twisted.enterprise.adbapi: Twisted RDBMS support

  1. Abstract
  2. What you should already know
  3. Quick Overview
  4. How do I use adbapi?
  5. Examples of various database adapters
  6. And that's it!

Abstract

Twisted is an asynchronous networking framework, but most database API implementations unfortunately have blocking interfaces -- for this reason, twisted.enterprise.adbapi was created. It is a non-blocking interface to the standardized DB-API 2.0 API, which allows you to access a number of different RDBMSes.

What you should already know

Quick Overview

Twisted is an asynchronous framework. This means standard database modules cannot be used directly, as they typically work something like:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

# Create connection... db = dbmodule.connect('mydb', 'andrew', 'password') # ...which blocks for an unknown amount of time # Create a cursor cursor = db.cursor() # Do a query... resultset = cursor.query('SELECT * FROM table WHERE ...') # ...which could take a long time, perhaps even minutes.

Those delays are unacceptable when using an asynchronous framework such as Twisted. For this reason, twisted provides twisted.enterprise.adbapi, an asynchronous wrapper for any DB-API 2.0-compliant module.

enterprise.adbapi will do blocking database operations in separate threads, which trigger callbacks in the originating thread when they complete. In the meantime, the original thread can continue doing normal work, like servicing other requests.

How do I use adbapi?

Rather than creating a database connection directly, use the adbapi.ConnectionPool class to manage a connections for you. This allows enterprise.adbapi to use multiple connections, one per thread. This is easy:

1 2 3

# Using the "dbmodule" from the previous example, create a ConnectionPool from twisted.enterprise import adbapi dbpool = adbapi.ConnectionPool("dbmodule", 'mydb', 'andrew', 'password')

Things to note about doing this:

Now we can do a database query:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

# equivalent of cursor.execute(statement), return cursor.fetchall(): def getAge(user): return dbpool.runQuery("SELECT age FROM users WHERE name = ?", user) def printResult(l): if l: print l[0][0], "years old" else: print "No such user" getAge("joe").addCallback(printResult)

This is straightforward, except perhaps for the return value of getAge. It returns a twisted.internet.defer.Deferred, which allows arbitrary callbacks to be called upon completion (or upon failure). More documentation on Deferred is available here.

In addition to runQuery, there is also runOperation, and runInteraction that gets called with a callable (e.g. a function). The function will be called in the thread with a twisted.enterprise.adbapi.Transaction, which basically mimics a DB-API cursor. In all cases a database transaction will be commited after your database usage is finished, unless an exception is raised in which case it will be rolled back.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21

def _getAge(txn, user): # this will run in a thread, we can use blocking calls txn.execute("SELECT * FROM foo") # ... other cursor commands called on txn ... txn.execute("SELECT age FROM users WHERE name = ?", user) result = txn.fetchall() if result: return result[0][0] else: return None def getAge(user): return dbpool.runInteraction(_getAge, user) def printResult(age): if age != None: print age, "years old" else: print "No such user" getAge("joe").addCallback(printResult)

Also worth noting is that these examples assumes that dbmodule uses the qmarks paramstyle (see the DB-API specification). If your dbmodule uses a different paramstyle (e.g. pyformat) then use that. Twisted doesn't attempt to offer any sort of magic paramater munging -- runQuery(query, params, ...) maps directly onto cursor.execute(query, params, ...).

Examples of various database adapters

Notice that the first argument is the module name you would usually import and get connect(...) from, and that following arguments are whatever arguments you'd call connect(...) with.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

from twisted.enterprise import adbapi # Gadfly cp = adbapi.ConnectionPool("gadfly", "test", "/tmp/gadflyDB") # PostgreSQL PyPgSQL cp = adbapi.ConnectionPool("pyPgSQL.PgSQL", database="test") # MySQL cp = adbapi.ConnectionPool("MySQLdb", db="test")

And that's it!

That's all you need to know to use a database from within Twisted. You probably should read the adbapi module's documentation to get an idea of the other functions it has, but hopefully this document presents the core ideas.

Index

Version: 11.0.0 Site Meter