Skip to main content

File support for asyncio.

Project description

https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/aiofiles.svg https://travis-ci.org/Tinche/aiofiles.svg?branch=master https://coveralls.io/repos/Tinche/aiofiles/badge.svg?branch=master

aiofiles is an Apache2 licensed library, written in Python, for handling local disk files in asyncio applications.

Ordinary local file IO is blocking, and cannot easily and portably made asynchronous. This means doing file IO may interfere with asyncio applications, which shouldn’t block the executing thread. aiofiles helps with this by introducing asynchronous versions of files that support delegating operations to a separate thread pool.

f = yield from aiofiles.open('filename', mode='r')
try:
    contents = yield from f.read()
finally:
    yield from f.close()
print(contents)
'My file contents'

Features

  • a file API very similar to Python’s standard, blocking API

  • support for buffered and unbuffered binary files, and buffered text files

Installation

To install aiofiles, simply:

$ pip install aiofiles

Usage

Files are opened using the aiofiles.open() coroutine, which in addition to mirroring the builtin open accepts optional loop and executor arguments. If loop is absent, the default loop will be used, as per the set asyncio policy. If executor is not specified, the default event loop executor will be used.

In case of success, an asynchronous file object is returned with an API identical to an ordinary file, except the following methods are coroutines and delegate to an executor:

  • close

  • flush

  • isatty

  • read

  • readall

  • read1

  • readinto

  • readline

  • readlines

  • seek

  • seekable

  • tell

  • truncate

  • writable

  • write

  • writelines

In case of failure, one of the usual exceptions will be raised.

The aiofiles.os module contains executor-enabled coroutine versions of several useful os functions that deal with files:

  • stat

  • sendfile

Limitations and Differences from the Builtin File API

The closing of a file may block, and yielding from a coroutine while exiting from a context manager isn’t possible, so aiofiles file objects can’t be used as context managers. Use the try/finally construct from the introductory section to ensure files are closed.

Iteration is also unsupported. To iterate over a file, call readline repeatedly until an empty result is returned. Keep in mind readline doesn’t strip newline characters.

f = yield from aiofiles.open('filename')
try:
    while True:
        line = yield from f.readline()
        if not line:
            break
        line = line.strip()
        ...
finally:
    yield from f.close()

Contributing

Contributions are very welcome. Tests can be run with tox, please ensure the coverage at least stays the same before you submit a pull request.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distribution

aiofiles-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl (8.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file aiofiles-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for aiofiles-0.2.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2bc9cb71a10967289031e3158ee43a527b689650d044f418532c4cd38292f343
MD5 4d1c68c35b1edc41faf1e28195275814
BLAKE2b-256 135c57a0e721cb9dc288f91788aff33c38b5398b7f7bb576c329291ad7cdc553

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page