import asyncio
from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
from functools import partial
from functools import wraps
import inspect
import os
from typing import Callable
__all__ = [
'async_to_sync',
'create_task',
'get_running_loop',
'runs_sync',
'sync_to_async',
'wrap_sync_to_async',
'wrap_sync_to_async_unsafe',
]
_one_thread_to_rule_them_all = ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=1)
try:
get_running_loop = asyncio.get_running_loop
except AttributeError: # pragma: nocover
# NOTE(kgriffs): This branch is definitely covered under py35 and py36
# but for some reason the codecov gate doesn't pick this up, hence
# the pragma above.
get_running_loop = asyncio.get_event_loop
try:
create_task = asyncio.create_task
except AttributeError: # pragma: nocover
# NOTE(kgriffs): This branch is definitely covered under py35 and py36
# but for some reason the codecov gate doesn't pick this up, hence
# the pragma above.
def create_task(coro, name=None):
return asyncio.ensure_future(coro)
[docs]
def wrap_sync_to_async_unsafe(func) -> Callable:
"""Wrap a callable in a coroutine that executes the callable directly.
This helper makes it easier to use synchronous callables with ASGI
apps. However, it is considered "unsafe" because it calls the wrapped
function directly in the same thread as the asyncio loop. Generally, you
should use :func:`~.wrap_sync_to_async` instead.
Warning:
This helper is only to be used for functions that do not perform any
blocking I/O or lengthy CPU-bound operations, since the entire async
loop will be blocked while the wrapped function is executed.
For a safer, non-blocking alternative that runs the function in a
thread pool executor, use :func:`~.sync_to_async` instead.
Arguments:
func (callable): Function, method, or other callable to wrap
Returns:
function: An awaitable coroutine function that wraps the
synchronous callable.
"""
@wraps(func)
async def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
return func(*args, **kwargs)
return wrapper
[docs]
def wrap_sync_to_async(func, threadsafe=None) -> Callable:
"""Wrap a callable in a coroutine that executes the callable in the background.
This helper makes it easier to call functions that can not be
ported to use async natively (e.g., functions exported by a database
library that does not yet support asyncio).
To execute blocking operations safely, without stalling the async
loop, the wrapped callable is scheduled to run in the background, on a
separate thread, when the wrapper is called.
Normally, the default executor for the running loop is used to schedule the
synchronous callable. If the callable is not thread-safe, it can be
scheduled serially in a global single-threaded executor.
Warning:
Wrapping a synchronous function safely adds a fair amount of overhead
to the function call, and should only be used when a native async
library is not available for the operation you wish to perform.
Arguments:
func (callable): Function, method, or other callable to wrap
Keyword Arguments:
threadsafe (bool): Set to ``False`` when the callable is not
thread-safe (default ``True``). When this argument is ``False``,
the wrapped callable will be scheduled to run serially in a
global single-threaded executor.
Returns:
function: An awaitable coroutine function that wraps the
synchronous callable.
"""
if threadsafe is None or threadsafe:
executor = None # Use default
else:
executor = _one_thread_to_rule_them_all
@wraps(func)
async def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
return await get_running_loop().run_in_executor(
executor, partial(func, *args, **kwargs)
)
return wrapper
[docs]
async def sync_to_async(func, *args, **kwargs):
"""Schedule a synchronous callable on the default executor and await the result.
This helper makes it easier to call functions that can not be
ported to use async natively (e.g., functions exported by a database
library that does not yet support asyncio).
To execute blocking operations safely, without stalling the async
loop, the wrapped callable is scheduled to run in the background, on a
separate thread, when the wrapper is called.
The default executor for the running loop is used to schedule the
synchronous callable.
Warning:
This helper can only be used to execute thread-safe callables. If
the callable is not thread-safe, it can be executed serially
by first wrapping it with :func:`~.wrap_sync_to_async`, and then
executing the wrapper directly.
Warning:
Calling a synchronous function safely from an asyncio event loop
adds a fair amount of overhead to the function call, and should
only be used when a native async library is not available for the
operation you wish to perform.
Arguments:
func (callable): Function, method, or other callable to wrap
*args: All additional arguments are passed through to the callable.
Keyword Arguments:
**kwargs: All keyword arguments are passed through to the callable.
Returns:
function: An awaitable coroutine function that wraps the
synchronous callable.
""" # noqa
return await get_running_loop().run_in_executor(
None, partial(func, *args, **kwargs)
)
def _should_wrap_non_coroutines() -> bool:
"""Return ``True`` IFF ``FALCON_ASGI_WRAP_NON_COROUTINES`` is set in the environ.
This should only be used for Falcon's own test suite.
"""
return 'FALCON_ASGI_WRAP_NON_COROUTINES' in os.environ
def _wrap_non_coroutine_unsafe(func):
"""Wrap a coroutine using ``wrap_sync_to_async_unsafe()`` for internal test cases.
This method is intended for Falcon's own test suite and should not be
used by apps themselves. It provides a convenient way to reuse sync
methods for ASGI test cases when it is safe to do so.
Arguments:
func (callable): Function, method, or other callable to wrap
Returns:
When not in test mode, this function simply returns the callable
unchanged. Otherwise, if the callable is not a coroutine function,
it will be wrapped using ``wrap_sync_to_async_unsafe()``.
"""
if func is None:
return func
if not _should_wrap_non_coroutines():
return func
if inspect.iscoroutinefunction(func):
return func
return wrap_sync_to_async_unsafe(func)
[docs]
def async_to_sync(coroutine, *args, **kwargs):
"""Invoke a coroutine function from a synchronous caller.
This method can be used to invoke an asynchronous task from a synchronous
context. The coroutine will be scheduled to run on the current event
loop for the current OS thread. If an event loop is not already running,
one will be created.
Warning:
This method is very inefficient and is intended primarily for testing
and prototyping.
Args:
coroutine: A coroutine function to invoke.
*args: Additional args are passed through to the coroutine function.
Keyword Args:
**kwargs: Additional args are passed through to the coroutine function.
"""
# TODO(vytas): The canonical way of doing this for simple use cases is
# asyncio.run(), but that would be a breaking change wrt the above
# documented behaviour; breaking enough to break some of our own tests.
# NOTE(vytas): Work around get_event_loop deprecation in 3.10 by going via
# get_event_loop_policy(). This should be equivalent for async_to_sync's
# use case as it is currently impossible to invoke run_until_complete()
# from a running loop anyway.
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop_policy().get_event_loop()
return loop.run_until_complete(coroutine(*args, **kwargs))
[docs]
def runs_sync(coroutine):
"""Transform a coroutine function into a synchronous method.
This is achieved by always invoking the decorated coroutine function via
:meth:`async_to_sync`.
Warning:
This decorator is very inefficient and should only be used for adapting
asynchronous test functions for use with synchronous test runners such
as ``pytest`` or the ``unittest`` module.
It will create an event loop for the current thread if one is not
already running.
Args:
coroutine: A coroutine function to masquerade as a synchronous one.
Returns:
callable: A synchronous function.
"""
@wraps(coroutine)
def invoke(*args, **kwargs):
return async_to_sync(coroutine, *args, **kwargs)
return invoke