Writing Clients

  1. Overview
  2. Protocol
  3. Simple, single-use clients
  4. ClientFactory
  5. A Higher-Level Example: ircLogBot
  6. Further Reading

Overview

Twisted is a framework designed to be very flexible, and let you write powerful clients. The cost of this flexibility is a few layers in the way to writing your client. This document covers creating clients that can be used for TCP, SSL and Unix sockets, UDP is covered in a different document.

At the base, the place where you actually implement the protocol parsing and handling, is the Protocol class. This class will usually be decended from twisted.internet.protocol.Protocol. Most protocol handlers inherit either from this class or from one of its convenience children. An instance of the protocol class will be instantiated when you connect to the server, and will go away when the connection is finished. This means that persistent configuration is not saved in the Protocol.

The persistent configuration is kept in a Factory class, which usually inherits from twisted.internet.protocol.ClientFactory. The default factory class just instantiate the Protocol, and then sets on it an attribute called factory which points to itself. This let the Protocol access, and possibly modify, the persistent configuration.

Protocol

As mentioned above, this, and auxiliary classes and functions, is where most of the code is. A Twisted protocol handles data in an asynchronous manner. What this means is that the protocol never waits for an event, but rather responds to events as they arrive from the network.

Here is a simple example:

from twisted.internet.protocol import Protocol
from sys import stdout

class Echo(Protocol):
    def dataReceived(self, data):
        stdout.write(data)

This is one of the simplest protocols. It simply writes to standard output whatever it reads from the connection. There are many events it does not respond to. Here is an example of a Protocol responding to another event.

from twisted.internet.protocol import Protocol

class WelcomeMessage(Protocol):
    def connectionMade(self):
        self.transport.write("Hello server, I am the client!\r\n")
        self.transport.loseConnection()

This protocol connects to the server, sends it a welcome message, and then terminates the connection.

The connectionMade event is usually where set up of the Protocol object happens, as well as any initial greetings (as in the WelcomeMessage protocol above). Any tearing down of Protocol-specific objects is done in connectionLost.

Simple, single-use clients

In many cases, the protocol only needs to connect to the server once, and the code just wants to get a connected instance of the protocol. In those cases twisted.internet.protocol.ClientCreator provides the appropriate API.

from twisted.internet import reactor
from twisted.internet.protocol import Protocol, ClientCreator

class Greeter(Protocol):
    def sendMessage(self, msg):
        self.transport.write("MESSAGE %s\n" % msg)

def gotProtocol(p):
    p.sendMessage("Hello")
    reactor.callLater(1, p.sendMessage, "This is sent in a second")
    reactor.callLater(2, p.transport.loseConnection)

c = ClientCreator(reactor, Greeter)
c.connectTCP("localhost", 1234).addCallback(gotProtocol)

ClientFactory

We use reactor.connect* and a ClientFactory. The ClientFactory is in charge of creating the Protocol, and also receives events relating to the connection state. This allows it to do things like reconnect on the event of a connection error. Here is an example of a simple ClientFactory that uses the Echo protocol (above) and also prints what state the connection is in.

from twisted.internet.protocol import Protocol, ClientFactory
from sys import stdout

class Echo(Protocol):
    def dataReceived(self, data):
        stdout.write(data)

class EchoClientFactory(ClientFactory):
    def startedConnecting(self, connector):
        print 'Started to connect.'
    
    def buildProtocol(self, addr):
        print 'Connected.'
        return Echo()
    
    def clientConnectionLost(self, connector, reason):
        print 'Lost connection.  Reason:', reason
    
    def clientConnectionFailed(self, connector, reason):
        print 'Connection failed. Reason:', reason

To connect this EchoClientFactory to a server, you could use this code:

from twisted.internet import reactor
reactor.connectTCP(host, port, EchoClientFactory())
reactor.run()

Note that clientConnectionFailed is called when a connection could not be established, and that clientConnectionLost is called when a connection was made and then disconnected.

Reconnection

Many times, the connection of a client will be lost unintentionally due to network errors. One way to reconnect after a disconnection would be to call connector.connect() when the connection is lost:

from twisted.internet.protocol import ClientFactory

class EchoClientFactory(ClientFactory):
    def clientConnectionLost(self, connector, reason):
        connector.connect()

The connector passed as the first argument is the interface between a connection and a protocol. When the connection fails and the factory receives the clientConnectionLost event, the factory can call connector.connect() to start the connection over again from scratch.

However, most programs that want this functionality should implement ReconnectingClientFactory instead, which tries to reconnect if a connection is lost or fails, and which exponentially delays repeated reconnect attempts.

Here is the Echo protocol implemented with a ReconnectingClientFactory:

from twisted.internet.protocol import Protocol, ReconnectingClientFactory
from sys import stdout

class Echo(Protocol):
    def dataReceived(self, data):
        stdout.write(data)

class EchoClientFactory(ReconnectingClientFactory):
    def startedConnecting(self, connector):
        print 'Started to connect.'

    def buildProtocol(self, addr):
        print 'Connected.'
        print 'Resetting reconnection delay'
        self.resetDelay()
        return Echo()

    def clientConnectionLost(self, connector, reason):
        print 'Lost connection.  Reason:', reason
        ReconnectingClientFactory.clientConnectionLost(self, connector, reason)

    def clientConnectionFailed(self, connector, reason):
        print 'Connection failed. Reason:', reason
        ReconnectingClientFactory.clientConnectionFailed(self, connector,
                                                         reason)

A Higher-Level Example: ircLogBot

Overview of ircLogBot

The clients so far have been fairly simple. A more complicated example comes with Twisted Words in the doc/examples directory.

