cpython/Doc/library/asyncio-dev.rst

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.. currentmodule:: asyncio
.. _asyncio-dev:
Develop with asyncio
====================
Asynchronous programming is different than classical "sequential" programming.
This page lists common traps and explains how to avoid them.
.. _asyncio-debug-mode:
Debug mode of asyncio
---------------------
The implementation of :mod:`asyncio` module has been written for performances.
To development with asyncio, it's required to enable the debug checks to ease
the development of asynchronous code.
Setup an application to enable all debug checks:
* Enable the asyncio debug mode globally by setting the environment variable
:envvar:`PYTHONASYNCIODEBUG` to ``1``
* Set the log level of the :ref:`asyncio logger <asyncio-logger>` to
:py:data:`logging.DEBUG`. For example, call
``logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)`` at startup.
* Configure the :mod:`warnings` module to display :exc:`ResourceWarning`
warnings. For example, use the ``-Wdefault`` command line option of Python to
display them.
Examples debug checks:
* Log :ref:`coroutines defined but never "yielded from"
<asyncio-coroutine-not-scheduled>`
* :meth:`~BaseEventLoop.call_soon` and :meth:`~BaseEventLoop.call_at` methods
raise an exception if they are called from the wrong thread.
* Log the execution time of the selector
* Log callbacks taking more than 100 ms to be executed. The
:attr:`BaseEventLoop.slow_callback_duration` attribute is the minimum
duration in seconds of "slow" callbacks.
* :exc:`ResourceWarning` warnings are emitted when transports and event loops
are :ref:`not closed explicitly <asyncio-close-transports>`.
.. seealso::
The :meth:`BaseEventLoop.set_debug` method and the :ref:`asyncio logger
<asyncio-logger>`.
Cancellation
------------
Cancellation of tasks is not common in classic programming. In asynchronous
programming, not only it is something common, but you have to prepare your
code to handle it.
Futures and tasks can be cancelled explicitly with their :meth:`Future.cancel`
method. The :func:`wait_for` function cancels the waited task when the timeout
occurs. There are many other cases where a task can be cancelled indirectly.
Don't call :meth:`~Future.set_result` or :meth:`~Future.set_exception` method
of :class:`Future` if the future is cancelled: it would fail with an exception.
For example, write::
if not fut.cancelled():
fut.set_result('done')
Don't schedule directly a call to the :meth:`~Future.set_result` or the
:meth:`~Future.set_exception` method of a future with
:meth:`BaseEventLoop.call_soon`: the future can be cancelled before its method
is called.
If you wait for a future, you should check early if the future was cancelled to
avoid useless operations. Example::
@coroutine
def slow_operation(fut):
if fut.cancelled():
return
# ... slow computation ...
yield from fut
# ...
The :func:`shield` function can also be used to ignore cancellation.
.. _asyncio-multithreading:
Concurrency and multithreading
------------------------------
An event loop runs in a thread and executes all callbacks and tasks in the same
thread. While a task is running in the event loop, no other task is running in
the same thread. But when the task uses ``yield from``, the task is suspended
and the event loop executes the next task.
To schedule a callback from a different thread, the
:meth:`BaseEventLoop.call_soon_threadsafe` method should be used. Example to
schedule a coroutine from a different thread::
loop.call_soon_threadsafe(asyncio.async, coro_func())
Most asyncio objects are not thread safe. You should only worry if you access
objects outside the event loop. For example, to cancel a future, don't call
directly its :meth:`Future.cancel` method, but::
loop.call_soon_threadsafe(fut.cancel)
To handle signals and to execute subprocesses, the event loop must be run in
the main thread.
The :meth:`BaseEventLoop.run_in_executor` method can be used with a thread pool
executor to execute a callback in different thread to not block the thread of
the event loop.
.. seealso::
The :ref:`Synchronization primitives <asyncio-sync>` section describes ways
to synchronize tasks.
The :ref:`Subprocess and threads <asyncio-subprocess-threads>` section lists
asyncio limitations to run subprocesses from different threads.
.. _asyncio-handle-blocking:
Handle blocking functions correctly
-----------------------------------
Blocking functions should not be called directly. For example, if a function
blocks for 1 second, other tasks are delayed by 1 second which can have an
important impact on reactivity.
For networking and subprocesses, the :mod:`asyncio` module provides high-level
APIs like :ref:`protocols <asyncio-protocol>`.
An executor can be used to run a task in a different thread or even in a
different process, to not block the thread of the event loop. See the
:meth:`BaseEventLoop.run_in_executor` method.
.. seealso::
The :ref:`Delayed calls <asyncio-delayed-calls>` section details how the
event loop handles time.
.. _asyncio-logger:
Logging
-------
The :mod:`asyncio` module logs information with the :mod:`logging` module in
the logger ``'asyncio'``.
.. _asyncio-coroutine-not-scheduled:
Detect coroutine objects never scheduled
----------------------------------------
When a coroutine function is called and its result is not passed to
:func:`async` or to the :meth:`BaseEventLoop.create_task` method, the execution
of the coroutine object will never be scheduled which is probably a bug.
:ref:`Enable the debug mode of asyncio <asyncio-debug-mode>` to :ref:`log a
warning <asyncio-logger>` to detect it.
Example with the bug::
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def test():
print("never scheduled")
test()
Output in debug mode::
Coroutine test() at test.py:3 was never yielded from
Coroutine object created at (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 7, in <module>
test()
The fix is to call the :func:`async` function or the
:meth:`BaseEventLoop.create_task` method with the coroutine object.
