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Allow Channel objects to be created outside of async contexts #162
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Is it expected that people will want to re-use channels? In that case this will cause errors if someone tries to re-use it. In that case we should use an ephemeral |
I think that the whole point in removing Only in tests I know that this is not true and now also in your example with IPython. Your PR LGTM, only |
@@ -703,12 +703,13 @@ def _protocol_factory(self) -> H2Protocol: | |||
return H2Protocol(Handler(), self._config, self._h2_config) | |||
|
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async def _create_connection(self) -> H2Protocol: | |||
loop = self._loop or asyncio.get_running_loop() |
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I liked your previous version of setting self._loop
property here
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Hey, so I will do this, but be aware that this will mean that the following code in ipython will fail (and yes, this is absolutely something I want to do when debugging):
>>> channel = Channel(...)
...
>>> async with channel as ch:
... client = FooBase(ch)
... r1 = await client.bar(...)
...
>>> async with channel as ch:
... client = FooBase(ch)
... r2 = await client.bar(...) # this will fail because we still hold the previous loop
...
When you move to 0.5 you'll want to grab the loop explicitly at the callsite (using asyncio.get_running_loop
or, even better, just use the asyncio
global methods directly). This emulates doing that. By storing the loop, you're keeping a closed loop around which is not intended behaviour for asyncio
.
I don't think there are any benefits in doing it the way we did it before except maybe slightly cleaner code.
Can you confirm this is what you want?
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Strange but I can't reproduce your error, even with stock grpclib
with no changes.
Python 3.9.13 (main, May 24 2022, 21:28:31)
Type 'copyright', 'credits' or 'license' for more information
IPython 8.4.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. Type '?' for help.
In [1]: from grpclib.client import Channel
In [2]: from helloworld.helloworld_pb2 import HelloRequest
In [3]: from helloworld.helloworld_grpc import GreeterStub
In [4]: channel = Channel('127.0.0.1', 50051)
In [5]: async with channel as ch:
...: client = GreeterStub(ch)
...: r1 = await client.SayHello(HelloRequest(name="Dr. Strange"))
...:
In [6]: async with channel as ch:
...: client = GreeterStub(ch)
...: r2 = await client.SayHello(HelloRequest(name="Dr. Strange"))
...:
In [7]: r1
Out[7]: message: "Hello, Dr. Strange!"
In [8]: r2
Out[8]: message: "Hello, Dr. Strange!"
Which version of IPython do you have?
BTW, as I said before you don't have to use async with
to use a channel, like this:
In [4]: channel = Channel('127.0.0.1', 50051)
In [5]: greeter = GreeterStub(channel)
In [6]: await greeter.SayHello(HelloRequest(name='Dr. Strange'))
Out[6]: message: "Hello, Dr. Strange!"
In [7]: await greeter.SayHello(HelloRequest(name='Dr. Strange'))
Out[7]: message: "Hello, Dr. Strange!"
This is fine for IPython sessions or if you want to close the channel manually.
@@ -792,11 +793,14 @@ def __del__(self) -> None: | |||
if self._protocol is not None: | |||
message = 'Unclosed connection: {!r}'.format(self) | |||
warnings.warn(message, ResourceWarning) | |||
if self._loop.is_closed(): |
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Placing assert self._loop is not None
before using self._loop
property will do the trick for mypy, this is probably the simplest way of telling to mypy that variable was initialised. If self._protocol is not None
then also self._loop is not None
.
Fixes #161