Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: traio
Version: 0.3b0
Summary: A simple asyncio wrapper attempting to look like Trio
Home-page: https://github.com/RouquinBlanc/traio/
Author: Jonathan Martin
Author-email: therouquinblanc@gmail.com
License: MIT
Description: # A simple asyncio wrapper attempting to look like Trio
        
        [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/RouquinBlanc/traio.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/RouquinBlanc/traio) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/RouquinBlanc/traio/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/RouquinBlanc/traio?branch=master)
        
        When going deeper and deeper with asyncio, and managing a lot of tasks
        in parallel, you notice that on top of having a lot to deal with
        to keep an eye on all your task, you also end up always doing the
        same kind of boiler plate, and the code can become easily twisted and
        unreadable.
        
        [Trio](https://github.com/python-trio/trio) is there to make asynchronous programming easy and more "for humans".
        
        Traio (as kind of Trio on top of Asyncio) let you use asyncio with a little of
        the philosophy of Trio, mostly the Nursery concept. It also synthesize the most
        common pattern we are using for handling async tasks in a sane way.
        
        ## Disclaimer
        
        This is *not* a replacement for Trio: if you do a full Trio-like project,
        just use Trio! It's just truly awesome, but in some cases you get stuck 
        with asyncio, but still want to have a code you can read and manage...
        
        Because we run on top of asyncio, we are quite limited in how we can handle
        cancellation, scopes, and coroutines. This is *just* on top of asyncio, this
        is not an alternative! But on the good side, you can mix this with regular
        asyncio code, which can look appealing.
        
        ## Examples
        
        ### Simple Nursery
        
        The main way to use the Nursery is (like in Trio) as a context manager
        
        ```python
        import asyncio
        from traio import Nursery
        
        async def fetch_url(x):
            # Do something long
            await asyncio.sleep(3)
        
        async def main():
            async with Nursery(timeout=10) as nursery:
                for i in range(10):
                    nursery.start_soon(fetch_url(i))
        ```
        
        When reaching the end of the context block, the code will block until:
        - all tasks are done
        - or the timeout is over
        - or the nursery get's cancelled.
        
        You can also use the Nursery without context manager:
        
        ```python
        import asyncio
        from traio import Nursery
        
        async def fetch_url(x):
            # Do something long
            await asyncio.sleep(3)
        
        async def main():
            # Equivalent to previous example
            nursery = Nursery(timeout=10)
            
            for i in range(10):
                nursery.start_soon(fetch_url(i))
                
            await nursery.join()
        ```
        
        ### Names and logger
        
        If you went deep enough in asyncio misteries, you know that tracing code is
        (for now) kind of a nightmare... For that reason, Nursery as well as tasks can
        be instantiated with a name. The Nursery can also take a logger which will be
        used for tracing most of the calls and task life cycle, mostly with debug level. 
        
        ### Special tasks
        
        `Nursery.start_soon` can be called with different parameters with interesting
        effects:
        
        - The `bubble` boolean parameter controls task error bubbling. A task will
        bubble by default. This means that an error in the taskwill cause the task 
        to stop (of course), but the nursery will be cancelled as well and raise 
        the given error. This is the desired default behavior.
        But it can be useful in some cases not to do that, and just ignore a task.
        Not that if you await manually a task, this cancels bubbling automatically:
        if you take the pain of waiting for a task, it's not to get all the rest cancelled!
        
        ```python
        import asyncio
        from traio import Nursery
        
        async def fetch_url():
            # Do something long
            await asyncio.sleep(10)
            
        async def trivial():
            await asyncio.sleep(0.01)
            raise ValueError('not interesting')
        
        async def main():
        
            async with Nursery(timeout=0.5) as n:
                # This will try to run for 10 seconds
                n.start_soon(fetch_url())
                
                # This will run a bit then raise (but not 'bubble')
                n.start_soon(trivial(), bubble=False)
                
            # Eventually after 0.5 seconds the Nursery times out and
            # gives a TImeoutError
        ```
        
        - A task can be marked as `master`, in that case the nursery will die with the 
        task when done. This is typically useful when you have one main task to be
        performed and other background ones, which have no meaning if the main one stops.
        
        ```python
        import asyncio
        from traio import Nursery
        
        async def fetch_url():
            # Do something long
            await asyncio.sleep(10)
            
        async def trivial():
            await asyncio.sleep(0.01)
        
        async def main():
        
            async with Nursery(timeout=0.5) as n:
                # This will try to run for 10 seconds
                n.start_soon(fetch_url())
                
                # This will run a bit then nursery gets cancelled when it ends
                n.start_soon(trivial(), master=True)
        ```
        
        Note you can combine both flags; If bubble is False and master is True,
        the nursery will exit silently when the task is done, even with an exception.
        
        ### Nested Nursery
        
        That's one of the most exciting ones: you can spawn a sub-nursery from the
        original one, which will follow the same rules as any Nursery but will as well
        die if the parent is cancelled!
        
        ```python
        import asyncio
        from traio import Nursery
        
        async def fetch_url():
            # Do something long
            await asyncio.sleep(10)
        
        async def main():
        
            async with Nursery(timeout=0.2):
                async with Nursery(timeout=0.5) as inner:
                    # This will try to run for 10 seconds
                    inner.start_soon(fetch_url())
                
            # Here the outer Nursery will timeout first and will cancel the inner one!
        ```
        
        ### Caveat
        
        Remember that **we do not modify the way asyncio works**. Asyncio is still
        in charge of scheduling all tasks. In that aspect, if you block you nursery
        awaiting for something *not* handled by the nursery, the timeouts and cancellation
        won't apply until your current task is done. Instead, try to wrap your task in a
        call to `Nursery.start_soon`.
        
        So instead of this:
        ```python
        async with Nursery() as n:
            await my_very_long_task()
        ```
        try to do this:
        ```python
        async with Nursery() as n:
            await n.start_soon(my_very_long_task())
        ```
        
        ## Status
        
        This is still alpha; the principle was validated and the various tests ensure
        a pretty good coverage as well as examples. But the API may vary a bit for a while
        until we figure out what to add.
        
        ## TODOS
        
        - write more examples
        - extend the API:
          - new `Nursery` APIs
          - new kinds of tasks, for example executors (although we have no way to stop 
          a thread executor...)
          - After discovering a very similar project called [Ayo](https://github.com/Tygs/ayo), see what 
          good features can be integrated (love the `<<` operator!)
        - play more with the real Trio and get a better feeling of it
        - get some user feedback if possible!
Keywords: asyncio,nursery,trio,even loop
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