# twisted imports
from twisted.words.protocols import irc
from twisted.internet import reactor, protocol
from twisted.python import log

# system imports
import time, sys


class MessageLogger:
    """
    An independent logger class (because separation of application
    and protocol logic is a good thing).
    """
    def __init__(self, file):
        self.file = file

    def log(self, message):
        """Write a message to the file."""
        timestamp = time.strftime("[%H:%M:%S]", time.localtime(time.time()))
        self.file.write('%s %s\n' % (timestamp, message))
        self.file.flush()

    def close(self):
        self.file.close()


class LogBot(irc.IRCClient):
    """A logging IRC bot."""

    nickname = "twistedbot"

    def connectionMade(self):
        irc.IRCClient.connectionMade(self)
        self.logger = MessageLogger(open(self.factory.filename, "a"))
        self.logger.log("[connected at %s]" %
                        time.asctime(time.localtime(time.time())))

    def connectionLost(self, reason):
        irc.IRCClient.connectionLost(self, reason)
        self.logger.log("[disconnected at %s]" %
                        time.asctime(time.localtime(time.time())))
        self.logger.close()


    # callbacks for events

    def signedOn(self):
        """Called when bot has succesfully signed on to server."""
        self.join(self.factory.channel)

    def joined(self, channel):
        """This will get called when the bot joins the channel."""
        self.logger.log("[I have joined %s]" % channel)

    def privmsg(self, user, channel, msg):
        """This will get called when the bot receives a message."""
        user = user.split('!', 1)[0]
        self.logger.log("<%s> %s" % (user, msg))

        # Check to see if they're sending me a private message
        if channel == self.nickname:
            msg = "It isn't nice to whisper!  Play nice with the group."
            self.msg(user, msg)
            return

        # Otherwise check to see if it is a message directed at me
        if msg.startswith(self.nickname + ":"):
            msg = "%s: I am a log bot" % user
            self.msg(channel, msg)
            self.logger.log("<%s> %s" % (self.nickname, msg))

    def action(self, user, channel, msg):
        """This will get called when the bot sees someone do an action."""
        user = user.split('!', 1)[0]
        self.logger.log("* %s %s" % (user, msg))

    # irc callbacks

    def irc_NICK(self, prefix, params):
        """Called when an IRC user changes their nickname."""
        old_nick = prefix.split('!')[0]
        new_nick = params[0]
        self.logger.log("%s is now known as %s" % (old_nick, new_nick))


class LogBotFactory(protocol.ClientFactory):
    """A factory for LogBots.

    A new protocol instance will be created each time we connect to the server.
    """

    # the class of the protocol to build when new connection is made
    protocol = LogBot

    def __init__(self, channel, filename):
        self.channel = channel
        self.filename = filename

    def clientConnectionLost(self, connector, reason):
        """If we get disconnected, reconnect to server."""
        connector.connect()

    def clientConnectionFailed(self, connector, reason):
        print "connection failed:", reason
        reactor.stop()


if __name__ == '__main__':
    # initialize logging
    log.startLogging(sys.stdout)

    # create factory protocol and application
    f = LogBotFactory(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2])

    # connect factory to this host and port
    reactor.connectTCP("irc.freenode.net", 6667, f)

    # run bot
    reactor.run()

ircLogBot.py connects to an IRC server, joins a channel, and logs all traffic on it to a file. It demonstrates some of the connection-level logic of reconnecting on a lost connection, as well as storing persistent data in the Factory.

Persistent Data in the Factory

Since the Protocol instance is recreated each time the connection is made, the client needs some way to keep track of data that should be persisted. In the case of the logging bot, it needs to know which channel it is logging, and where to log it to.

from twisted.internet import protocol
from twisted.protocols import irc

class LogBot(irc.IRCClient):

    def connectionMade(self):
        irc.IRCClient.connectionMade(self)
        self.logger = MessageLogger(open(self.factory.filename, "a"))
        self.logger.log("[connected at %s]" %
                        time.asctime(time.localtime(time.time())))
    
    def signedOn(self):
        self.join(self.factory.channel)

    
class LogBotFactory(protocol.ClientFactory):
    
    protocol = LogBot
    
    def __init__(self, channel, filename):
        self.channel = channel
        self.filename = filename

When the protocol is created, it gets a reference to the factory as self.factory. It can then access attributes of the factory in its logic. In the case of LogBot, it opens the file and connects to the channel stored in the factory.

Further Reading

The Protocol class used throughout this document is a base implementation of IProtocol used in most Twisted applications for convenience. To learn about the completeIProtocol interface, see the API documentation for IProtocol.

The transport attribute used in some examples in this document provides the ITCPTransport interface. To learn about the complete interface, see the API documentation for ITCPTransport.

Interface classes are a way of specifying what methods and attributes an object has and how they behave. See the Components: Interfaces and Adapters document.

Index

Version: 8.2.0