Boucle d'évènements

Source code: Lib/asyncio/events.py, Lib/asyncio/base_events.py


Preface

The event loop is the core of every asyncio application. Event loops run asynchronous tasks and callbacks, perform network IO operations, and run subprocesses.

Application developers should typically use the high-level asyncio functions, such as asyncio.run(), and should rarely need to reference the loop object or call its methods. This section is intended mostly for authors of lower-level code, libraries, and frameworks, who need finer control over the event loop behavior.

Obtenir une boucle d'évènements

The following low-level functions can be used to get, set, or create an event loop:

asyncio.get_running_loop()

Return the running event loop in the current OS thread.

Raise a RuntimeError if there is no running event loop.

This function can only be called from a coroutine or a callback.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

asyncio.get_event_loop()

Get the current event loop.

When called from a coroutine or a callback (e.g. scheduled with call_soon or similar API), this function will always return the running event loop.

If there is no running event loop set, the function will return the result of the get_event_loop_policy().get_event_loop() call.

Because this function has rather complex behavior (especially when custom event loop policies are in use), using the get_running_loop() function is preferred to get_event_loop() in coroutines and callbacks.

As noted above, consider using the higher-level asyncio.run() function, instead of using these lower level functions to manually create and close an event loop.

Note

In Python versions 3.10.0--3.10.8 and 3.11.0 this function (and other functions which use it implicitly) emitted a DeprecationWarning if there was no running event loop, even if the current loop was set on the policy. In Python versions 3.10.9, 3.11.1 and 3.12 they emit a DeprecationWarning if there is no running event loop and no current loop is set. In some future Python release this will become an error.

asyncio.set_event_loop(loop)

Set loop as the current event loop for the current OS thread.

asyncio.new_event_loop()

Crée et renvoie un nouvel objet de boucle d'événements.

Note that the behaviour of get_event_loop(), set_event_loop(), and new_event_loop() functions can be altered by setting a custom event loop policy.

Sommaire

This documentation page contains the following sections:

Méthodes de la boucle d'évènements

Event loops have low-level APIs for the following:

Démarrer et arrêter une boucle d'évènements

loop.run_until_complete(future)

Lance la boucle jusqu'à ce que future (une instance de Future) soit terminée.

If the argument is a coroutine object it is implicitly scheduled to run as a asyncio.Task.

Return the Future's result or raise its exception.

loop.run_forever()

Run the event loop until stop() is called.

If stop() is called before run_forever() is called, the loop will poll the I/O selector once with a timeout of zero, run all callbacks scheduled in response to I/O events (and those that were already scheduled), and then exit.

If stop() is called while run_forever() is running, the loop will run the current batch of callbacks and then exit. Note that new callbacks scheduled by callbacks will not run in this case; instead, they will run the next time run_forever() or run_until_complete() is called.

loop.stop()

Arrête l'exécution de la boucle d'évènements.

loop.is_running()

Renvoie True si la boucle d'évènements est démarrée.

loop.is_closed()

Renvoie True si la boucle d'évènements est arrêtée.

loop.close()

Arrête la boucle d'évènements.

The loop must not be running when this function is called. Any pending callbacks will be discarded.

This method clears all queues and shuts down the executor, but does not wait for the executor to finish.

This method is idempotent and irreversible. No other methods should be called after the event loop is closed.

coroutine loop.shutdown_asyncgens()

Schedule all currently open asynchronous generator objects to close with an aclose() call. After calling this method, the event loop will issue a warning if a new asynchronous generator is iterated. This should be used to reliably finalize all scheduled asynchronous generators.

Note that there is no need to call this function when asyncio.run() is used.

Exemple :

try:
    loop.run_forever()
finally:
    loop.run_until_complete(loop.shutdown_asyncgens())
    loop.close()

Nouveau dans la version 3.6.

coroutine loop.shutdown_default_executor()

Schedule the closure of the default executor and wait for it to join all of the threads in the ThreadPoolExecutor. Once this method has been called, using the default executor with loop.run_in_executor() will raise a RuntimeError.

Note

Do not call this method when using asyncio.run(), as the latter handles default executor shutdown automatically.

Nouveau dans la version 3.9.

Scheduling callbacks

loop.call_soon(callback, *args, context=None)

Schedule the callback callback to be called with args arguments at the next iteration of the event loop.

Return an instance of asyncio.Handle, which can be used later to cancel the callback.

Callbacks are called in the order in which they are registered. Each callback will be called exactly once.

The optional keyword-only context argument specifies a custom contextvars.Context for the callback to run in. Callbacks use the current context when no context is provided.

Unlike call_soon_threadsafe(), this method is not thread-safe.

loop.call_soon_threadsafe(callback, *args, context=None)

A thread-safe variant of call_soon(). When scheduling callbacks from another thread, this function must be used, since call_soon() is not thread-safe.

Raises RuntimeError if called on a loop that's been closed. This can happen on a secondary thread when the main application is shutting down.

Voir la section exécution concurrente et multi-fils d'exécution de la documentation.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Ajout de l'argument nommé context. Voir PEP 567 pour plus de détails.

