This is mostly networking library. It implements main loop based on greenlets. Mostly suitable for servers of some kind.
API's implemented so far:
- Zeromq
- Redis
- MySQL
- Mongo
- HTTP/HTTPS (client)
- DNS (async)
Features:
- Only for Python3 (works with 3.2, needs 3.3 for zorro.web)
- Full set of synchronisation primitives (incl. Futures, Lock, Conditions...)
- Pipelining for all network protocols
- Pure python implementation (still outperforms C implementations for many tasks because of pipelining)
- Basic web framework for zerogw
- Pluggable polling mechanisms
Usage:
from zorro import Hub
hub = Hub()
@hub.run
def main():
# setup other coroutines here
return
Basic zmq replier example. Each reply will get it's own microthread:
from zorro import Hub, zmq
def replier(preference,*other_multipart_args):
if preference == b'binary':
return b'hello'
elif preference == b'unicode':
return 'hello' # same as above, encoded in 'utf-8'
elif preference == b'tuple':
return 'hello', 'world' # two parts will be sent
else:
# exeption will be logged, but reply is not sent
# so you must timeout on the other side
# other requests will be ok (we use ZMQ_XREP actually)
raise ValueError(preference)
hub = Hub()
@hub.run
def main():
sock = zmq.rep_socket(replier)
sock.connect('tcp://somewhere')
Some advanced redis usage example:
from zorro import Hub, redis, Future
from functools import partial
hub = Hub()
redis = redis.Redis()
def getkey(index):
# Semi-parallel requests will be pipelined so it's quite fast
a = redis.execute('INCR', 'test:{0}'.format(index-1), 1)
redis.execute('DECR', 'test:{0}'.format(index+1), a)
return int(redis.execute('GET', 'test:{0}'.format(index)))
@hub.run
def main():
futures = [Future(partial(getkey, i)) for i in range(100)]
print("TOTAL", sum(f.get() for f in futures))