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Python Rate-Limiter using Leaky-Bucket Algorimth Family

Project description

PyrateLimiter

The request rate limiter using Leaky-bucket algorithm

PyPI version Coverage Status Python 3.7 Python 3.8 Maintenance PyPI license HitCount


Introduction

This module can be used to apply rate-limit for API request. User defines window duration and the limit of function calls within such interval. To hold the state of the Bucket, you can use MemoryListBucket/MemoryQueueBucket as internal bucket. To use PyrateLimiter with Redis, redis-py is required to be installed. It is also possible to use your own Bucket implementation, by extending AbstractBucket from pyrate_limiter.core

Available modules

from pyrate_limiter import (
	BucketFullException,
	Duration,
	RequestRate,
	Limiter,
	MemoryListBucket,
	MemoryQueueBucket,
)

Strategies

Subscription strategies

Considering API throttling logic for usual business models of Subscription, we usually see strategies somewhat similar to these.

Some commercial/free API (Linkedin, Github etc)
- 500 requests/hour, and
- 1000 requests/day, and
- maximum 10,000 requests/month
  • RequestRate class is designed to describe this strategies - eg for the above strategies we have a Rate-Limiter defined as following
hourly_rate = RequestRate(500, Duration.HOUR) # maximum 500 requests/hour
daily_rate = RequestRate(1000, Duration.DAY) # maximum 1000 requests/day
monthly_rate = RequestRate(10000, Duration.MONTH) # and so on

limiter = Limiter(hourly_rate, daily_rate, monthly_rate, *other_rates, bucket_class=MemoryListBucket) # default is MemoryQueueBucket

# usage
identity = user_id # or ip-address, or maybe both
limiter.try_acquire(identity)

As the logic is pretty self-explainatory, note that the superior rate-limit must come after the inferiors, ie 1000 req/day must be declared after an hourly-rate-limit, and the daily-limit must be larger than hourly-limit.

  • bucket_class is the type of bucket that holds request. It could be an in-memory data structure like Python List (MemoryListBucket), or Queue MemoryQueueBucket.

  • For microservices or decentralized platform, multiple rate-Limiter may share a single store for storing request-rate history, ie Redis. This lib provides a ready-use RedisBucket to handle such case, and required redis-py as its peer-dependency. The usage difference is when using Redis, a naming prefix must be provide so the keys can be distinct for each item's identity.

from redis import ConnectionPool

pool = ConnectionPool.from_url('redis://localhost:6379')

rate = RequestRate(3, 5 * Duration.SECOND)

bucket_kwargs = {
	"redis_pool": redis_pool,
	"bucket_name": "my-ultimate-bucket-prefix"
}

# so each item buckets will have a key name as
# my-ultimate-bucket-prefix__item-identity

limiter = Limiter(rate, bucket_class=RedisBucket, bucket_kwargs=bucket_kwargs)
item = 'vutran_item'
limiter.try_acquire(item)

BucketFullException

If the Bucket is full, an exception BucketFullException will be raised, with meta-info about the identity it received, the rate that has raised, and the remaining time until the next request can be processed.

rate = RequestRate(3, 5 * Duration.SECOND)
limiter = Limiter(rate)
item = 'vutran'

has_raised = False
try:
	for _ in range(4):
		limiter.try_acquire(item)
		sleep(1)
except BucketFullException as err:
	has_raised = True
	assert str(err)
	# Bucket for vutran with Rate 3/5 is already full
	assert isinstance(err.meta_info, dict)
	# {'error': 'Bucket for vutran with Rate 3/5 is already full', 'identity': 'tranvu', 'rate': '5/5', 'remaining_time': 2}
  • *RequestRate may be required to reset on a fixed schedule, eg: every first-day of a month

Decorator

Rate-limiting is also available in decorator form, using Limiter.ratelimit. Example:

@limiter.ratelimit(item)
def my_function():
    do_stuff()

As with Limiter.try_acquire, if calls to the wrapped function exceed the rate limits you defined, a BucketFullException will be raised.

Rate-limiting delays

In some cases, you may want to simply slow down your calls to stay within the rate limits instead of canceling them. In that case you can use the delay flag, optionally with a max_delay (in seconds) that you are willing to wait in between calls.

Example:

@limiter.ratelimit(item, delay=True, max_delay=10)
def my_function():
    do_stuff()

In this case, calls may be delayed by at most 10 seconds to stay within the rate limits; any longer than that, and a BucketFullException will be raised instead. Without specifying max_delay, calls will be delayed as long as necessary.

Contextmanager

Limiter.ratelimit also works as a contextmanager:

def my_function():
    with limiter.ratelimit(item, delay=True):
        do_stuff()

Async decorator/contextmanager

All the above features of Limiter.ratelimit also work on async functions:

@limiter.ratelimit(item, delay=True)
async def my_function():
    await do_stuff()

async def my_function():
    async with limiter.ratelimit(item):
        await do_stuff()

When delays are enabled, asyncio.sleep will be used instead of time.sleep.

Examples

To prove that pyrate-limiter is working as expected, here is a complete example to demonstrate rate-limiting with delays:

from time import perf_counter as time
from pyrate_limiter import Duration, Limiter, RequestRate

limiter = Limiter(RequestRate(5, Duration.SECOND))
n_requests = 27

@limiter.ratelimit("test", delay=True)
def limited_function(start_time):
    print(f"t + {(time() - start_time):.5f}")

start_time = time()
for _ in range(n_requests):
    limited_function(start_time)
print(f"Ran {n_requests} requests in {time() - start_time:.5f} seconds")

And an equivalent example for async usage:

import asyncio
from time import perf_counter as time
from pyrate_limiter import Duration, Limiter, RequestRate

limiter = Limiter(RequestRate(5, Duration.SECOND))
n_requests = 27

@limiter.ratelimit("test", delay=True)
async def limited_function(start_time):
    print(f"t + {(time() - start_time):.5f}")

async def test_ratelimit():
    start_time = time()
    tasks = [limited_function(start_time) for _ in range(n_requests)]
    await asyncio.gather(*tasks)
    print(f"Ran {n_requests} requests in {time() - start_time:.5f} seconds")

asyncio.run(test_ratelimit())

Spam-protection strategies

  • Sometimes, we need a rate-limiter to protect our API from spamming/ddos attack. Some usual strategies for this could be as following
1. No more than 100 requests/minute, or
2. 100 request per minute, and no more than 300 request per hour

Throttling handling

When the number of incoming requets go beyond the limit, we can either do..

1. Raise a 429 Http Error, or
2. Keep the incoming requests, wait then slowly process them one by one.

More complex scenario

https://www.keycdn.com/support/rate-limiting#types-of-rate-limits

  • *Sometimes, we may need to apply specific rate-limiting strategies based on schedules/region or some other metrics. It requires the capability to switch the strategies instantly without re-deploying the whole service.

Notes

Todo-items marked with (*) are planned for v3 release.

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