Simple wrapper around file objects and sockets that provides uniform interface to both.
Example:
from channels import PipeChannel, SocketChannel
pipe_chan = PipeChannel(sys.stdin.fileno(), sys.stdout.fileno())
sock_chan = SocketChannel(socket.create_connection(('127.0.0.1', 8080))Channel is the base class for different channels. Every channel implements the following methods:
read(self)Performs a non-blocking read and returns any bytes available. Raises
EndpointClosedException if the channel is closed.
write(self, *data)Writes chunks of bytes to the channel. Raises EndpointClosedException.
close(self)Closes the channel and frees up the resources.
get_fd(self)Returns a file descriptor number that can be used for poll or
epoll for reading. Raises NotImplementedError if (custom) channel
doesn't support reading.
Every channel has a buffering property (read-only). It is equal to
'line' for line-buffered channels. It should be 'bytes' otherwise
but any value other than 'line' works.
The following channel classes are implemented:
from channels import PipeChannel
PipeChannel(faucet=None, sink=None, *, buffering='bytes')faucet should be a file descriptor open for reading. sink should
be a file descriptor open for writing. If both are provided, the
channel is bi-directional. Sets faucet to non-blocking mode.
If buffering is set to 'line' the channel uses line-buffering for
reading. Every read call will return b'' if there is no complete
line available even if there is any data at all. If channel is closed
but there is data in buffer, calls to read will return lines from
buffer until it is exhausted. Last line maybe an incomplete line (no
'\n' in the end).
from channels import SocketChannel
SocketChannel(sock, *, buffering='bytes')Wraps a socket for non-blocking IO. See PipeChannel for more info on
buffering parameter.
(in package channels.testing)
from channels.testing import TestChannel
TestChannel(*, buffering='bytes')See PipeChannel for more info on buffering parameter.
Provides put and get methods to to feed data to read and fetch
"written" data respectively.
(in package channels.poller)
Poller is a wrapper for select.poll that also supports accepting and
keeping track of TCP/Unix clients.
from channels.poller import Poller
Poller(*, buffering='bytes')Creates a poller object. All accepted client channels inherit the
buffering parameter.
register(self, channel)Registers the channel for polling.
add_server(self, sock)Registers a server socket. Poller will accept incoming connections and automatically register clients.
unregister(self, channel)Removes a registered channel. Silently does nothing if channel is not registered.
close_all(self)Closes all registered channels and servers.
poll(self, timeout=None)Performs a single call to select.poll(). timeout is the number of
seconds for polling or None for infinite polling. Return value is a
list of pairs in format of (data, channel) for channels and ((addr, client_channel), sock) for server sockets. addr depends on socket
type. For line-based channels single poll call will return one
result for every line available.
