Source code: Lib/asyncio/streams.py
Note
The top-level functions in this module are meant as convenience wrappers only; there's really nothing special there, and if they don't do exactly what you want, feel free to copy their code.
coroutine asyncio.open_connection(host=None, port=None, *, loop=None, limit=None, **kwds)
A wrapper for create_connection()
returning a (reader,
writer) pair.
The reader returned is a StreamReader
instance; the writer is
a StreamWriter
instance.
The arguments are all the usual arguments to
AbstractEventLoop.create_connection()
except protocol_factory; most
common are positional host and port, with various optional keyword arguments
following.
Additional optional keyword arguments are loop (to set the event loop
instance to use) and limit (to set the buffer limit passed to the
StreamReader
).
This function is a coroutine.
coroutine asyncio.start_server(client_connected_cb, host=None, port=None, *, loop=None, limit=None, **kwds)
Start a socket server, with a callback for each client connected. The return
value is the same as create_server()
.
The client_connected_cb parameter is called with two parameters:
client_reader, client_writer. client_reader is a
StreamReader
object, while client_writer is a
StreamWriter
object. The client_connected_cb parameter can
either be a plain callback function or a coroutine function; if it is a coroutine function, it will be automatically
converted into a Task
.
The rest of the arguments are all the usual arguments to
create_server()
except protocol_factory; most
common are positional host and port, with various optional keyword
arguments following.
Additional optional keyword arguments are loop (to set the event loop
instance to use) and limit (to set the buffer limit passed to the
StreamReader
).
This function is a coroutine.
coroutine asyncio.open_unix_connection(path=None, *, loop=None, limit=None, **kwds)
A wrapper for create_unix_connection()
returning
a (reader, writer) pair.
See open_connection()
for information about return value and other
details.
This function is a coroutine.
Availability: UNIX.
coroutine asyncio.start_unix_server(client_connected_cb, path=None, *, loop=None, limit=None, **kwds)
Start a UNIX Domain Socket server, with a callback for each client connected.
See start_server()
for information about return value and other
details.
This function is a coroutine.
Availability: UNIX.
class asyncio.StreamReader(limit=None, loop=None)
This class is not thread safe.
exception()
Get the exception.
feed_eof()
Acknowledge the EOF.
feed_data(data)
Feed data bytes in the internal buffer. Any operations waiting for the data will be resumed.
set_exception(exc)
Set the exception.
set_transport(transport)
Set the transport.
coroutine read(n=-1)
Read up to n bytes. If n is not provided, or set to -1
,
read until EOF and return all read bytes.
If the EOF was received and the internal buffer is empty,
return an empty bytes
object.
This method is a coroutine.
coroutine readline()
Read one line, where "line" is a sequence of bytes ending with \n
.
If EOF is received, and \n
was not found, the method will
return the partial read bytes.
If the EOF was received and the internal buffer is empty,
return an empty bytes
object.
This method is a coroutine.
coroutine readexactly(n)
Read exactly n bytes. Raise an IncompleteReadError
if the end of
the stream is reached before n can be read, the
IncompleteReadError.partial
attribute of the exception contains
the partial read bytes.
This method is a coroutine.
coroutine readuntil(separator=b'\n')
Read data from the stream until separator
is found.
On success, the data and separator will be removed from the internal buffer (consumed). Returned data will include the separator at the end.
Configured stream limit is used to check result. Limit sets the maximal length of data that can be returned, not counting the separator.
If an EOF occurs and the complete separator is still not found,
an IncompleteReadError
exception will be
raised, and the internal buffer will be reset. The
IncompleteReadError.partial
attribute may contain the
separator partially.
If the data cannot be read because of over limit, a
LimitOverrunError
exception will be raised, and the data
will be left in the internal buffer, so it can be read again.
New in version 3.5.2.
at_eof()
Return True
if the buffer is empty and feed_eof()
was called.
class asyncio.StreamWriter(transport, protocol, reader, loop)
Wraps a Transport.
This exposes write()
, writelines()
, can_write_eof()
,
write_eof()
, get_extra_info()
and close()
. It adds
drain()
which returns an optional Future
on which you can
wait for flow control. It also adds a transport attribute which references
the Transport
directly.
This class is not thread safe.
transport
Transport.
can_write_eof()
Return True
if the transport supports write_eof()
,
False
if not. See WriteTransport.can_write_eof()
.
close()
Close the transport: see BaseTransport.close()
.
coroutine drain()
Let the write buffer of the underlying transport a chance to be flushed.
The intended use is to write:
w.write(data)
yield from w.drain()
When the size of the transport buffer reaches the high-water limit (the protocol is paused), block until the size of the buffer is drained down to the low-water limit and the protocol is resumed. When there is nothing to wait for, the yield-from continues immediately.
Yielding from drain()
gives the opportunity for the loop to
schedule the write operation and flush the buffer. It should especially
be used when a possibly large amount of data is written to the transport,
and the coroutine does not yield-from between calls to write()
.