Note

Most asyncio scheduling functions don't allow passing keyword arguments. To do that, use functools.partial():

# will schedule "print("Hello", flush=True)"
loop.call_soon(
    functools.partial(print, "Hello", flush=True))

Using partial objects is usually more convenient than using lambdas, as asyncio can render partial objects better in debug and error messages.

Scheduling delayed callbacks

Event loop provides mechanisms to schedule callback functions to be called at some point in the future. Event loop uses monotonic clocks to track time.

loop.call_later(delay, callback, *args, context=None)

Schedule callback to be called after the given delay number of seconds (can be either an int or a float).

An instance of asyncio.TimerHandle is returned which can be used to cancel the callback.

callback will be called exactly once. If two callbacks are scheduled for exactly the same time, the order in which they are called is undefined.

The optional positional args will be passed to the callback when it is called. If you want the callback to be called with keyword arguments use functools.partial().

L'argument nommé optionnel context permet de spécifier une classe contextvars.Context personnalisée dans laquelle la fonction de rappel s’exécutera. Le contexte actuel est utilisé si context n'est pas fourni.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Ajout de l'argument nommé context. Voir PEP 567 pour plus de détails.

Modifié dans la version 3.8: In Python 3.7 and earlier with the default event loop implementation, the delay could not exceed one day. This has been fixed in Python 3.8.

loop.call_at(when, callback, *args, context=None)

Schedule callback to be called at the given absolute timestamp when (an int or a float), using the same time reference as loop.time().

This method's behavior is the same as call_later().

An instance of asyncio.TimerHandle is returned which can be used to cancel the callback.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Ajout de l'argument nommé context. Voir PEP 567 pour plus de détails.

Modifié dans la version 3.8: In Python 3.7 and earlier with the default event loop implementation, the difference between when and the current time could not exceed one day. This has been fixed in Python 3.8.

loop.time()

Return the current time, as a float value, according to the event loop's internal monotonic clock.

Note

Modifié dans la version 3.8: In Python 3.7 and earlier timeouts (relative delay or absolute when) should not exceed one day. This has been fixed in Python 3.8.

Voir aussi

La fonction asyncio.sleep().

Creating Futures and Tasks

loop.create_future()

Create an asyncio.Future object attached to the event loop.

This is the preferred way to create Futures in asyncio. This lets third-party event loops provide alternative implementations of the Future object (with better performance or instrumentation).

Nouveau dans la version 3.5.2.

loop.create_task(coro, *, name=None)

Schedule the execution of coroutine coro. Return a Task object.

Third-party event loops can use their own subclass of Task for interoperability. In this case, the result type is a subclass of Task.

If the name argument is provided and not None, it is set as the name of the task using Task.set_name().

Modifié dans la version 3.8: Added the name parameter.

loop.set_task_factory(factory)

Set a task factory that will be used by loop.create_task().

If factory is None the default task factory will be set. Otherwise, factory must be a callable with the signature matching (loop, coro), where loop is a reference to the active event loop, and coro is a coroutine object. The callable must return a asyncio.Future-compatible object.

loop.get_task_factory()

Return a task factory or None if the default one is in use.

Créer des connexions

coroutine loop.create_connection(protocol_factory, host=None, port=None, *, ssl=None, family=0, proto=0, flags=0, sock=None, local_addr=None, server_hostname=None, ssl_handshake_timeout=None, happy_eyeballs_delay=None, interleave=None)

Open a streaming transport connection to a given address specified by host and port.

The socket family can be either AF_INET or AF_INET6 depending on host (or the family argument, if provided).

The socket type will be SOCK_STREAM.

protocol_factory must be a callable returning an asyncio protocol implementation.

This method will try to establish the connection in the background. When successful, it returns a (transport, protocol) pair.

The chronological synopsis of the underlying operation is as follows:

  1. The connection is established and a transport is created for it.

  2. protocol_factory is called without arguments and is expected to return a protocol instance.

  3. The protocol instance is coupled with the transport by calling its connection_made() method.

  4. A (transport, protocol) tuple is returned on success.

The created transport is an implementation-dependent bidirectional stream.

Other arguments:

  • ssl: if given and not false, a SSL/TLS transport is created (by default a plain TCP transport is created). If ssl is a ssl.SSLContext object, this context is used to create the transport; if ssl is True, a default context returned from ssl.create_default_context() is used.

  • server_hostname sets or overrides the hostname that the target server's certificate will be matched against. Should only be passed if ssl is not None. By default the value of the host argument is used. If host is empty, there is no default and you must pass a value for server_hostname. If server_hostname is an empty string, hostname matching is disabled (which is a serious security risk, allowing for potential man-in-the-middle attacks).

  • family, proto, flags are the optional address family, protocol and flags to be passed through to getaddrinfo() for host resolution. If given, these should all be integers from the corresponding socket module constants.

  • happy_eyeballs_delay, if given, enables Happy Eyeballs for this connection. It should be a floating-point number representing the amount of time in seconds to wait for a connection attempt to complete, before starting the next attempt in parallel. This is the "Connection Attempt Delay" as defined in RFC 8305. A sensible default value recommended by the RFC is 0.25 (250 milliseconds).

