A simple module to make functions asynchronous
Project description
Asynchronizer is simple module that can be used to run multiple functions asynchronously. To convert a function, you just need to add a decorator @asynchronize
to the function. This project is still in development, so report any bugs here. For examples, see the examples folder
Requirements
python 2.x or python 3.x
Installation
Asynchronizer can be installed using pip:
pip install asynchronizer
How to use
Basic use
Suppose you have a function like this:
import requests
def send_requests():
r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/get')
print r.status_code
for _ in range(20):
send_requests()
You can modify it like this to make it asynchronous:
import requests
from asynchronizer import asynchronize, Wait
@asynchronize
def send_requests():
r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/get')
print r.status_code
for _ in range(20):
send_requests()
Wait()
Example Script:
This example script will take 55 seconds to run normally, but only 10 seconds when run asynchronously
import time
from asynchronizer import asynchronize, Wait, setWorkers
@asynchronize
def func(i):
time.sleep(i)
print i
for i in range(1,11):
func(i)
Wait()
Things to keep in mind
The function
Wait()
is necessary. IfWait()
is not present, your script will end without waiting for any unfinished functions to finish.The function
Wait()
is also a blocking function, meaning that the execution of your script will pause here till all the async functions called before this are finished. This is why it should usually be added at the end of your scriptThe decorated functions are async to each other, but the code inside the functions is synchronous, which means this is wrong:
# wrong way @asynchronize def send_requests(): for _ in range(20): r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/get') send_requests()
and this is the correct way:
# correct way @asynchronize def send_requests(): r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/get') for _ in range(20): send_requests()
Instead of returning values from your functions, send them to a callback. For example:
@asynchronize def send_requests(): r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/get') parse(r.text) # instead of return r.text
Advanced use
If you want to use a custom number of workers, just add
setWorkers(n)
at the start of your script, withn
being the number of concurrent greenlet threads you want. Default is 32.To assign priority to a specific function call, add
priority=n
to the parameters of the function call, withn
being the priority you want to set. For Example:func(param1,param2,param3,priority=2)
Contributing
If you want to contribute to this project, feel free to send a Pull Request to Github
To report any bugs or request new features, head over to the Issues page
License
Licensed under The MIT License (MIT).
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2016 Arsh
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