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AsyncIO Service-based programming.

Project description

=====================================================================
Mode: AsyncIO Services
=====================================================================

|build-status| |license| |wheel| |pyversion| |pyimp|

:Version: 1.10.2
:Web: http://mode.readthedocs.org/
:Download: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mode
:Source: http://github.com/fauststream/mode
:Keywords: async, service, framework, actors, bootsteps, graph

What is Mode?
=============

Mode is a library for Python AsyncIO, using the new ``async/await`` syntax
in Python 3.6 to define your program as a set of services.

When starting a larger project using ``asyncio``, it immediately became
apparent that we needed a way to manage the different services running in the
program. Questions such as "how do we shutdown the event loop" is frequently
answered by telling users to "wait for all coroutines in
asyncio.Task.all_tasks", but we needed more control over what services
where stopped, in what order and what services can we safely shutdown without
waiting for current operations to complete.

The result is Mode and its generic ``Service`` class.

Services
Programs in Mode are built out of one or more services, where the
services organizes themselves at runtime into a dependency graph.

In practice this means services may start other services, that
when told to stop, does so in the correct order::

class App(Service):

def on_init_dependencies(self) -> None:
return [
self.websockets,
self.webserver,
self.user_cache,
]

async def on_start(self) -> None:
print('App is starting')

Graph
If we fill out the rest of this code to implement the additional
services.

First the Websocket server service could look like this::

class Websockets(Service):

def __init__(self, port: int = 8081, **kwargs: Any) -> None:
self.port = 8081
self._server = None
super().__init__(**kwargs)

async def on_start(self) -> None:
self._server = websockets.run()

async def on_stop(self) -> None:
if self._server is not None:
self._server.close()

Second, the web server we want to run in a separate thread
so we use ``ServiceThread`` instead::

from aiohttp.web import Application
from mode.threads import ServiceThread

class Webserver(ServiceThread):

def __init__(self,
port: int = 8000,
bind: str = None,
**kwargs: Any) -> None:
self._app = Application()
self.port = port
self.bind = bind
self._handler = None
self._srv = None
super().__init__(**kwargs)

async def on_start(self) -> None:
handler = self._handler = self._app.make_handler()
# self.loop is the event loop in this thread
# self.parent_loop is the loop that created this thread.
self._srv = await self.loop.create_server(
handler, self.bind, self.port)
self.log.info('Serving on port %s', self.port)

async def on_thread_stop(self) -> None:
# see examples/tutorial.py for an actual example
self._srv.stop()

Third, our user cache, which has a background coroutine used to
remove old expired items from the cache::

class UserCache(Service):
_cache: MutableMapping[str, User]

def on_init(self):
self._cache = {}

async def lookup(self, user_id: str) -> User:
try:
return self._cache[user_id]
except KeyError:
user = self._cache[user_id] = await User.objects.get(user_id)
return user

@Service.timer(10) # execute every 10 seconds.
def _remove_expired(self):
remove_expired_users(self._cache)

Proxy
Now we just need to create these services in our "App" class.

In our little tutorial example the "app" is the entrypoint for
our program. Mode does not have a concept of apps, so we don't
subclass anything, but we want the app to be reusable in projects
and keep it possible to start multiple apps at the same time.

If we create apps at module scope, for example::

# example/app.py
from our_library import App
app = App(web_port=6066)

It is very important to instantiate services lazily, otherwise
the ``asyncio`` event loop is created too early.

For services that are defined at module level we can create a
``ServiceProxy``::

from typing import Any

from mode import Service, ServiceProxy, ServiceT
from mode.utils.objects import cached_property

class AppService(Service):
# the "real" service that App.start() will run

def __init__(self, app: 'App', **kwargs: Any) -> None:
self.app = app
super().__init__(**kwargs)

def on_init_dependencies(self) -> None:
return [
self.app.websockets,
self.app.webserver,
self.app.user_cache,
]

async def on_start(self) -> None:
print('App is starting')

class App(ServiceProxy):

def __init__(self,
web_port: int = 8000,
web_bind: str = None,
websocket_port: int = 8001,
**kwargs: Any) -> None:
self.web_port = web_port
self.web_bind = web_bind
self.websocket_port = websocket_port

@cached_property
def _service(self) -> ServiceT:
return AppService(self)

@cached_property
def websockets(self) -> Websockets:
return Websockets(
port=self.websocket_port,
loop=self.loop,
beacon=self.beacon,
)

@cached_property
def webserver(self) -> Webserver:
return Webserver(
port=self.web_port,
bind=self.web_bind,
loop=self.loop,
beacon=self.beacon,
)

