A lightweight framework for building Python background services with a Flask-like API, enabling seamless inter-service communication via Redis pub/sub.
Project description
Daebus
A lightweight framework for building Python background services with a Flask-like API, enabling seamless inter-service communication via Redis pub/sub.
Overview
Daebus provides a simple way to create and connect distributed background services. It offers a Flask-inspired API that makes it easy to:
- Create systemd daemons that communicate with each other
- Expose HTTP endpoints for frontend applications (e.g., kiosk browsers)
- Enable quick bootstrapping of new services with minimal boilerplate
Services communicate via Redis pub/sub channels, providing a lightweight and reliable messaging system ideal for local service orchestration.
Note: Daebus requires a Redis instance running on the system.
Features
- Flask-inspired API: Simple, decorator-based API for defining service functionality
- Redis Pub/Sub: Direct channel-based communication between services
- Action Routing: Route messages to specific handlers based on action field
- Background tasks: Easy scheduling of periodic background tasks
- Client library:
DaebusCallerallows for easy communication with Daebus services - HTTP endpoints: Expose lightweight HTTP APIs from your daemon without additional dependencies
- Specialized APIs: Distinct and purpose-built APIs for HTTP and pub/sub contexts
Installation
pip install daebus
Quick Start
Creating a Service
from Daebus import Daebus, request, response, broadcast, cache, logger
app = Daebus(__name__)
# Define an action handler (like a Flask route)
@app.action("get_status")
def handle_status_request():
try:
payload = request.payload
logger.info(f"Received status request: {payload}")
# Process the request
result = {"status": "healthy", "uptime": 3600}
# Send response back to the requester
return response.success(result)
except Exception as e:
return response.error(e)
# Define another action handler
@app.action("restart")
def handle_restart():
try:
logger.info("Handling restart request")
# Restart logic here
return response.success({"restarted": True})
except Exception as e:
return response.error(e)
# Define a channel listener for broadcasts
@app.listen("notifications")
def handle_notification(payload):
logger.info(f"Received notification: {payload}")
# Process the notification
# Define a background task that runs every 30 seconds
@app.background("health_check", 30)
def health_check():
logger.info("Running health check")
# Perform health check
# Broadcast status to any interested services
broadcast.send("system_status", {"status": "healthy"})
# Run the service
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(service="my_service", debug=True)
Communicating with Services using DaebusCaller
from Daebus import DaebusCaller
# Create a caller for the target service
caller = DaebusCaller("my_service")
try:
# Send a request to a specific action and wait for a response
response = caller.send_request("get_status", {
"detail_level": "full"
})
print(f"Service status: {response}")
# Send a restart request
restart_response = caller.send_request("restart", {
"mode": "graceful"
})
print(f"Restart result: {restart_response}")
# Send a message to a broadcast channel
caller.send_message("notifications", {
"type": "alert",
"message": "System temperature high"
})
# Send a message directly to the service with a specific action
caller.send_to_service({
"timestamp": 1625176230,
"info": "Direct message with action"
}, action="log_info")
finally:
# Clean up resources when done
caller.close()
Adding HTTP Endpoints to Your Service
You can easily add HTTP endpoints to your daemon using the built-in HTTP server:
from Daebus import Daebus, DaebusHttp
app = Daebus(__name__)
# Create and attach an HTTP endpoint
http = DaebusHttp(port=8080)
app.attach(http)
# Define HTTP routes (similar to Flask)
@app.route("/status")
def get_status(req):
# Use the request object to access request data
# req.payload contains JSON, form data, or query params
# For HTTP responses, use response.send with data and status code
return response.send({
"service": "my_service",
"status": "running",
"timestamp": time.time()
}, 200) # 200 OK status code
# Routes with parameters
@app.route("/devices/<device_id>")
def get_device(req, device_id):
# The device_id parameter is extracted from the URL
if device_id == "123":
return response.send({
"device_id": device_id,
"status": "online"
}, 200)
else:
# Error responses with appropriate status codes
return response.send({
"error": "Device not found"