  • interleave controls address reordering when a host name resolves to multiple IP addresses. If 0 or unspecified, no reordering is done, and addresses are tried in the order returned by getaddrinfo(). If a positive integer is specified, the addresses are interleaved by address family, and the given integer is interpreted as "First Address Family Count" as defined in RFC 8305. The default is 0 if happy_eyeballs_delay is not specified, and 1 if it is.

  • sock, if given, should be an existing, already connected socket.socket object to be used by the transport. If sock is given, none of host, port, family, proto, flags, happy_eyeballs_delay, interleave and local_addr should be specified.

    Note

    The sock argument transfers ownership of the socket to the transport created. To close the socket, call the transport's close() method.

  • local_addr, if given, is a (local_host, local_port) tuple used to bind the socket locally. The local_host and local_port are looked up using getaddrinfo(), similarly to host and port.

  • ssl_handshake_timeout is (for a TLS connection) the time in seconds to wait for the TLS handshake to complete before aborting the connection. 60.0 seconds if None (default).

Modifié dans la version 3.5: Added support for SSL/TLS in ProactorEventLoop.

Modifié dans la version 3.6: The socket option TCP_NODELAY is set by default for all TCP connections.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Added the ssl_handshake_timeout parameter.

Modifié dans la version 3.8: Added the happy_eyeballs_delay and interleave parameters.

Happy Eyeballs Algorithm: Success with Dual-Stack Hosts. When a server's IPv4 path and protocol are working, but the server's IPv6 path and protocol are not working, a dual-stack client application experiences significant connection delay compared to an IPv4-only client. This is undesirable because it causes the dual-stack client to have a worse user experience. This document specifies requirements for algorithms that reduce this user-visible delay and provides an algorithm.

For more information: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6555

Voir aussi

The open_connection() function is a high-level alternative API. It returns a pair of (StreamReader, StreamWriter) that can be used directly in async/await code.

coroutine loop.create_datagram_endpoint(protocol_factory, local_addr=None, remote_addr=None, *, family=0, proto=0, flags=0, reuse_address=None, reuse_port=None, allow_broadcast=None, sock=None)

Note

The parameter reuse_address is no longer supported, as using SO_REUSEADDR poses a significant security concern for UDP. Explicitly passing reuse_address=True will raise an exception.

When multiple processes with differing UIDs assign sockets to an identical UDP socket address with SO_REUSEADDR, incoming packets can become randomly distributed among the sockets.

For supported platforms, reuse_port can be used as a replacement for similar functionality. With reuse_port, SO_REUSEPORT is used instead, which specifically prevents processes with differing UIDs from assigning sockets to the same socket address.

Créer une connexion par datagramme

The socket family can be either AF_INET, AF_INET6, or AF_UNIX, depending on host (or the family argument, if provided).

The socket type will be SOCK_DGRAM.

protocol_factory must be a callable returning a protocol implementation.

A tuple of (transport, protocol) is returned on success.

Other arguments:

  • local_addr, if given, is a (local_host, local_port) tuple used to bind the socket locally. The local_host and local_port are looked up using getaddrinfo().

  • remote_addr, if given, is a (remote_host, remote_port) tuple used to connect the socket to a remote address. The remote_host and remote_port are looked up using getaddrinfo().

  • family, proto, flags are the optional address family, protocol and flags to be passed through to getaddrinfo() for host resolution. If given, these should all be integers from the corresponding socket module constants.

  • reuse_port tells the kernel to allow this endpoint to be bound to the same port as other existing endpoints are bound to, so long as they all set this flag when being created. This option is not supported on Windows and some Unixes. If the SO_REUSEPORT constant is not defined then this capability is unsupported.

  • allow_broadcast tells the kernel to allow this endpoint to send messages to the broadcast address.

  • sock can optionally be specified in order to use a preexisting, already connected, socket.socket object to be used by the transport. If specified, local_addr and remote_addr should be omitted (must be None).

    Note

    The sock argument transfers ownership of the socket to the transport created. To close the socket, call the transport's close() method.

See UDP echo client protocol and UDP echo server protocol examples.

Modifié dans la version 3.4.4: The family, proto, flags, reuse_address, reuse_port, *allow_broadcast, and sock parameters were added.

Modifié dans la version 3.8.1: The reuse_address parameter is no longer supported due to security concerns.

Modifié dans la version 3.8: Prise en charge sur Windows.

coroutine loop.create_unix_connection(protocol_factory, path=None, *, ssl=None, sock=None, server_hostname=None, ssl_handshake_timeout=None)

Créer une connexion Unix

The socket family will be AF_UNIX; socket type will be SOCK_STREAM.

A tuple of (transport, protocol) is returned on success.

path is the name of a Unix domain socket and is required, unless a sock parameter is specified. Abstract Unix sockets, str, bytes, and Path paths are supported.

See the documentation of the loop.create_connection() method for information about arguments to this method.

Disponibilité : Unix.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Added the ssl_handshake_timeout parameter. The path parameter can now be a path-like object.