@cached_property
def user_cache(self) -> UserCache:
return UserCache(loop=self.loop, beacon=self.beacon)

Worker
To start your service on the command-line, add an
entrypoint for a ``Worker`` to start it::

app = App()

if __name__ == '__main__':
from mode import Worker
Worker(app, loglevel="info").execute_from_commandline()

Then execute your program to start the worker::

$ python examples/tutorial.py
[2018-03-27 15:47:12,159: INFO]: [^Worker]: Starting...
[2018-03-27 15:47:12,160: INFO]: [^-AppService]: Starting...
[2018-03-27 15:47:12,160: INFO]: [^--Websockets]: Starting...
STARTING WEBSOCKET SERVER
[2018-03-27 15:47:12,161: INFO]: [^--UserCache]: Starting...
[2018-03-27 15:47:12,161: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Starting...
[2018-03-27 15:47:12,164: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Serving on port 8000
REMOVING EXPIRED USERS
REMOVING EXPIRED USERS

To stop it hit ``Control-c``::

[2018-03-27 15:55:08,084: INFO]: [^Worker]: Stopping on signal received...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,084: INFO]: [^Worker]: Stopping...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,084: INFO]: [^-AppService]: Stopping...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,084: INFO]: [^--UserCache]: Stopping...
REMOVING EXPIRED USERS
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,085: INFO]: [^Worker]: Gathering service tasks...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,085: INFO]: [^--UserCache]: -Stopped!
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,085: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Stopping...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,085: INFO]: [^Worker]: Gathering all futures...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,085: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Closing server
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Waiting for server to close handle
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Shutting down web application
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Waiting for handler to shut down
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: Cleanup
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Webserver]: -Stopped!
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Websockets]: Stopping...
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,086: INFO]: [^--Websockets]: -Stopped!
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,087: INFO]: [^-AppService]: -Stopped!
[2018-03-27 15:55:08,087: INFO]: [^Worker]: -Stopped!

Beacons
The ``beacon`` object that we pass to services keeps track of the services
in a graph.

They are not stricly required, but can be used to visualize a running
system, for example we can render it as a pretty graph.

This requires you to have the ``pydot`` library and GraphViz
installed::

$ pip install pydot

Let's change the app service class to dump the graph to an image
at startup.

class AppService(Service):

async def on_start(self) -> None:
print('APP STARTING')
import pydot
import io
o = io.StringIO()
beacon = self.app.beacon.root or self.app.beacon
beacon.as_graph().to_dot(o)
graph, = pydot.graph_from_dot_data(o.getvalue())
print('WRITING GRAPH TO image.png')
with open('image.png', 'wb') as fh:
fh.write(graph.create_png())


Creating a Service
==================

To define a service, simply subclass and fill in the methods
to do stuff as the service is started/stopped etc.::

class MyService(Service):

async def on_start(self) -> None:
print('Im starting now')

async def on_started(self) -> None:
print('Im ready')

async def on_stop(self) -> None:
print('Im stopping now')

To start the service, call ``await service.start()``::

await service.start()

Or you can use ``mode.Worker`` (or a subclass of this) to start your
services-based asyncio program from the console::

if __name__ == '__main__':
import mode
worker = mode.Worker(MyService(), loglevel='INFO', logfile=None)
worker.execute_from_commandline()

It's a Graph!
=============

Services can start other services, coroutines, and background tasks.

1) Starting other services using ``add_depenency``::

class MyService(Service):

def on_init(self) -> None:
self.add_dependency(OtherService(loop=self.loop))

2) Start a list of services using ``on_init_dependencies``::

class MyService(Service):

def on_init_dependencies(self) -> None:
return [
ServiceA(loop=self.loop),
ServiceB(loop=self.loop),
ServiceC(loop=self.loop),
]

3) Start a future/coroutine (that will be waited on to complete on stop)::

class MyService(Service):

async def on_start(self) -> None:
self.add_future(self.my_coro())

async def my_coro(self) -> None:
print('Executing coroutine')

4) Start a background task::

class MyService(Service):

@Service.task
async def _my_coro(self) -> None:
print('Executing coroutine')


5) Start a background task that keeps running::

class MyService(Service):

@Service.task
async def _my_coro(self) -> None:
while not self.should_stop:
# NOTE: self.sleep will wait for one second, or
# until service stopped/crashed.
await self.sleep(1.0)
print('Background thread waking up')

.. _installation:

Installation
============

You can install Mode either via the Python Package Index (PyPI)
or from source.

