Programming Guide

This section is a work in progress and suggestions are welcome.

Explict Event Loops

Twisted has a single, global reactor (for now). As such, txaio was built with a single, global (but configurable) event-loop. However, asyncio supports multiple event-loops.

After version 2.7.0 it is possible to use txaio with multiple event-loops, and thereby offer asyncio users the chance to pass one. Of course, it’s still not possible to use multiple event-loops at once with Twisted.

To start using multiple event-loops with txaio, use txaio.with_config() to return a new “instance” of the txaio API with the given config (the only thing you can configure currently is the event-loop). On Twisted, it’s an error if you try to use a different reactor.

The object returned by txaio.with_config() is a drop-in replacement for every txaio.* call, so you can go from code like this:

import txaio
f = txaio.create_future()

…and instead make your code do look like this:

import asyncio
import txaio
txa = txaio.with_config(loop=asyncio.new_event_loop())
f = txa.create_future()

If you’re doing this inside a class, you could use self._txa or similar instead. This gives you an easy path to opt-in to this multiple event-loop API:

  • replace all txaio.* calls to use an object, like self._txa.
  • assign this to the txaio module (self._txa = txaio) or use the new API right away (self._txa = txaio.with_config())
  • add a public API to your library to pass in an event loop
  • when this is used, you set self._txa = txaio.with_config(loop=loop)

See the example in examples/multiloop.py.

Logging

If you are developing a new application, you can take advantage of more structured logging by using txaio’s APIs throughout. This API is similar to Twisted’s logging in many ways, but not identical. If you’re integrating txaio into existing code, it should “play nicely” with the logging module, Twisted’s newest logger, and the pre-15.2.0 “legacy” Twisted logger.

To create an object suitable for logging, call txaio.make_logger(). This will return an instance which has a series of methods indicating the “severity” or “level” of the log – see txaio.interfaces.ILogger for an example and more details.

So, given some code like:

import txaio
txaio.use_twisted()

class Bunny(object):
    log = txaio.make_logger()

    def hop(self, times=1):
        self.log.trace("Bunny.hop(times={times})", times=times)
        self.log.debug("Hopping {times} times.", times=times)
        try:
            1 / 0
        except Exception:
            fail = txaio.create_failure()
            self.log.critical(txaio.failure_format_traceback(fail))

print("output before start_logging")
txaio.start_logging(level='debug')
print("output after start_logging")
jack = Bunny()
jack.hop(42)

Then you should see output approximately like this:

output before start_logging
2016-01-21T01:02:03-0100 output after start_logging
2016-01-21T01:02:03-0100 Hopping 42 times.
2016-01-21T01:02:03-0100 Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "logging-example.py", line 21, in <module>
    jack.hop(42)
--- <exception caught here> ---
  File "logging-example.py", line 12, in hop
    raise RuntimeError("Fox spotted!")
exceptions.RuntimeError: Fox spotted!

Note that the trace-level message wasn’t logged. If you don’t like to see full tracebacks except with debugging, you can use this idiom:

self.log.critical(txaio.failure_message(fail))
self.log.debug(txaio.failure_format_traceback(fail))

It’s worth noting the code doesn’t change at all if you do .use_asyncio() at the top instead – of course this is the whole point of txaio!

Logging Interoperability

When you’re using libraries that are already doing logging, but not using the txaio APIs, you shouldn’t need to do anything. For example:

import txaio
txaio.use_twisted()


def existing_code():
    from twisted.python import log
    log.msg("A legacy Twisted logger message")

txaio.start_logging(level='debug')
existing_code()

If you’re using asyncio (or just built-in Python logging), it could look like this:

import txaio
txaio.use_asyncio()


def existing_code():
    import logging
    log = logging.getLogger("roy")
    log.info("Python stdlib message: %s", "txaio was here")

txaio.start_logging(level='debug')
existing_code()

Starting Logging Yourself

If you are already starting your favourite logging system yourself (be that Twiste’d logger via globalLogBeginner or Python stdlib logging), any library using txaio’s logging should play nicely with it. Not ever calling txaio.start_logging() has a slight drawback, however: as part of setting up logging, we re-bind all the “unused” logging methods to do-nothing. For example, if the log level is set to 'info' than the .debug method on all txaio-created logger instances becomes a no-op.

For fully-worked examples of this, look in examples/log_interop_stdlib.py and examples/log_interop_twisted.py.