/2 when the server supports it, with
seamless fallback to HTTP/1.1.
Example:
import asyncio
from blacksheep.client import ClientSession
async def client_example():
async with ClientSession() as client:
response = await client.get("https://docs.python.org/3/")
text = await response.text()
print(text)
asyncio.run(client_example())
[!IMPORTANT]
Starting from version 2.3.1, BlackSheep supports PyPy
(PyPy 3.11). The HTTP client requires h11 and h2 libraries. Version 2.5.0
added native HTTP/2 support via the h2 library. The httptools library is
optional and only provides better URL parsing performance on CPython. These
dependencies affect only the blacksheep.client namespace.
Supported platforms and runtimes
- Python: all versions included in the build matrix.
- CPython and PyPy.
- Ubuntu.
- Windows.
- macOS.
Documentation
Please refer to the documentation website.
Branches
The main branch contains the currently developed version, which is version 2. The v1 branch contains version 1 of the web framework, for bugs fixes
and maintenance.