Note: This document is relevant for the version of Twisted that was current at IPC10. It has since been superseded by many changes to the Python API. It is remaining unchanged for historical reasons, but please refer to documentation for the specific system you are looking for and not these papers for current information.

The World of Software is a World of Constant Change

Twisted has undergone several major revisions since Moshe Zadka and I wrote the "The Twisted Network Framework". Most of these changes have not deviated from the central vision of the framework, but almost all of the code listings have been re-visited and enhanced in some way.

So, while the paper was correct at the time that it was originally written, a few things have changed which have invalidated portions of it.

Most significant is the fact that almost all methods which pass callbacks of some kind have been changed to take no callback or error-callback arguments, and instead return an instance of a twisted.python.defer.Deferred. This means that an asynchronous function can be easily identified visually because it will be of the form: async_obj.asyncMethod("foo").addCallbacks(succeded, failed). There is also a utility method addCallback which makes it more convenient to pass additional arguments to a callback function and omit special-case error handling.

While it is still backwards compatible, twisted.internet.passport has been re-named to twisted.cred, and the various classes in it have been split out into submodules of that package, and the various remote-object superclasses have been moved out of twisted.spread.pb and put into twisted.spread.flavors.

Application.listenOn has been replaced with the more descripively named Application.listenTCP, Application.listenUDP, and Application.listenSSL.

twisted.web.widgets has progressed quite far since the paper was written! One description specifically given in the paper is no longer correct:

The namespace for evaluating the template expressions is obtained by scanning the class hierarchy for attributes, and getting each of those attributes from the current instance. This means that all methods will be bound methods, so indicating "self" explicitly is not required. While it is possible to override the method for creating namespaces, using this default has the effect of associating all presentation code for a particular widget in one class, along with its template. If one is working with a non-programmer designer, and the template is in an external file, it is always very clear to the designer what functionality is available to them in any given scope, because there is a list of available methods for any given class.

This is still possible to avoid breakages in old code, but after some experimentation, it became clear that simply passing self was an easier method for creating the namespace, both for designers and programmers.

In addition, since the advent of Zope3, interoperability with Zope has become increasingly interesting possibility for the Twisted development team, since it would be desirable if Twisted could use their excellent strategy for content-management, while still maintaining Twisted's advantages in the arena of multi-protocol servers. Of particular interest has been Zope Presentation Templates, since they seem to be a truly robust solution for keeping design discrete from code, compatible with the event-based method in which twisted.web.widgets processes web requests. twisted.web.widgets.ZopePresentationTemplate may be opening soon in a theatre near you!

The following code examples are corrected or modernized versions of the ones that appear in the paper.

Listing 9: A remotely accessible object and accompanying call
# Server Side
class MyObject(pb.Referenceable):
    def remote_doIt(self):
        return "did it"

# Client Side
    ...
    def myCallback(result):
        print result # result will be 'did it'
    def myErrback(stacktrace):
        print 'oh no, mr. bill!'
        print stacktrace
    myRemoteReference.doIt().addCallbacks(myCallback,
                                          myErrback)
Listing 10: An object responding to its calling perspective
# Server Side
class Greeter(pb.Viewable):
    def view_greet(self, actor):
        return "Hello %s!\n" % actor.perspectiveName

# Client Side
    ...
    remoteGreeter.greet().addCallback(sys.stdout.write)
    ...
Listing 12: A client for Echoer objects.
from twisted.spread import pb
from twisted.internet import main
def gotObject(object):
    print "got object:",object
    object.echo("hello network".addCallback(gotEcho)
def gotEcho(echo):
    print 'server echoed:',echo
    main.shutDown()
def gotNoObject(reason):
    print "no object:",reason
    main.shutDown()
pb.getObjectAt("localhost", 8789, gotObject, gotNoObject, 30)
main.run()
Listing 13: A PB server using twisted's "passport" authentication.
from twisted.spread import pb
from twisted.internet import main
class SimplePerspective(pb.Perspective):
    def perspective_echo(self, text):
        print 'echoing',text
        return text
class SimpleService(pb.Service):
    def getPerspectiveNamed(self, name):
        return SimplePerspective(name, self)
if __name__ == '__main__':
    import pbecho
    app = main.Application("pbecho")
    pbecho.SimpleService("pbecho",app).getPerspectiveNamed("guest").makeIdentity("guest")
    app.listenTCP(pb.portno, pb.BrokerFactory(pb.AuthRoot(app)))
    app.save("start")
Listing 14: Connecting to an Authorized Service
from twisted.spread import pb
from twisted.internet import main
def success(message):
    print "Message received:",message
    main.shutDown()
def failure(error):
    print "Failure...",error
    main.shutDown()
def connected(perspective):
    perspective.echo("hello world").addCallbacks(success, failure)
    print "connected."

pb.connect("localhost", pb.portno, "guest", "guest",
           "pbecho", "guest", 30).addCallbacks(connected,
                                               failure)
main.run()
Listing 15: A Twisted GUI application
from twisted.internet import main, ingtkernet
from twisted.spread.ui import gtkutil
import gtk
ingtkernet.install()
class EchoClient:
    def __init__(self, echoer):
        l.hide()
        self.echoer = echoer
        w = gtk.GtkWindow(gtk.WINDOW_TOPLEVEL)
        vb = gtk.GtkVBox(); b = gtk.GtkButton("Echo:")
        self.entry = gtk.GtkEntry(); self.outry = gtk.GtkEntry()
        w.add(vb)
        map(vb.add, [b, self.entry, self.outry])
        b.connect('clicked', self.clicked)
        w.connect('destroy', gtk.mainquit)
        w.show_all()
    def clicked(self, b):
        txt = self.entry.get_text()
        self.entry.set_text("")
        self.echoer.echo(txt).addCallback(self.outry.set_text)
l = gtkutil.Login(EchoClient, None, initialService="pbecho")
l.show_all()
gtk.mainloop()
Listing 16: an event-based web widget.
from twisted.spread import pb
from twisted.python import defer
from twisted.web import widgets
class EchoDisplay(widgets.Gadget, widgets.Presentation):
    template = """<H1>Welcome to my widget, displaying %%%%echotext%%%%.</h1>
    <p>Here it is: %%%%getEchoPerspective()%%%%</p>"""
    echotext = 'hello web!'
    def getEchoPerspective(self):
        return ['<b>',
            pb.connect("localhost", pb.portno,
                   "guest", "guest", "pbecho", "guest", 1).
                addCallbacks(self.makeListOf, self.formatTraceback)
            ,'</b>']
    def makeListOf(self, echoer):
        return [echoer.echo(self.echotext).addCallback(lambda x: [x])]
if __name__ == "__main__":
    from twisted.web import server
    from twisted.internet import main
    a = main.Application("pbweb")
    a.listenTCP(8080, server.Site(EchoDisplay()))
    a.run()