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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 29, 20262026-05-29T21:37:36+00:00 2026-05-29T21:37:36+00:00

I’m a little confused about how to do something that I thought would be

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I’m a little confused about how to do something that I thought would be quite simple. I have a simple app written using Flask. It looks something like this:

from flask import Flask

app = Flask(__name__)

def _run_on_start(a_string):
    print "doing something important with %s" % a_string

@app.route('/')
def root():
    return 'hello world'

if __name__ == "__main__":
    if len(sys.argv) < 2:
        raise Exception("Must provide domain for application execution.")
    else:
        DOM = sys.argv[1]
        _run_on_start("%s" % DOM)
        app.run(debug=True)

What I’m finding is that my terminal is outputting the print statements in _run_on_start but non of the other usual Flask app debug code. If I remove the call before app.run, the output is normal. Further I’m finding the output of _run_on_start to be repeated twice on startup, though I don’t know if it’s some weird output or the function is actually being called twice.

I’m assuming this is not the right way to add a function call before you call app.run. I looked in the Flask docs and found mentions of various decorators one can use, which allow you to execute a function before/after certain requests but I want to execute the call when the app server is run.

Further, I realise that if I call this module from another module, i.e., not when __name__ != "__main__" my I won’t get my call to _run_on_start.

What’s the right approach here? In both cases when I’m starting from the CL and from another module?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-29T21:37:37+00:00Added an answer on May 29, 2026 at 9:37 pm

    The duplicate output from your function can be explained by the reloader. The first thing it does is start the main function in a new thread so it can monitor the source files and restart the thread when they change. Disable this with the use_reloader=False option.

    If you want to be able to run your function when starting the server from a different module, wrap it in a function, and call that function from the other module:

    def run_server(dom):
            _run_on_start("%s" % dom)
            app.run(debug=True, use_reloader=False)
    
    if __name__ == '__main__':
        if len(sys.argv) < 2:
            raise Exception("Must provide domain for application execution.")
        else:
            DOM = sys.argv[1]
            run_server(DOM)
    

    The “right approach” depends on what you’re actually trying to accomplish here. The built-in server is meant for running your application in a local testing environment before deploying it to a production server, so the problem of starting it from a different module doesn’t make much sense on its own.

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