Call Graph Introspection¶
Source code: Lib/asyncio/graph.py
asyncio has powerful runtime call graph introspection utilities to trace the entire call graph of a running coroutine or task, or a suspended future. These utilities and the underlying machinery can be used from within a Python program or by external profilers and debuggers.
Added in version 3.14.0a4 (unreleased).
- asyncio.print_call_graph(future=None, /, *, file=None, depth=1, limit=None)¶
Print the async call graph for the current task or the provided
Task
orFuture
.This function prints entries starting from the top frame and going down towards the invocation point.
The function receives an optional future argument. If not passed, the current running task will be used.
If the function is called on the current task, the optional keyword-only depth argument can be used to skip the specified number of frames from top of the stack.
If the optional keyword-only limit argument is provided, each call stack in the resulting graph is truncated to include at most
abs(limit)
entries. If limit is positive, the entries left are the closest to the invocation point. If limit is negative, the topmost entries are left. If limit is omitted orNone
, all entries are present. If limit is0
, the call stack is not printed at all, only «awaited by» information is printed.If file is omitted or
None
, the function will print tosys.stdout
.Example:
The following Python code:
import asyncio async def test(): asyncio.print_call_graph() async def main(): async with asyncio.TaskGroup() as g: g.create_task(test(), name='test') asyncio.run(main())
will print:
* Task(name='test', id=0x1039f0fe0) + Call stack: | File 't2.py', line 4, in async test() + Awaited by: * Task(name='Task-1', id=0x103a5e060) + Call stack: | File 'taskgroups.py', line 107, in async TaskGroup.__aexit__() | File 't2.py', line 7, in async main()
- asyncio.format_call_graph(future=None, /, *, depth=1, limit=None)¶
Like
print_call_graph()
, but returns a string. If future isNone
and there’s no current task, the function returns an empty string.
- asyncio.capture_call_graph(future=None, /, *, depth=1, limit=None)¶
Capture the async call graph for the current task or the provided
Task
orFuture
.The function receives an optional future argument. If not passed, the current running task will be used. If there’s no current task, the function returns
None
.If the function is called on the current task, the optional keyword-only depth argument can be used to skip the specified number of frames from top of the stack.
Returns a
FutureCallGraph
data class object:FutureCallGraph(future, call_stack, awaited_by)
FrameCallGraphEntry(frame)
Where frame is a frame object of a regular Python function in the call stack.
Low level utility functions¶
To introspect an async call graph asyncio requires cooperation from
control flow structures, such as shield()
or TaskGroup
.
Any time an intermediate Future
object with low-level APIs like
Future.add_done_callback()
is
involved, the following two functions should be used to inform asyncio
about how exactly such intermediate future objects are connected with
the tasks they wrap or control.
- asyncio.future_add_to_awaited_by(future, waiter, /)¶
Record that future is awaited on by waiter.
Both future and waiter must be instances of
Future
orTask
or their subclasses, otherwise the call would have no effect.A call to
future_add_to_awaited_by()
must be followed by an eventual call to thefuture_discard_from_awaited_by()
function with the same arguments.