}, 404) # 404 Not Found
# POST requests
@app.route("/control", methods=["POST"])
def control_action(req):
# Access JSON data from the request payload
data = req.payload
# Process the request
return response.send({
"success": True,
"message": "Command received"
}, 201) # 201 Created
# Run the service with HTTP enabled
app.run(service="my_service")
Configuring CORS for HTTP Endpoints
If your HTTP API needs to be accessed from web browsers, you can configure Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS):
from Daebus import Daebus, DaebusHttp
app = Daebus(__name__)
# Configure CORS when creating the HTTP endpoint
cors_config = {
'allowed_origins': ['http://localhost:3000', 'https://example.com'], # Specific origins
'allowed_methods': ['GET', 'POST', 'OPTIONS'], # Allowed HTTP methods
'allowed_headers': ['Content-Type', 'Authorization'], # Allowed headers
'expose_headers': ['X-Custom-Header'], # Headers exposed to client
'allow_credentials': True, # Allow cookies
'max_age': 3600 # Cache preflight for 1 hour
}
# Create HTTP endpoint with CORS support
http = DaebusHttp(port=8080, cors_config=cors_config)
app.attach(http)
# Alternatively, configure CORS after initialization
# http = DaebusHttp(port=8080)
# http.configure_cors({
# 'allowed_origins': '*', # Allow all origins
# 'allowed_methods': ['GET', 'POST'],
# 'allowed_headers': '*', # Allow all headers
# })
@app.route("/api/data")
def get_data(req):
# This endpoint will now include CORS headers in the response
return response.send({"data": "example"}, 200)
You can use these CORS configuration options:
allowed_origins: List of allowed origins or'*'for any originallowed_methods: List of allowed HTTP methods or'*'for any methodallowed_headers: List of allowed headers or'*'for any headerexpose_headers: List of headers to expose to the clientallow_credentials: Boolean for allowing credentials (cookies)max_age: Cache time (seconds) for preflight requests
Protocol-Specific Response Methods
Daebus provides distinct response methods optimized for each protocol:
from Daebus import Daebus, DaebusHttp, request, response
app = Daebus(__name__)
http = DaebusHttp(port=8080)
app.attach(http)
# Shared function for business logic
def get_status_data():
return {
"service": "my_service",
"status": "healthy",
"uptime": 3600
}
# HTTP route with HTTP-specific response using response.send
@app.route("/status")
def http_status_handler(req):
try:
data = get_status_data()
# Use response.send() for HTTP responses, with status code
return response.send(data, 200)
except Exception as e:
# HTTP errors with appropriate status codes
return response.send({"error": str(e)}, 500)
# Redis action handler with pub/sub specific response methods
@app.action("get_status")
def redis_status_handler():
try:
data = get_status_data()
# Use response.success() for Redis responses
return response.success(data)
except Exception as e:
# Redis-specific error handling
return response.error(e)
Advanced: Direct Access to Protocol-Specific Classes
For advanced usage, you can access the protocol-specific classes directly:
from Daebus import (
Daebus, DaebusHttp,
HttpRequest, HttpResponse, # HTTP-specific classes
PubSubRequest, PubSubResponse # Pub/Sub-specific classes
)
app = Daebus(__name__)
http = DaebusHttp(port=8080)
app.attach(http)
# Use HTTP-specific classes directly for advanced customization
@app.route("/advanced")
def advanced_handler(req):
# Check if we have the right request type
if not isinstance(req, HttpRequest):
raise TypeError("Expected an HttpRequest object")
# Create a custom HTTP response
custom_response = HttpResponse(None)
return custom_response.send({
"message": "Custom HTTP response",
"path": req.path
}, 200)
Benefits of protocol-specific methods:
response.send(data, status_code)- HTTP focused, with explicit status codesresponse.success(data)- Pub/sub focused, adds necessary pub/sub metadataresponse.error(exception)- Pub/sub focused, formats exceptions for pub/sub- Clear distinction between HTTP and pub/sub handling
- Direct access to protocol-specific classes for advanced customization
How It Works
Action Routing
Daebus uses a simple action routing system:
- Each service automatically listens on its main channel (named after the service)
- Messages sent to this channel can include an
actionfield to route to specific handlers - Handlers are registered using
@app.action("action_name")
For example:
- When a message with
action: "get_status"is received, it's routed to the function decorated with@app.action("get_status") - When a message with