Créer des serveurs

coroutine loop.create_server(protocol_factory, host=None, port=None, *, family=socket.AF_UNSPEC, flags=socket.AI_PASSIVE, sock=None, backlog=100, ssl=None, reuse_address=None, reuse_port=None, ssl_handshake_timeout=None, start_serving=True)

Create a TCP server (socket type SOCK_STREAM) listening on port of the host address.

Returns a Server object.

Arguments:

  • protocol_factory must be a callable returning a protocol implementation.

  • The host parameter can be set to several types which determine where the server would be listening:

    • If host is a string, the TCP server is bound to a single network interface specified by host.

    • If host is a sequence of strings, the TCP server is bound to all network interfaces specified by the sequence.

    • If host is an empty string or None, all interfaces are assumed and a list of multiple sockets will be returned (most likely one for IPv4 and another one for IPv6).

  • The port parameter can be set to specify which port the server should listen on. If 0 or None (the default), a random unused port will be selected (note that if host resolves to multiple network interfaces, a different random port will be selected for each interface).

  • family can be set to either socket.AF_INET or AF_INET6 to force the socket to use IPv4 or IPv6. If not set, the family will be determined from host name (defaults to AF_UNSPEC).

  • flags est un masque de bits pour getaddrinfo().

  • sock can optionally be specified in order to use a preexisting socket object. If specified, host and port must not be specified.

    Note

    The sock argument transfers ownership of the socket to the server created. To close the socket, call the server's close() method.

  • backlog is the maximum number of queued connections passed to listen() (defaults to 100).

  • ssl can be set to an SSLContext instance to enable TLS over the accepted connections.

  • reuse_address tells the kernel to reuse a local socket in TIME_WAIT state, without waiting for its natural timeout to expire. If not specified will automatically be set to True on Unix.

  • reuse_port tells the kernel to allow this endpoint to be bound to the same port as other existing endpoints are bound to, so long as they all set this flag when being created. This option is not supported on Windows.

  • ssl_handshake_timeout is (for a TLS server) the time in seconds to wait for the TLS handshake to complete before aborting the connection. 60.0 seconds if None (default).

  • start_serving set to True (the default) causes the created server to start accepting connections immediately. When set to False, the user should await on Server.start_serving() or Server.serve_forever() to make the server to start accepting connections.

Modifié dans la version 3.5: Added support for SSL/TLS in ProactorEventLoop.

Modifié dans la version 3.5.1: The host parameter can be a sequence of strings.

Modifié dans la version 3.6: Added ssl_handshake_timeout and start_serving parameters. The socket option TCP_NODELAY is set by default for all TCP connections.

Voir aussi

The start_server() function is a higher-level alternative API that returns a pair of StreamReader and StreamWriter that can be used in an async/await code.

coroutine loop.create_unix_server(protocol_factory, path=None, *, sock=None, backlog=100, ssl=None, ssl_handshake_timeout=None, start_serving=True)

Similar to loop.create_server() but works with the AF_UNIX socket family.

path is the name of a Unix domain socket, and is required, unless a sock argument is provided. Abstract Unix sockets, str, bytes, and Path paths are supported.

See the documentation of the loop.create_server() method for information about arguments to this method.

Disponibilité : Unix.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Added the ssl_handshake_timeout and start_serving parameters. The path parameter can now be a Path object.

coroutine loop.connect_accepted_socket(protocol_factory, sock, *, ssl=None, ssl_handshake_timeout=None)

Wrap an already accepted connection into a transport/protocol pair.

This method can be used by servers that accept connections outside of asyncio but that use asyncio to handle them.

Paramètres :

  • protocol_factory must be a callable returning a protocol implementation.

  • sock is a preexisting socket object returned from socket.accept.

    Note

    The sock argument transfers ownership of the socket to the transport created. To close the socket, call the transport's close() method.

  • ssl can be set to an SSLContext to enable SSL over the accepted connections.

  • ssl_handshake_timeout is (for an SSL connection) the time in seconds to wait for the SSL handshake to complete before aborting the connection. 60.0 seconds if None (default).

Returns a (transport, protocol) pair.

Nouveau dans la version 3.5.3.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Added the ssl_handshake_timeout parameter.

Transferring files

coroutine loop.sendfile(transport, file, offset=0, count=None, *, fallback=True)

Send a file over a transport. Return the total number of bytes sent.

The method uses high-performance os.sendfile() if available.

file must be a regular file object opened in binary mode.

offset tells from where to start reading the file. If specified, count is the total number of bytes to transmit as opposed to sending the file until EOF is reached. File position is always updated, even when this method raises an error, and file.tell() can be used to obtain the actual number of bytes sent.

fallback set to True makes asyncio to manually read and send the file when the platform does not support the sendfile system call (e.g. Windows or SSL socket on Unix).

Raise SendfileNotAvailableError if the system does not support the sendfile syscall and fallback is False.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

TLS Upgrade

coroutine loop.start_tls(transport, protocol, sslcontext, *, server_side=False, server_hostname=None, ssl_handshake_timeout=None)

Convertit une connexion existante en connexion TLS.

Create a TLS coder/decoder instance and insert it between the transport and the protocol. The coder/decoder implements both transport-facing protocol and protocol-facing transport.

Return the created two-interface instance. After await, the protocol must stop using the original transport and communicate with the returned object only because the coder caches protocol-side data and sporadically exchanges extra TLS session packets with transport.

