"""Abstract Transport class.""" __all__ = ['ReadTransport', 'WriteTransport', 'Transport'] class BaseTransport: """Base ABC for transports.""" def __init__(self, extra=None): if extra is None: extra = {} self._extra = extra def get_extra_info(self, name, default=None): """Get optional transport information.""" return self._extra.get(name, default) def close(self): """Closes the transport. Buffered data will be flushed asynchronously. No more data will be received. After all buffered data is flushed, the protocol's connection_lost() method will (eventually) called with None as its argument. """ raise NotImplementedError class ReadTransport(BaseTransport): """ABC for read-only transports.""" def pause_reading(self): """Pause the receiving end. No data will be passed to the protocol's data_received() method until resume_reading() is called. """ raise NotImplementedError def resume_reading(self): """Resume the receiving end. Data received will once again be passed to the protocol's data_received() method. """ raise NotImplementedError class WriteTransport(BaseTransport): """ABC for write-only transports.""" def set_write_buffer_limits(self, high=None, low=None): """Set the high- and low-water limits for write flow control. These two values control when to call the protocol's pause_writing() and resume_writing() methods. If specified, the low-water limit must be less than or equal to the high-water limit. Neither value can be negative. The defaults are implementation-specific. If only the high-water limit is given, the low-water limit defaults to a implementation-specific value less than or equal to the high-water limit. Setting high to zero forces low to zero as well, and causes pause_writing() to be called whenever the buffer becomes non-empty. Setting low to zero causes resume_writing() to be called only once the buffer is empty. Use of zero for either limit is generally sub-optimal as it reduces opportunities for doing I/O and computation concurrently. """ raise NotImplementedError def get_write_buffer_size(self): """Return the current size of the write buffer.""" raise NotImplementedError def write(self, data): """Write some data bytes to the transport. This does not block; it buffers the data and arranges for it to be sent out asynchronously. """ raise NotImplementedError def writelines(self, list_of_data): """Write a list (or any iterable) of data bytes to the transport. The default implementation just calls write() for each item in the list/iterable. """ for data in list_of_data: self.write(data) def write_eof(self): """Closes the write end after flushing buffered data. (This is like typing ^D into a UNIX program reading from stdin.) Data may still be received. """ raise NotImplementedError def can_write_eof(self): """Return True if this protocol supports write_eof(), False if not.""" raise NotImplementedError def abort(self): """Closes the transport immediately. Buffered data will be lost. No more data will be received. The protocol's connection_lost() method will (eventually) be called with None as its argument. """ raise NotImplementedError class Transport(ReadTransport, WriteTransport): """ABC representing a bidirectional transport. There may be several implementations, but typically, the user does not implement new transports; rather, the platform provides some useful transports that are implemented using the platform's best practices. The user never instantiates a transport directly; they call a utility function, passing it a protocol factory and other information necessary to create the transport and protocol. (E.g. EventLoop.create_connection() or EventLoop.create_server().) The utility function will asynchronously create a transport and a protocol and hook them up by calling the protocol's connection_made() method, passing it the transport. The implementation here raises NotImplemented for every method except writelines(), which calls write() in a loop. """ class DatagramTransport(BaseTransport): """ABC for datagram (UDP) transports.""" def sendto(self, data, addr=None): """Send data to the transport. This does not block; it buffers the data and arranges for it to be sent out asynchronously. addr is target socket address. If addr is None use target address pointed on transport creation. """ raise NotImplementedError def abort(self): """Closes the transport immediately. Buffered data will be lost. No more data will be received. The protocol's connection_lost() method will (eventually) be called with None as its argument. """ raise NotImplementedError class SubprocessTransport(BaseTransport): def get_pid(self): """Get subprocess id.""" raise NotImplementedError def get_returncode(self): """Get subprocess returncode. See also http://docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess#subprocess.Popen.returncode """ raise NotImplementedError def get_pipe_transport(self, fd): """Get transport for pipe with number fd.""" raise NotImplementedError def send_signal(self, signal): """Send signal to subprocess. See also: docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess#subprocess.Popen.send_signal """ raise NotImplementedError def terminate(self): """Stop the subprocess. Alias for close() method. On Posix OSs the method sends SIGTERM to the subprocess. On Windows the Win32 API function TerminateProcess() is called to stop the subprocess. See also: http://docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess#subprocess.Popen.terminate """ raise NotImplementedError def kill(self): """Kill the subprocess. On Posix OSs the function sends SIGKILL to the subprocess. On Windows kill() is an alias for terminate(). See also: http://docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess#subprocess.Popen.kill """ raise NotImplementedError