action: "restart"is received, it's routed to the function decorated with@app.action("restart")
Channel Types
Daebus uses two types of Redis pub/sub channels:
- Service Channels: Named after the service (e.g.,
my_service) and used for direct communication with action routing - Custom Channels: Any additional channels that services can publish to or subscribe to (e.g.,
notifications,system_status)
Message Flow
-
Request/Response:
- Client calls
send_request("action_name", payload) - DaebusCaller sends message to service's main channel with the action field
- Service routes to appropriate handler based on action
- Handler processes request and sends response back to caller's response channel
- Client calls
-
Broadcasts:
- Any service can broadcast to any channel with
broadcast.send(channel, payload) - Interested services subscribe to those channels with
@app.listen(channel)
- Any service can broadcast to any channel with
HTTP Endpoints
Daebus provides a lightweight HTTP server that:
- Uses Python's built-in
http.servermodule (no external dependencies) - Automatically converts Python dictionaries to JSON responses
- Parses JSON and form data from requests
- Supports URL parameters with the same syntax as Flask (
/path/<param>) - Runs in a background thread, allowing your service to handle both Redis and HTTP requests
Protocol-Specific Classes
Daebus provides specialized classes for each protocol:
-
For Pub/Sub (Redis):
PubSubRequest: Handles pub/sub message payloads, reply channels, and request IDsPubSubResponse: Handles pub/sub responses and error handling
Usage
Basic Usage
from daebus import Daebus, response, request, logger
app = Daebus(__name__)
@app.action("hello_world")
def hello_world():
name = request.payload.get("name", "World")
logger.info(f"Received request from {name}")
return response.success({"message": f"Hello, {name}!"})
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(service='hello-service')
Logging
Daebus provides two logger options:
logger: A proxy that references the service's logger. This works within main handlers.direct_logger: A direct reference to the base logger. This works in all contexts.
For background tasks, scheduled jobs, and other situations where the thread context might differ, use direct_logger:
from daebus import Daebus, direct_logger
app = Daebus(__name__)
@app.background("periodic_task", interval=60)
def run_periodic_task():
try:
# Do some work
direct_logger.info("Periodic task completed")
except Exception as e:
# Always use direct_logger in background tasks
direct_logger.error(f"Error in periodic task: {e}")
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(service='background-service')
HTTP Endpoints
from daebus import Daebus, DaebusHttp, response, logger
app = Daebus(__name__)
http = DaebusHttp(port=8080)
app.attach(http)
@app.route("/hello")
def hello(request):
name = request.params.get("name", "World")
logger.info(f"HTTP request from {name}")
return response.send({"message": f"Hello, {name}!"}, 200)
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(service='web-service')
Cross-Service Communication
from daebus import Daebus, DaebusCaller, direct_logger
app = Daebus(__name__)
# Create a caller for another service
other_service = DaebusCaller("other-service")
@app.on_start()
def initialize():
direct_logger.info("Notifying other services that we've started")
try:
# Send a message to another service
result = other_service.send_message("service_started", {
"service_name": "my-service",
"timestamp": time.time()
})
direct_logger.info(f"Notification sent, response: {result}")
except Exception as e:
direct_logger.error(f"Failed to send notification: {e}")
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(service='my-service')
Advanced Features
- Background Tasks: Run tasks periodically with
@app.background(name, interval) - Threads: Run long-running tasks in dedicated threads with
@app.thread(name) - Lifecycle Hooks: Register functions to run at service startup with
@app.on_start() - HTTP: Add HTTP endpoints with
@app.route(path, methods)
Thread Safety and Contexts
When working with Daebus in different contexts (HTTP handlers, background tasks, service initialization), follow these guidelines:
- Main Handlers: In action handlers and HTTP route handlers, you can use
logger,request, andresponse. - Background Tasks: Always use
direct_loggerfor logging in background tasks and scheduled jobs. - Initialization: Use
direct_loggerbefore callingapp.run(). - On Start Handlers: For consistency, use
direct_loggerinon_starthandlers.
License
MIT
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