In some situations (e.g. when the passed transport is already closing) this may return None.

Paramètres :

  • transport and protocol instances that methods like create_server() and create_connection() return.

  • sslcontext: a configured instance of SSLContext.

  • server_side pass True when a server-side connection is being upgraded (like the one created by create_server()).

  • server_hostname: sets or overrides the host name that the target server's certificate will be matched against.

  • ssl_handshake_timeout is (for a TLS connection) the time in seconds to wait for the TLS handshake to complete before aborting the connection. 60.0 seconds if None (default).

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

Surveiller des descripteurs de fichiers

loop.add_reader(fd, callback, *args)

Start monitoring the fd file descriptor for read availability and invoke callback with the specified arguments once fd is available for reading.

loop.remove_reader(fd)

Stop monitoring the fd file descriptor for read availability. Returns True if fd was previously being monitored for reads.

loop.add_writer(fd, callback, *args)

Start monitoring the fd file descriptor for write availability and invoke callback with the specified arguments once fd is available for writing.

Use functools.partial() to pass keyword arguments to callback.

loop.remove_writer(fd)

Stop monitoring the fd file descriptor for write availability. Returns True if fd was previously being monitored for writes.

See also Platform Support section for some limitations of these methods.

Working with socket objects directly

In general, protocol implementations that use transport-based APIs such as loop.create_connection() and loop.create_server() are faster than implementations that work with sockets directly. However, there are some use cases when performance is not critical, and working with socket objects directly is more convenient.

coroutine loop.sock_recv(sock, nbytes)

Receive up to nbytes from sock. Asynchronous version of socket.recv().

Return the received data as a bytes object.

Le connecteur sock ne doit pas être bloquant.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Even though this method was always documented as a coroutine method, releases before Python 3.7 returned a Future. Since Python 3.7 this is an async def method.

coroutine loop.sock_recv_into(sock, buf)

Receive data from sock into the buf buffer. Modeled after the blocking socket.recv_into() method.

Return the number of bytes written to the buffer.

Le connecteur sock ne doit pas être bloquant.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

coroutine loop.sock_sendall(sock, data)

Send data to the sock socket. Asynchronous version of socket.sendall().

This method continues to send to the socket until either all data in data has been sent or an error occurs. None is returned on success. On error, an exception is raised. Additionally, there is no way to determine how much data, if any, was successfully processed by the receiving end of the connection.

Le connecteur sock ne doit pas être bloquant.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Even though the method was always documented as a coroutine method, before Python 3.7 it returned an Future. Since Python 3.7, this is an async def method.

coroutine loop.sock_connect(sock, address)

Connect sock to a remote socket at address.

Asynchronous version of socket.connect().

Le connecteur sock ne doit pas être bloquant.

Modifié dans la version 3.5.2: address no longer needs to be resolved. sock_connect will try to check if the address is already resolved by calling socket.inet_pton(). If not, loop.getaddrinfo() will be used to resolve the address.

coroutine loop.sock_accept(sock)

Accept a connection. Modeled after the blocking socket.accept() method.

The socket must be bound to an address and listening for connections. The return value is a pair (conn, address) where conn is a new socket object usable to send and receive data on the connection, and address is the address bound to the socket on the other end of the connection.

Le connecteur sock ne doit pas être bloquant.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Even though the method was always documented as a coroutine method, before Python 3.7 it returned a Future. Since Python 3.7, this is an async def method.

coroutine loop.sock_sendfile(sock, file, offset=0, count=None, *, fallback=True)

Send a file using high-performance os.sendfile if possible. Return the total number of bytes sent.

Asynchronous version of socket.sendfile().

sock must be a non-blocking socket.SOCK_STREAM socket.

file must be a regular file object open in binary mode.

offset tells from where to start reading the file. If specified, count is the total number of bytes to transmit as opposed to sending the file until EOF is reached. File position is always updated, even when this method raises an error, and file.tell() can be used to obtain the actual number of bytes sent.

fallback, when set to True, makes asyncio manually read and send the file when the platform does not support the sendfile syscall (e.g. Windows or SSL socket on Unix).

Raise SendfileNotAvailableError if the system does not support sendfile syscall and fallback is False.

Le connecteur sock ne doit pas être bloquant.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

DNS

coroutine loop.getaddrinfo(host, port, *, family=0, type=0, proto=0, flags=0)

Asynchronous version of socket.getaddrinfo().

coroutine loop.getnameinfo(sockaddr, flags=0)

Asynchronous version of socket.getnameinfo().

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Both getaddrinfo and getnameinfo methods were always documented to return a coroutine, but prior to Python 3.7 they were, in fact, returning asyncio.Future objects. Starting with Python 3.7 both methods are coroutines.

Working with pipes

coroutine loop.connect_read_pipe(protocol_factory, pipe)

Branche l'extrémité en lecture du tube pipe à la boucle d'évènements.

protocol_factory must be a callable returning an asyncio protocol implementation.

pipe is a file-like object.

Return pair (transport, protocol), where transport supports the ReadTransport interface and protocol is an object instantiated by the protocol_factory.

