211 lines
7.1 KiB
Python
211 lines
7.1 KiB
Python
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"""Abstract Protocol base classes."""
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__all__ = (
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'BaseProtocol', 'Protocol', 'DatagramProtocol',
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'SubprocessProtocol', 'BufferedProtocol',
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)
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class BaseProtocol:
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"""Common base class for protocol interfaces.
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Usually user implements protocols that derived from BaseProtocol
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like Protocol or ProcessProtocol.
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The only case when BaseProtocol should be implemented directly is
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write-only transport like write pipe
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"""
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def connection_made(self, transport):
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"""Called when a connection is made.
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The argument is the transport representing the pipe connection.
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To receive data, wait for data_received() calls.
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When the connection is closed, connection_lost() is called.
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"""
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def connection_lost(self, exc):
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"""Called when the connection is lost or closed.
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The argument is an exception object or None (the latter
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meaning a regular EOF is received or the connection was
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aborted or closed).
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"""
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def pause_writing(self):
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"""Called when the transport's buffer goes over the high-water mark.
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Pause and resume calls are paired -- pause_writing() is called
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once when the buffer goes strictly over the high-water mark
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(even if subsequent writes increases the buffer size even
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more), and eventually resume_writing() is called once when the
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buffer size reaches the low-water mark.
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Note that if the buffer size equals the high-water mark,
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pause_writing() is not called -- it must go strictly over.
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Conversely, resume_writing() is called when the buffer size is
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equal or lower than the low-water mark. These end conditions
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are important to ensure that things go as expected when either
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mark is zero.
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NOTE: This is the only Protocol callback that is not called
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through EventLoop.call_soon() -- if it were, it would have no
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effect when it's most needed (when the app keeps writing
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without yielding until pause_writing() is called).
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"""
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def resume_writing(self):
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"""Called when the transport's buffer drains below the low-water mark.
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See pause_writing() for details.
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"""
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class Protocol(BaseProtocol):
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"""Interface for stream protocol.
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The user should implement this interface. They can inherit from
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this class but don't need to. The implementations here do
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nothing (they don't raise exceptions).
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When the user wants to requests a transport, they pass a protocol
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factory to a utility function (e.g., EventLoop.create_connection()).
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When the connection is made successfully, connection_made() is
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called with a suitable transport object. Then data_received()
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will be called 0 or more times with data (bytes) received from the
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transport; finally, connection_lost() will be called exactly once
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with either an exception object or None as an argument.
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State machine of calls:
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start -> CM [-> DR*] [-> ER?] -> CL -> end
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* CM: connection_made()
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* DR: data_received()
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* ER: eof_received()
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* CL: connection_lost()
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"""
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def data_received(self, data):
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"""Called when some data is received.
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The argument is a bytes object.
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"""
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def eof_received(self):
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"""Called when the other end calls write_eof() or equivalent.
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If this returns a false value (including None), the transport
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will close itself. If it returns a true value, closing the
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transport is up to the protocol.
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"""
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class BufferedProtocol(BaseProtocol):
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"""Interface for stream protocol with manual buffer control.
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Important: this has been added to asyncio in Python 3.7
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*on a provisional basis*! Consider it as an experimental API that
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might be changed or removed in Python 3.8.
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Event methods, such as `create_server` and `create_connection`,
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accept factories that return protocols that implement this interface.
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The idea of BufferedProtocol is that it allows to manually allocate
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and control the receive buffer. Event loops can then use the buffer
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provided by the protocol to avoid unnecessary data copies. This
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can result in noticeable performance improvement for protocols that
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receive big amounts of data. Sophisticated protocols can allocate
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the buffer only once at creation time.
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State machine of calls:
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start -> CM [-> GB [-> BU?]]* [-> ER?] -> CL -> end
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* CM: connection_made()
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* GB: get_buffer()
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* BU: buffer_updated()
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* ER: eof_received()
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* CL: connection_lost()
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"""
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def get_buffer(self, sizehint):
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"""Called to allocate a new receive buffer.
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*sizehint* is a recommended minimal size for the returned
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buffer. When set to -1, the buffer size can be arbitrary.
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Must return an object that implements the
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:ref:`buffer protocol <bufferobjects>`.
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It is an error to return a zero-sized buffer.
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"""
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def buffer_updated(self, nbytes):
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"""Called when the buffer was updated with the received data.
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*nbytes* is the total number of bytes that were written to
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the buffer.
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"""
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def eof_received(self):
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"""Called when the other end calls write_eof() or equivalent.
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If this returns a false value (including None), the transport
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will close itself. If it returns a true value, closing the
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transport is up to the protocol.
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"""
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class DatagramProtocol(BaseProtocol):
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"""Interface for datagram protocol."""
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def datagram_received(self, data, addr):
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"""Called when some datagram is received."""
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def error_received(self, exc):
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"""Called when a send or receive operation raises an OSError.
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(Other than BlockingIOError or InterruptedError.)
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"""
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class SubprocessProtocol(BaseProtocol):
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"""Interface for protocol for subprocess calls."""
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def pipe_data_received(self, fd, data):
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"""Called when the subprocess writes data into stdout/stderr pipe.
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fd is int file descriptor.
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data is bytes object.
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"""
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def pipe_connection_lost(self, fd, exc):
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"""Called when a file descriptor associated with the child process is
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closed.
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fd is the int file descriptor that was closed.
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"""
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def process_exited(self):
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"""Called when subprocess has exited."""
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def _feed_data_to_buffered_proto(proto, data):
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data_len = len(data)
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while data_len:
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buf = proto.get_buffer(data_len)
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buf_len = len(buf)
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if not buf_len:
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raise RuntimeError('get_buffer() returned an empty buffer')
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if buf_len >= data_len:
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buf[:data_len] = data
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proto.buffer_updated(data_len)
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return
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else:
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buf[:buf_len] = data[:buf_len]
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proto.buffer_updated(buf_len)
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data = data[buf_len:]
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data_len = len(data)
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