.. seealso::
:ref:`Pending task destroyed <asyncio-pending-task-destroyed>`.
Detect exceptions never consumed
--------------------------------
Python usually calls :func:`sys.displayhook` on unhandled exceptions. If
:meth:`Future.set_exception` is called, but the exception is never consumed,
:func:`sys.displayhook` is not called. Instead, :ref:`a log is emitted
<asyncio-logger>` when the future is deleted by the garbage collector, with the
traceback where the exception was raised.
Example of unhandled exception::
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def bug():
raise Exception("not consumed")
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
asyncio.async(bug())
loop.run_forever()
Output::
Task exception was never retrieved
future: <Task finished coro=<coro() done, defined at asyncio/coroutines.py:139> exception=Exception('not consumed',)>
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "asyncio/tasks.py", line 237, in _step
result = next(coro)
File "asyncio/coroutines.py", line 141, in coro
res = func(*args, **kw)
File "test.py", line 5, in bug
raise Exception("not consumed")
Exception: not consumed
:ref:`Enable the debug mode of asyncio <asyncio-debug-mode>` to get the
traceback where the task was created. Output in debug mode::
Task exception was never retrieved
future: <Task finished coro=<bug() done, defined at test.py:3> exception=Exception('not consumed',) created at test.py:8>
source_traceback: Object created at (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 8, in <module>
asyncio.async(bug())
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "asyncio/tasks.py", line 237, in _step
result = next(coro)
File "asyncio/coroutines.py", line 79, in __next__
return next(self.gen)
File "asyncio/coroutines.py", line 141, in coro
res = func(*args, **kw)
File "test.py", line 5, in bug
raise Exception("not consumed")
Exception: not consumed
There are different options to fix this issue. The first option is to chain the
coroutine in another coroutine and use classic try/except::
@asyncio.coroutine
def handle_exception():
try:
yield from bug()
except Exception:
print("exception consumed")
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
asyncio.async(handle_exception())
loop.run_forever()
Another option is to use the :meth:`BaseEventLoop.run_until_complete`
function::
task = asyncio.async(bug())
try:
loop.run_until_complete(task)
except Exception:
print("exception consumed")
.. seealso::
The :meth:`Future.exception` method.
Chain coroutines correctly
--------------------------
When a coroutine function calls other coroutine functions and tasks, they
should be chained explicitly with ``yield from``. Otherwise, the execution is
not guaranteed to be sequential.
Example with different bugs using :func:`asyncio.sleep` to simulate slow
operations::
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def create():
yield from asyncio.sleep(3.0)
print("(1) create file")
@asyncio.coroutine
def write():
yield from asyncio.sleep(1.0)
print("(2) write into file")
@asyncio.coroutine
def close():
print("(3) close file")
@asyncio.coroutine
def test():
asyncio.async(create())
asyncio.async(write())
asyncio.async(close())
yield from asyncio.sleep(2.0)
loop.stop()
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
asyncio.async(test())
loop.run_forever()
print("Pending tasks at exit: %s" % asyncio.Task.all_tasks(loop))
loop.close()
Expected output::
(1) create file
(2) write into file
(3) close file
Pending tasks at exit: set()
Actual output::
(3) close file
(2) write into file
Pending tasks at exit: {<Task pending create() at test.py:7 wait_for=<Future pending cb=[Task._wakeup()]>>}
Task was destroyed but it is pending!
task: <Task pending create() done at test.py:5 wait_for=<Future pending cb=[Task._wakeup()]>>
The loop stopped before the ``create()`` finished, ``close()`` has been called
before ``write()``, whereas coroutine functions were called in this order:
``create()``, ``write()``, ``close()``.
To fix the example, tasks must be marked with ``yield from``::
@asyncio.coroutine
def test():
yield from asyncio.async(create())
yield from asyncio.async(write())
yield from asyncio.async(close())
yield from asyncio.sleep(2.0)
loop.stop()
Or without ``asyncio.async()``::
@asyncio.coroutine
def test():
yield from create()
yield from write()
yield from close()
yield from asyncio.sleep(2.0)
loop.stop()
.. _asyncio-pending-task-destroyed:
Pending task destroyed
----------------------
If a pending task is destroyed, the execution of its wrapped :ref:`coroutine
<coroutine>` did not complete. It is probably a bug and so a warning is logged.
Example of log::
Task was destroyed but it is pending!
task: <Task pending coro=<kill_me() done, defined at test.py:5> wait_for=<Future pending cb=[Task._wakeup()]>>
:ref:`Enable the debug mode of asyncio <asyncio-debug-mode>` to get the
traceback where the task was created. Example of log in debug mode::
Task was destroyed but it is pending!
source_traceback: Object created at (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 15, in <module>
task = asyncio.async(coro, loop=loop)
task: <Task pending coro=<kill_me() done, defined at test.py:5> wait_for=<Future pending cb=[Task._wakeup()] created at test.py:7> created at test.py:15>
.. seealso::
:ref:`Detect coroutine objects never scheduled <asyncio-coroutine-not-scheduled>`.
.. _asyncio-close-transports:
Close transports and event loops
--------------------------------
When a transport is no more needed, call its ``close()`` method to release
resources. Event loops must also be closed explicitly.
If a transport or an event loop is not closed explicitly, a
:exc:`ResourceWarning` warning will be emitted in its destructor. By default,
:exc:`ResourceWarning` warnings are ignored. The :ref:`Debug mode of asyncio
<asyncio-debug-mode>` section explains how to display them.