With SelectorEventLoop event loop, the pipe is set to non-blocking mode.

coroutine loop.connect_write_pipe(protocol_factory, pipe)

Branche l'extrémité en écriture de pipe à la boucle d'évènements.

protocol_factory must be a callable returning an asyncio protocol implementation.

pipe is file-like object.

Return pair (transport, protocol), where transport supports WriteTransport interface and protocol is an object instantiated by the protocol_factory.

With SelectorEventLoop event loop, the pipe is set to non-blocking mode.

Note

SelectorEventLoop does not support the above methods on Windows. Use ProactorEventLoop instead for Windows.

Voir aussi

The loop.subprocess_exec() and loop.subprocess_shell() methods.

Signaux Unix

loop.add_signal_handler(signum, callback, *args)

Set callback as the handler for the signum signal.

The callback will be invoked by loop, along with other queued callbacks and runnable coroutines of that event loop. Unlike signal handlers registered using signal.signal(), a callback registered with this function is allowed to interact with the event loop.

Raise ValueError if the signal number is invalid or uncatchable. Raise RuntimeError if there is a problem setting up the handler.

Use functools.partial() to pass keyword arguments to callback.

Like signal.signal(), this function must be invoked in the main thread.

loop.remove_signal_handler(sig)

Supprime le gestionnaire du signal sig.

Return True if the signal handler was removed, or False if no handler was set for the given signal.

Disponibilité : Unix.

Voir aussi

Le module signal.

Executing code in thread or process pools

awaitable loop.run_in_executor(executor, func, *args)

Arrange for func to be called in the specified executor.

The executor argument should be an concurrent.futures.Executor instance. The default executor is used if executor is None.

Exemple :

import asyncio
import concurrent.futures

def blocking_io():
    # File operations (such as logging) can block the
    # event loop: run them in a thread pool.
    with open('/dev/urandom', 'rb') as f:
        return f.read(100)

def cpu_bound():
    # CPU-bound operations will block the event loop:
    # in general it is preferable to run them in a
    # process pool.
    return sum(i * i for i in range(10 ** 7))

async def main():
    loop = asyncio.get_running_loop()

    ## Options:

    # 1. Run in the default loop's executor:
    result = await loop.run_in_executor(
        None, blocking_io)
    print('default thread pool', result)

    # 2. Run in a custom thread pool:
    with concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor() as pool:
        result = await loop.run_in_executor(
            pool, blocking_io)
        print('custom thread pool', result)

    # 3. Run in a custom process pool:
    with concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor() as pool:
        result = await loop.run_in_executor(
            pool, cpu_bound)
        print('custom process pool', result)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    asyncio.run(main())

Note that the entry point guard (if __name__ == '__main__') is required for option 3 due to the peculiarities of multiprocessing, which is used by ProcessPoolExecutor. See Safe importing of main module.

This method returns a asyncio.Future object.

Use functools.partial() to pass keyword arguments to func.

Modifié dans la version 3.5.3: loop.run_in_executor() no longer configures the max_workers of the thread pool executor it creates, instead leaving it up to the thread pool executor (ThreadPoolExecutor) to set the default.

loop.set_default_executor(executor)

Set executor as the default executor used by run_in_executor(). executor should be an instance of ThreadPoolExecutor.

Obsolète depuis la version 3.8: Using an executor that is not an instance of ThreadPoolExecutor is deprecated and will trigger an error in Python 3.9.

executor must be an instance of concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor.

API de gestion d'erreur

Allows customizing how exceptions are handled in the event loop.

loop.set_exception_handler(handler)

Set handler as the new event loop exception handler.

If handler is None, the default exception handler will be set. Otherwise, handler must be a callable with the signature matching (loop, context), where loop is a reference to the active event loop, and context is a dict object containing the details of the exception (see call_exception_handler() documentation for details about context).

loop.get_exception_handler()

Return the current exception handler, or None if no custom exception handler was set.

Nouveau dans la version 3.5.2.

loop.default_exception_handler(context)

Gestionnaire d'exception par défaut.

This is called when an exception occurs and no exception handler is set. This can be called by a custom exception handler that wants to defer to the default handler behavior.

context parameter has the same meaning as in call_exception_handler().

loop.call_exception_handler(context)

Appelle le gestionnaire d'exception de la boucle d'évènements actuelle.

context is a dict object containing the following keys (new keys may be introduced in future Python versions):

  • message : Message d'erreur ;

  • exception (optionnel): Un objet exception ;

  • 'future' (optional): asyncio.Future instance;

  • 'task' (optional): asyncio.Task instance;

  • 'handle' (optional): asyncio.Handle instance;

  • 'protocol' (optional): Protocol instance;

  • 'transport' (optional): Transport instance;

  • 'socket' (optional): socket.socket instance;

  • 'asyncgen' (optional): Asynchronous generator that caused

    the exception.

Note

This method should not be overloaded in subclassed event loops. For custom exception handling, use the set_exception_handler() method.

Active le mode débogage

loop.get_debug()

Get the debug mode (bool) of the event loop.

