selectors
— High-level I/O multiplexing¶New in version 3.4.
Source code: Lib/selectors.py
This module allows high-level and efficient I/O multiplexing, built upon the
select
module primitives. Users are encouraged to use this module
instead, unless they want precise control over the OS-level primitives used.
It defines a BaseSelector
abstract base class, along with several
concrete implementations (KqueueSelector
, EpollSelector
...),
that can be used to wait for I/O readiness notification on multiple file
objects. In the following, “file object” refers to any object with a
fileno()
method, or a raw file descriptor. See file object.
DefaultSelector
is an alias to the most efficient implementation
available on the current platform: this should be the default choice for most
users.
Note
The type of file objects supported depends on the platform: on Windows, sockets are supported, but not pipes, whereas on Unix, both are supported (some other types may be supported as well, such as fifos or special file devices).
See also
select
Classes hierarchy:
BaseSelector
+-- SelectSelector
+-- PollSelector
+-- EpollSelector
+-- DevpollSelector
+-- KqueueSelector
In the following, events is a bitwise mask indicating which I/O events should be waited for on a given file object. It can be a combination of the modules constants below:
Constant Meaning EVENT_READ
Available for read EVENT_WRITE
Available for write
selectors.
SelectorKey
¶A SelectorKey
is a namedtuple
used to
associate a file object to its underlying file decriptor, selected event
mask and attached data. It is returned by several BaseSelector
methods.
fileobj
¶File object registered.
fd
¶Underlying file descriptor.
events
¶Events that must be waited for on this file object.
data
¶Optional opaque data associated to this file object: for example, this could be used to store a per-client session ID.
selectors.
BaseSelector
¶A BaseSelector
is used to wait for I/O event readiness on multiple
file objects. It supports file stream registration, unregistration, and a
method to wait for I/O events on those streams, with an optional timeout.
It’s an abstract base class, so cannot be instantiated. Use
DefaultSelector
instead, or one of SelectSelector
,
KqueueSelector
etc. if you want to specifically use an
implementation, and your platform supports it.
BaseSelector
and its concrete implementations support the
context manager protocol.
register
(fileobj, events, data=None)¶Register a file object for selection, monitoring it for I/O events.
fileobj is the file object to monitor. It may either be an integer
file descriptor or an object with a fileno()
method.
events is a bitwise mask of events to monitor.
data is an opaque object.
This returns a new SelectorKey
instance, or raises a
ValueError
in case of invalid event mask or file descriptor, or
KeyError
if the file object is already registered.
unregister
(fileobj)¶Unregister a file object from selection, removing it from monitoring. A file object shall be unregistered prior to being closed.
fileobj must be a file object previously registered.
This returns the associated SelectorKey
instance, or raises a
KeyError
if fileobj is not registered. It will raise
ValueError
if fileobj is invalid (e.g. it has no fileno()
method or its fileno()
method has an invalid return value).
modify
(fileobj, events, data=None)¶Change a registered file object’s monitored events or attached data.
This is equivalent to BaseSelector.unregister(fileobj)()
followed
by BaseSelector.register(fileobj, events, data)()
, except that it
can be implemented more efficiently.
This returns a new SelectorKey
instance, or raises a
ValueError
in case of invalid event mask or file descriptor, or
KeyError
if the file object is not registered.
select
(timeout=None)¶Wait until some registered file objects become ready, or the timeout expires.
If timeout > 0
, this specifies the maximum wait time, in seconds.
If timeout <= 0
, the call won’t block, and will report the currently
ready file objects.
If timeout is None
, the call will block until a monitored file object
becomes ready.
This returns a list of (key, events)
tuples, one for each ready file
object.
key is the SelectorKey
instance corresponding to a ready file
object.
events is a bitmask of events ready on this file object.
Note
This method can return before any file object becomes ready or the timeout has elapsed if the current process receives a signal: in this case, an empty list will be returned.
Changed in version 3.5: The selector is now retried with a recomputed timeout when interrupted by a signal if the signal handler did not raise an exception (see PEP 475 for the rationale), instead of returning an empty list of events before the timeout.
close
()¶Close the selector.
This must be called to make sure that any underlying resource is freed. The selector shall not be used once it has been closed.
get_key
(fileobj)¶Return the key associated with a registered file object.
This returns the SelectorKey
instance associated to this file
object, or raises KeyError
if the file object is not registered.
get_map
()¶Return a mapping of file objects to selector keys.
This returns a Mapping
instance mapping
registered file objects to their associated SelectorKey
instance.
selectors.
DefaultSelector
¶The default selector class, using the most efficient implementation available on the current platform. This should be the default choice for most users.
selectors.
SelectSelector
¶select.select()
-based selector.
selectors.
PollSelector
¶select.poll()
-based selector.
selectors.
EpollSelector
¶select.epoll()
-based selector.
fileno
()¶This returns the file descriptor used by the underlying
select.epoll()
object.
selectors.
DevpollSelector
¶select.devpoll()
-based selector.
fileno
()¶This returns the file descriptor used by the underlying
select.devpoll()
object.
New in version 3.5.
selectors.
KqueueSelector
¶select.kqueue()
-based selector.
fileno
()¶This returns the file descriptor used by the underlying
select.kqueue()
object.
Here is a simple echo server implementation:
import selectors
import socket
sel = selectors.DefaultSelector()
def accept(sock, mask):
conn, addr = sock.accept() # Should be ready
print('accepted', conn, 'from', addr)
conn.setblocking(False)
sel.register(conn, selectors.EVENT_READ, read)
def read(conn, mask):
data = conn.recv(1000) # Should be ready
if data:
print('echoing', repr(data), 'to', conn)
conn.send(data) # Hope it won't block
else:
print('closing', conn)
sel.unregister(conn)
conn.close()
sock = socket.socket()
sock.bind(('localhost', 1234))
sock.listen(100)
sock.setblocking(False)
sel.register(sock, selectors.EVENT_READ, accept)
while True:
events = sel.select()
for key, mask in events:
callback = key.data
callback(key.fileobj, mask)