To install using `pip`::

$ pip install -U mode

.. _installing-from-source:

Downloading and installing from source
--------------------------------------

Download the latest version of Mode from
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mode

You can install it by doing the following::

$ tar xvfz mode-0.0.0.tar.gz
$ cd mode-0.0.0
$ python setup.py build
# python setup.py install

The last command must be executed as a privileged user if
you are not currently using a virtualenv.

.. _installing-from-git:

Using the development version
-----------------------------

With pip
~~~~~~~~

You can install the latest snapshot of Mode using the following
pip command::

$ pip install https://github.com/fauststream/Mode/zipball/master#egg=mode

FAQ
===

Can I use Mode with Django/Flask/etc.?
--------------------------------------

Yes! Use gevent/eventlet as a bridge to integrate with asyncio.

Using ``gevent``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This works with any blocking Python library that can work with gevent.

Using gevent requires you to install the ``aiogevent`` module,
and you can install this as a bundle with Mode:

.. sourcecode:: console

$ pip install -U mode[gevent]

Then to actually use gevent as the event loop you have to
execute the following in your entrypoint module (usually where you
start the worker), before any other third party libraries are imported::

#!/usr/bin/env python3
import mode.loop
mode.loop.use('gevent')
# execute program

REMEMBER: This must be located at the very top of the module,
in such a way that it executes before you import other libraries.


Using ``eventlet``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This works with any blocking Python library that can work with eventlet.

Using eventlet requires you to install the ``aioeventlet`` module,
and you can install this as a bundle with Mode:

.. sourcecode:: console

$ pip install -U mode[eventlet]

Then to actually use eventlet as the event loop you have to
execute the following in your entrypoint module (usually where you
start the worker), before any other third party libraries are imported::

#!/usr/bin/env python3
import mode.loop
mode.loop.use('eventlet')
# execute program

REMEMBER: It's very important this is at the very top of the module,
and that it executes before you import libraries.

Can I use Mode with Tornado?
----------------------------

Yes! Use the ``tornado.platform.asyncio`` bridge:
http://www.tornadoweb.org/en/stable/asyncio.html

Can I use Mode with Twisted?
-----------------------------

Yes! Use the asyncio reactor implementation:
https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/17.1.0/api/twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.html

Will you support Python 3.5 or earlier?
---------------------------------------

There are no immediate plans to support Python 3.5, but you are welcome to
contribute to the project.

Here are some of the steps required to accomplish this:

- Source code transformation to rewrite variable annotations to comments

for example, the code::

class Point:
x: int = 0
y: int = 0

must be rewritten into::

class Point:
x = 0 # type: int
y = 0 # type: int

- Source code transformation to rewrite async functions

for example, the code::

async def foo():
await asyncio.sleep(1.0)

must be rewritten into::

@coroutine
def foo():
yield from asyncio.sleep(1.0)

Will you support Python 2?
--------------------------

There are no plans to support Python 2, but you are welcome to contribute to
the project (details in question above is relevant also for Python 2).

Code of Conduct
===============

Everyone interacting in the project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms,
and mailing lists is expected to follow the Mode Code of Conduct.

As contributors and maintainers of these projects, and in the interest of fostering
an open and welcoming community, we pledge to respect all people who contribute
through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating documentation,
submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities.

We are committed to making participation in these projects a harassment-free
experience for everyone, regardless of level of experience, gender,
gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability,
personal appearance, body size, race, ethnicity, age,
religion, or nationality.

Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:

* The use of sexualized language or imagery
* Personal attacks
* Trolling or insulting/derogatory comments
* Public or private harassment
* Publishing other's private information, such as physical
or electronic addresses, without explicit permission
* Other unethical or unprofessional conduct.

Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject
comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are
not aligned to this Code of Conduct. By adopting this Code of Conduct,
project maintainers commit themselves to fairly and consistently applying
these principles to every aspect of managing this project. Project maintainers
who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct may be permanently removed from
the project team.

This code of conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces
when an individual is representing the project or its community.

Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
reported by opening an issue or contacting one or more of the project maintainers.

This Code of Conduct is adapted from the Contributor Covenant,
version 1.2.0 available at http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/2/0/.

.. |build-status| image:: https://secure.travis-ci.org/fauststream/mode.png?branch=master
:alt: Build status
:target: https://travis-ci.org/fauststream/mode

.. |license| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/mode.svg
:alt: BSD License
:target: https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-3-Clause

.. |wheel| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/wheel/mode.svg
:alt: Mode can be installed via wheel
:target: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mode/

.. |pyversion| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/mode.svg
:alt: Supported Python versions.
:target: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mode/

.. |pyimp| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/implementation/mode.svg
:alt: Supported Python implementations.
:target: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mode/



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