The default value is True if the environment variable PYTHONASYNCIODEBUG is set to a non-empty string, False otherwise.

loop.set_debug(enabled: bool)

Active le mode débogage pour la boucle d'évènements.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: The new Python Development Mode can now also be used to enable the debug mode.

Voir aussi

The debug mode of asyncio.

Running Subprocesses

Methods described in this subsections are low-level. In regular async/await code consider using the high-level asyncio.create_subprocess_shell() and asyncio.create_subprocess_exec() convenience functions instead.

Note

On Windows, the default event loop ProactorEventLoop supports subprocesses, whereas SelectorEventLoop does not. See Subprocess Support on Windows for details.

coroutine loop.subprocess_exec(protocol_factory, *args, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, **kwargs)

Create a subprocess from one or more string arguments specified by args.

args must be a list of strings represented by:

The first string specifies the program executable, and the remaining strings specify the arguments. Together, string arguments form the argv of the program.

This is similar to the standard library subprocess.Popen class called with shell=False and the list of strings passed as the first argument; however, where Popen takes a single argument which is list of strings, subprocess_exec takes multiple string arguments.

The protocol_factory must be a callable returning a subclass of the asyncio.SubprocessProtocol class.

Autres paramètres :

  • stdin can be any of these:

    • a file-like object representing a pipe to be connected to the subprocess's standard input stream using connect_write_pipe()

    • the subprocess.PIPE constant (default) which will create a new pipe and connect it,

    • the value None which will make the subprocess inherit the file descriptor from this process

    • the subprocess.DEVNULL constant which indicates that the special os.devnull file will be used

  • stdout can be any of these:

    • a file-like object representing a pipe to be connected to the subprocess's standard output stream using connect_write_pipe()

    • the subprocess.PIPE constant (default) which will create a new pipe and connect it,

    • the value None which will make the subprocess inherit the file descriptor from this process

    • the subprocess.DEVNULL constant which indicates that the special os.devnull file will be used

  • stderr can be any of these:

    • a file-like object representing a pipe to be connected to the subprocess's standard error stream using connect_write_pipe()

    • the subprocess.PIPE constant (default) which will create a new pipe and connect it,

    • the value None which will make the subprocess inherit the file descriptor from this process

    • the subprocess.DEVNULL constant which indicates that the special os.devnull file will be used

    • the subprocess.STDOUT constant which will connect the standard error stream to the process' standard output stream

  • All other keyword arguments are passed to subprocess.Popen without interpretation, except for bufsize, universal_newlines, shell, text, encoding and errors, which should not be specified at all.

    The asyncio subprocess API does not support decoding the streams as text. bytes.decode() can be used to convert the bytes returned from the stream to text.

See the constructor of the subprocess.Popen class for documentation on other arguments.

Returns a pair of (transport, protocol), where transport conforms to the asyncio.SubprocessTransport base class and protocol is an object instantiated by the protocol_factory.

coroutine loop.subprocess_shell(protocol_factory, cmd, *, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, **kwargs)

Create a subprocess from cmd, which can be a str or a bytes string encoded to the filesystem encoding, using the platform's "shell" syntax.

This is similar to the standard library subprocess.Popen class called with shell=True.

The protocol_factory must be a callable returning a subclass of the SubprocessProtocol class.

See subprocess_exec() for more details about the remaining arguments.

Returns a pair of (transport, protocol), where transport conforms to the SubprocessTransport base class and protocol is an object instantiated by the protocol_factory.

Note

It is the application's responsibility to ensure that all whitespace and special characters are quoted appropriately to avoid shell injection vulnerabilities. The shlex.quote() function can be used to properly escape whitespace and special characters in strings that are going to be used to construct shell commands.

Callback Handles

class asyncio.Handle

A callback wrapper object returned by loop.call_soon(), loop.call_soon_threadsafe().

cancel()

Cancel the callback. If the callback has already been canceled or executed, this method has no effect.

cancelled()

Renvoie True si la fonction de rappel à été annulé.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

class asyncio.TimerHandle

A callback wrapper object returned by loop.call_later(), and loop.call_at().

This class is a subclass of Handle.

when()

Return a scheduled callback time as float seconds.

The time is an absolute timestamp, using the same time reference as loop.time().

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

Objets Serveur

Server objects are created by loop.create_server(), loop.create_unix_server(), start_server(), and start_unix_server() functions.

Do not instantiate the class directly.

class asyncio.Server

Server objects are asynchronous context managers. When used in an async with statement, it's guaranteed that the Server object is closed and not accepting new connections when the async with statement is completed:

srv = await loop.create_server(...)

async with srv:
    # some code

# At this point, srv is closed and no longer accepts new connections.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Server object is an asynchronous context manager since Python 3.7.

close()

Stop serving: close listening sockets and set the sockets attribute to None.

The sockets that represent existing incoming client connections are left open.

The server is closed asynchronously, use the wait_closed() coroutine to wait until the server is closed.

get_loop()

Return the event loop associated with the server object.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

coroutine start_serving()

Commence à accepter les connexions.

This method is idempotent, so it can be called when the server is already being serving.

