/greenado

Greenlet-based pseudo-synchronous coroutines for tornado

Primary LanguagePythonApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

greenado

Test status Test coverage status Documentation

Greenado is a utility library that provides greenlet-based coroutines for tornado. In tornado, coroutines allow you to perform asynchronous operations without using callbacks, providing a pseudo-synchronous flow in your functions.

When using Tornado's :func:`@gen.coroutine <tornado.gen.coroutine>` in a large codebase, you will notice that they tend to be 'infectious' from the bottom up. In other words, for them to be truly useful, callers of the coroutine should 'yield' to them, which requires them to be a coroutine. In turn, their callers need to 'yield', and so on.

Instead, greenado coroutines infect from the top down, and only requires the :func:`@greenado.groutine <greenado.concurrent.groutine>` decorator somewhere in the call hierarchy, but it doesn't really matter where. Once the decorator is used, you can use :func:`greenado.gyield() <greenado.concurrent.gyield>` to pseudo-synchronously wait for asynchronous events to occur. This reduces complexity in large codebases, as you only need to use the decorator at the very top of your call trees, and nowhere else.

Documentation

Documentation can be found at http://greenado.readthedocs.org/en/latest/

Installation & Requirements

Installation is easiest using pip:

$ pip install greenado

greenado should work using tornado 3.2, but I only actively use it in tornado 4+

I have only tested greenado on Linux & OSX, but I imagine that it would work correctly on platforms that tornado and greenlet support.

Example usage

In the below examples, 'main_function' is your toplevel function in the call hierarchy that needs to call things that eventually call some asynchronous operation in tornado.

Normal tornado coroutine usage might look something like this:

from tornado import gen

@gen.coroutine
def do_long_operation():
    retval = yield long_operation()
    raise gen.Return(retval)

@gen.coroutine
def call_long_operation():
    retval = yield do_long_operation()
    raise gen.Return(retval)

@gen.coroutine
def main_function():
    retval = yield call_long_operation()

With greenado, it looks something like this instead:

import greenado

def do_long_operation():
    retval = greenado.gyield(long_operation())
    return retval

def call_long_operation():
    retval = do_long_operation()
    return retval

@greenado.groutine
def main_function():
    retval = call_long_operation()

Functions wrapped by :func:`@greenado.groutine <greenado.concurrent.groutine>` return a :class:`tornado.concurrent.Future` object which you must either yield, call result(), or use :meth:`IOLoop.add_future <tornado.ioloop.IOLoop.add_future>` on, otherwise you may risk swallowing exceptions.

Why can't I use the yield keyword?

Well, actually, if you use yet another decorator, you still can! Check out this example:

import greenado

    @greenado.generator
def do_long_operation():
    retval = yield long_operation()
    return retval

def call_long_operation():
    retval = do_long_operation()
    return retval

@greenado.groutine
def main_function():
    retval = call_long_operation()

You'll note that this is very similar to the coroutines available from tornado (and in fact, the implementation is mostly the same), but the difference is that (once again) you don't need to do anything special to call the do_long_operation function, other than make sure that :func:`@greenado.groutine <greenado.concurrent.groutine>` is in the call stack somewhere.

Testing

greenado.testing contains a function called gen_test which can be used exactly like :func:`tornado.testing.gen_test`:

import greenado

from greenado.testing import gen_test
from tornado.testing import AsyncTestCase

def something_that_yields():
    greenado.gyield(something())

class MyTest(AsyncTestCase):
    @gen_test
    def test_something(self):
        something_that_yields()

Contributing new changes

  1. Fork this repository
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Test your changes (tests/run_tests.sh)
  4. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  5. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  6. Create new Pull Request

Credit

Greenado is similar to and inspired by https://github.com/mopub/greenlet-tornado and https://github.com/Gawen/tornalet, but does not require that you use it from a tornado web handler as they do.

Authors

Dustin Spicuzza (dustin@virtualroadside.com)