This method is a coroutine.
get_extra_info(name, default=None)
Return optional transport information: see
BaseTransport.get_extra_info()
.
write(data)
Write some data bytes to the transport: see
WriteTransport.write()
.
writelines(data)
Write a list (or any iterable) of data bytes to the transport:
see WriteTransport.writelines()
.
write_eof()
Close the write end of the transport after flushing buffered data:
see WriteTransport.write_eof()
.
class asyncio.StreamReaderProtocol(stream_reader, client_connected_cb=None, loop=None)
Trivial helper class to adapt between Protocol
and
StreamReader
. Subclass of Protocol
.
stream_reader is a StreamReader
instance, client_connected_cb
is an optional function called with (stream_reader, stream_writer) when a
connection is made, loop is the event loop instance to use.
(This is a helper class instead of making StreamReader
itself a
Protocol
subclass, because the StreamReader
has other
potential uses, and to prevent the user of the StreamReader
from
accidentally calling inappropriate methods of the protocol.)
exception asyncio.IncompleteReadError
Incomplete read error, subclass of EOFError
.
expected
Total number of expected bytes (int
).
partial
Read bytes string before the end of stream was reached (bytes
).
exception asyncio.LimitOverrunError
Reached the buffer limit while looking for a separator.
consumed
Total number of to be consumed bytes.
TCP echo client using the asyncio.open_connection()
function:
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def tcp_echo_client(message, loop):
reader, writer = yield from asyncio.open_connection('127.0.0.1', 8888,
loop=loop)
print('Send: %r' % message)
writer.write(message.encode())
data = yield from reader.read(100)
print('Received: %r' % data.decode())
print('Close the socket')
writer.close()
message = 'Hello World!'
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
loop.run_until_complete(tcp_echo_client(message, loop))
loop.close()
See also
The TCP echo client protocol
example uses the AbstractEventLoop.create_connection()
method.
TCP echo server using the asyncio.start_server()
function:
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def handle_echo(reader, writer):
data = yield from reader.read(100)
message = data.decode()
addr = writer.get_extra_info('peername')
print("Received %r from %r" % (message, addr))
print("Send: %r" % message)
writer.write(data)
yield from writer.drain()
print("Close the client socket")
writer.close()
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
coro = asyncio.start_server(handle_echo, '127.0.0.1', 8888, loop=loop)
server = loop.run_until_complete(coro)
# Serve requests until Ctrl+C is pressed
print('Serving on {}'.format(server.sockets[0].getsockname()))
try:
loop.run_forever()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
pass
# Close the server
server.close()
loop.run_until_complete(server.wait_closed())
loop.close()
See also
The TCP echo server protocol
example uses the AbstractEventLoop.create_server()
method.
Simple example querying HTTP headers of the URL passed on the command line:
import asyncio
import urllib.parse
import sys
@asyncio.coroutine
def print_http_headers(url):
url = urllib.parse.urlsplit(url)
if url.scheme == 'https':
connect = asyncio.open_connection(url.hostname, 443, ssl=True)
else:
connect = asyncio.open_connection(url.hostname, 80)
reader, writer = yield from connect
query = ('HEAD {path} HTTP/1.0\r\n'
'Host: {hostname}\r\n'
'\r\n').format(path=url.path or '/', hostname=url.hostname)
writer.write(query.encode('latin-1'))
while True:
line = yield from reader.readline()
if not line:
break
line = line.decode('latin1').rstrip()
if line:
print('HTTP header> %s' % line)
# Ignore the body, close the socket
writer.close()
url = sys.argv[1]
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
task = asyncio.ensure_future(print_http_headers(url))
loop.run_until_complete(task)
loop.close()
Usage:
python example.py http://example.com/path/page.html
or with HTTPS:
python example.py https://example.com/path/page.html
Coroutine waiting until a socket receives data using the
open_connection()
function:
import asyncio
try:
from socket import socketpair
except ImportError:
from asyncio.windows_utils import socketpair
@asyncio.coroutine
def wait_for_data(loop):
# Create a pair of connected sockets
rsock, wsock = socketpair()
# Register the open socket to wait for data
reader, writer = yield from asyncio.open_connection(sock=rsock, loop=loop)
# Simulate the reception of data from the network
loop.call_soon(wsock.send, 'abc'.encode())
# Wait for data
data = yield from reader.read(100)
# Got data, we are done: close the socket
print("Received:", data.decode())
writer.close()
# Close the second socket
wsock.close()
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
loop.run_until_complete(wait_for_data(loop))
loop.close()
See also
The register an open socket to wait for data using a protocol example uses a low-level protocol created by the
AbstractEventLoop.create_connection()
method.
The watch a file descriptor for read events example uses the low-level
AbstractEventLoop.add_reader()
method to register the file descriptor of a
socket.