The start_serving keyword-only parameter to loop.create_server() and asyncio.start_server() allows creating a Server object that is not accepting connections initially. In this case Server.start_serving(), or Server.serve_forever() can be used to make the Server start accepting connections.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

coroutine serve_forever()

Start accepting connections until the coroutine is cancelled. Cancellation of serve_forever task causes the server to be closed.

This method can be called if the server is already accepting connections. Only one serve_forever task can exist per one Server object.

Exemple :

async def client_connected(reader, writer):
    # Communicate with the client with
    # reader/writer streams.  For example:
    await reader.readline()

async def main(host, port):
    srv = await asyncio.start_server(
        client_connected, host, port)
    await srv.serve_forever()

asyncio.run(main('127.0.0.1', 0))

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

is_serving()

Donne True si le serveur accepte de nouvelles connexions.

Nouveau dans la version 3.7.

coroutine wait_closed()

Attends que la méthode close() se termine.

sockets

List of socket.socket objects the server is listening on.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Prior to Python 3.7 Server.sockets used to return an internal list of server sockets directly. In 3.7 a copy of that list is returned.

Implémentations de boucle d'évènements

asyncio ships with two different event loop implementations: SelectorEventLoop and ProactorEventLoop.

By default asyncio is configured to use SelectorEventLoop on Unix and ProactorEventLoop on Windows.

class asyncio.SelectorEventLoop

An event loop based on the selectors module.

Uses the most efficient selector available for the given platform. It is also possible to manually configure the exact selector implementation to be used:

import asyncio
import selectors

class MyPolicy(asyncio.DefaultEventLoopPolicy):
   def new_event_loop(self):
      selector = selectors.SelectSelector()
      return asyncio.SelectorEventLoop(selector)

asyncio.set_event_loop_policy(MyPolicy())

Disponibilité : Unix, Windows.

class asyncio.ProactorEventLoop

An event loop for Windows that uses "I/O Completion Ports" (IOCP).

Disponibilité : Windows.

class asyncio.AbstractEventLoop

Abstract base class for asyncio-compliant event loops.

The Méthodes de la boucle d'évènements section lists all methods that an alternative implementation of AbstractEventLoop should have defined.

Exemples

Note that all examples in this section purposefully show how to use the low-level event loop APIs, such as loop.run_forever() and loop.call_soon(). Modern asyncio applications rarely need to be written this way; consider using the high-level functions like asyncio.run().

"Hello World" avec call_soon()

An example using the loop.call_soon() method to schedule a callback. The callback displays "Hello World" and then stops the event loop:

import asyncio

def hello_world(loop):
    """A callback to print 'Hello World' and stop the event loop"""
    print('Hello World')
    loop.stop()

loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()

# Schedule a call to hello_world()
loop.call_soon(hello_world, loop)

# Blocking call interrupted by loop.stop()
try:
    loop.run_forever()
finally:
    loop.close()

Voir aussi

A similar Hello World example created with a coroutine and the run() function.

Afficher la date actuelle avec call_later()

An example of a callback displaying the current date every second. The callback uses the loop.call_later() method to reschedule itself after 5 seconds, and then stops the event loop:

import asyncio
import datetime

def display_date(end_time, loop):
    print(datetime.datetime.now())
    if (loop.time() + 1.0) < end_time:
        loop.call_later(1, display_date, end_time, loop)
    else:
        loop.stop()

loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()

# Schedule the first call to display_date()
end_time = loop.time() + 5.0
loop.call_soon(display_date, end_time, loop)

# Blocking call interrupted by loop.stop()
try:
    loop.run_forever()
finally:
    loop.close()

Voir aussi

A similar current date example created with a coroutine and the run() function.

Watch a file descriptor for read events

Wait until a file descriptor received some data using the loop.add_reader() method and then close the event loop:

import asyncio
from socket import socketpair

# Create a pair of connected file descriptors
rsock, wsock = socketpair()

loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()

def reader():
    data = rsock.recv(100)
    print("Received:", data.decode())

    # We are done: unregister the file descriptor
    loop.remove_reader(rsock)

    # Stop the event loop
    loop.stop()

# Register the file descriptor for read event
loop.add_reader(rsock, reader)

# Simulate the reception of data from the network
loop.call_soon(wsock.send, 'abc'.encode())

try:
    # Run the event loop
    loop.run_forever()
finally:
    # We are done. Close sockets and the event loop.
    rsock.close()
    wsock.close()
    loop.close()

Voir aussi

Définit les gestionnaires de signaux pour SIGINT et SIGTERM

(Cet exemple ne fonctionne que sur Unix.)

Register handlers for signals SIGINT and SIGTERM using the loop.add_signal_handler() method:

import asyncio
import functools
import os
import signal

def ask_exit(signame, loop):
    print("got signal %s: exit" % signame)
    loop.stop()

async def main():
    loop = asyncio.get_running_loop()

    for signame in {'SIGINT', 'SIGTERM'}:
        loop.add_signal_handler(
            getattr(signal, signame),
            functools.partial(ask_exit, signame, loop))

    await asyncio.sleep(3600)

print("Event loop running for 1 hour, press Ctrl+C to interrupt.")
print(f"pid {os.getpid()}: send SIGINT or SIGTERM to exit.")

asyncio.run(main())