:mod:`contextvars` --- Context Variables ======================================== .. module:: contextvars :synopsis: Context Variables .. sectionauthor:: Yury Selivanov -------------- This module provides APIs to manage, store, and access non-local state. The :class:`~contextvars.ContextVar` class is used to declare and work with *Context Variables*. The :func:`~contextvars.copy_context` function and the :class:`~contextvars.Context` class should be used to manage the current context in asynchronous frameworks. Context managers that have state should use Context Variables instead of :func:`threading.local()` to prevent their state from bleeding to other code unexpectedly, when used in concurrent code. See also :pep:`567` for additional details. .. versionadded:: 3.7 Context Variables ----------------- .. class:: ContextVar(name, [\*, default]) This class is used to declare a new Context Variable, e.g.:: var: ContextVar[int] = ContextVar('var', default=42) The required *name* parameter is used for introspection and debug purposes. The optional keyword-only *default* parameter is returned by :meth:`ContextVar.get` when no value for the variable is found in the current context. **Important:** Context Variables should be created at the top module level and never in closures. :class:`Context` objects hold strong references to context variables which prevents context variables from being properly garbage collected. .. attribute:: ContextVar.name The name of the variable. This is a read-only property. .. method:: get([default]) Return a value for the context variable for the current context. If there is no value for the variable in the current context, the method will: * return the value of the *default* argument of the method, if provided; or * return the default value for the context variable, if it was created with one; or * raise a :exc:`LookupError`. .. method:: set(value) Call to set a new value for the context variable in the current context. The required *value* argument is the new value for the context variable. Returns a :class:`~contextvars.Token` object that can be used to restore the variable to its previous value via the :meth:`ContextVar.reset` method. .. method:: reset(token) Reset the context variable to the value it had before the :meth:`ContextVar.set` that created the *token* was used. For example:: var = ContextVar('var') token = var.set('new value') # code that uses 'var'; var.get() returns 'new value'. var.reset(token) # After the reset call the var has no value again, so # var.get() would raise a LookupError. .. class:: contextvars.Token *Token* objects are returned by the :meth:`ContextVar.set` method. They can be passed to the :meth:`ContextVar.reset` method to revert the value of the variable to what it was before the corresponding *set*. .. attribute:: Token.var A read-only property. Points to the :class:`ContextVar` object that created the token. .. attribute:: Token.old_value A read-only property. Set to the value the variable had before the :meth:`ContextVar.set` method call that created the token. It points to :attr:`Token.MISSING` is the variable was not set before the call. .. attribute:: Token.MISSING A marker object used by :attr:`Token.old_value`. Manual Context Management ------------------------- .. function:: copy_context() Returns a copy of the current :class:`~contextvars.Context` object. The following snippet gets a copy of the current context and prints all variables and their values that are set in it:: ctx: Context = copy_context() print(list(ctx.items())) The function has an O(1) complexity, i.e. works equally fast for contexts with a few context variables and for contexts that have a lot of them. .. class:: Context() A mapping of :class:`ContextVars ` to their values. ``Context()`` creates an empty context with no values in it. To get a copy of the current context use the :func:`~contextvars.copy_context` function. Context implements the :class:`collections.abc.Mapping` interface. .. method:: run(callable, \*args, \*\*kwargs) Execute ``callable(*args, **kwargs)`` code in the context object the *run* method is called on. Return the result of the execution or propagate an exception if one occurred. Any changes to any context variables that *callable* makes will be contained in the context object:: var = ContextVar('var') var.set('spam') def main(): # 'var' was set to 'spam' before # calling 'copy_context()' and 'ctx.run(main)', so: # var.get() == ctx[var] == 'spam' var.set('ham') # Now, after setting 'var' to 'ham': # var.get() == ctx[var] == 'ham' ctx = copy_context() # Any changes that the 'main' function makes to 'var' # will be contained in 'ctx'. ctx.run(main) # The 'main()' function was run in the 'ctx' context, # so changes to 'var' are contained in it: # ctx[var] == 'ham' # However, outside of 'ctx', 'var' is still set to 'spam': # var.get() == 'spam' The method raises a :exc:`RuntimeError` when called on the same context object from more than one OS thread, or when called recursively. .. method:: copy() Return a shallow copy of the context object. .. describe:: var in context Return ``True`` if the *context* has a value for *var* set; return ``False`` otherwise. .. describe:: context[var] Return the value of the *var* :class:`ContextVar` variable. If the variable is not set in the context object, a :exc:`KeyError` is raised. .. method:: get(var, [default]) Return the value for *var* if *var* has the value in the context object. Return *default* otherwise. If *default* is not given, return ``None``. .. describe:: iter(context) Return an iterator over the variables stored in the context object. .. describe:: len(proxy) Return the number of variables set in the context object. .. method:: keys() Return a list of all variables in the context object. .. method:: values() Return a list of all variables' values in the context object. .. method:: items() Return a list of 2-tuples containing all variables and their values in the context object. asyncio support --------------- Context variables are natively supported in :mod:`asyncio` and are ready to be used without any extra configuration. For example, here is a simple echo server, that uses a context variable to make the address of a remote client available in the Task that handles that client:: import asyncio import contextvars client_addr_var = contextvars.ContextVar('client_addr') def render_goodbye(): # The address of the currently handled client can be accessed # without passing it explicitly to this function. client_addr = client_addr_var.get() return f'Good bye, client @ {client_addr}\n'.encode() async def handle_request(reader, writer): addr = writer.transport.get_extra_info('socket').getpeername() client_addr_var.set(addr) # In any code that we call is now possible to get # client's address by calling 'client_addr_var.get()'. while True: line = await reader.readline() print(line) if not line.strip(): break writer.write(line) writer.write(render_goodbye()) writer.close() async def main(): srv = await asyncio.start_server( handle_request, '127.0.0.1', 8081) async with srv: await srv.serve_forever() asyncio.run(main()) # To test it you can use telnet: # telnet 127.0.0.1 8081