import abc import re import asyncio import collections import logging import platform import time import typing import datetime from .. import version, helpers, __name__ as __base_name__ from ..crypto import rsa from ..extensions import markdown from ..network import MTProtoSender, Connection, ConnectionTcpFull, TcpMTProxy from ..sessions import Session, SQLiteSession, MemorySession from ..tl import functions, types from ..tl.alltlobjects import LAYER from .._updates import MessageBox, EntityCache as MbEntityCache, SessionState, ChannelState, Entity, EntityType DEFAULT_DC_ID = 2 DEFAULT_IPV4_IP = '149.154.167.51' DEFAULT_IPV6_IP = '2001:67c:4e8:f002::a' DEFAULT_PORT = 443 if typing.TYPE_CHECKING: from .telegramclient import TelegramClient _base_log = logging.getLogger(__base_name__) # In seconds, how long to wait before disconnecting a exported sender. _DISCONNECT_EXPORTED_AFTER = 60 class _ExportState: def __init__(self): # ``n`` is the amount of borrows a given sender has; # once ``n`` reaches ``0``, disconnect the sender after a while. self._n = 0 self._zero_ts = 0 self._connected = False def add_borrow(self): self._n += 1 self._connected = True def add_return(self): self._n -= 1 assert self._n >= 0, 'returned sender more than it was borrowed' if self._n == 0: self._zero_ts = time.time() def should_disconnect(self): return (self._n == 0 and self._connected and (time.time() - self._zero_ts) > _DISCONNECT_EXPORTED_AFTER) def need_connect(self): return not self._connected def mark_disconnected(self): assert self.should_disconnect(), 'marked as disconnected when it was borrowed' self._connected = False # TODO How hard would it be to support both `trio` and `asyncio`? class TelegramBaseClient(abc.ABC): """ This is the abstract base class for the client. It defines some basic stuff like connecting, switching data center, etc, and leaves the `__call__` unimplemented. Arguments session (`str` | `telethon.sessions.abstract.Session`, `None`): The file name of the session file to be used if a string is given (it may be a full path), or the Session instance to be used otherwise. If it's `None`, the session will not be saved, and you should call :meth:`.log_out()` when you're done. Note that if you pass a string it will be a file in the current working directory, although you can also pass absolute paths. The session file contains enough information for you to login without re-sending the code, so if you have to enter the code more than once, maybe you're changing the working directory, renaming or removing the file, or using random names. api_id (`int` | `str`): The API ID you obtained from https://my.telegram.org. api_hash (`str`): The API hash you obtained from https://my.telegram.org. connection (`telethon.network.connection.common.Connection`, optional): The connection instance to be used when creating a new connection to the servers. It **must** be a type. Defaults to `telethon.network.connection.tcpfull.ConnectionTcpFull`. use_ipv6 (`bool`, optional): Whether to connect to the servers through IPv6 or not. By default this is `False` as IPv6 support is not too widespread yet. proxy (`tuple` | `list` | `dict`, optional): An iterable consisting of the proxy info. If `connection` is one of `MTProxy`, then it should contain MTProxy credentials: ``('hostname', port, 'secret')``. Otherwise, it's meant to store function parameters for PySocks, like ``(type, 'hostname', port)``. See https://github.com/Anorov/PySocks#usage-1 for more. local_addr (`str` | `tuple`, optional): Local host address (and port, optionally) used to bind the socket to locally. You only need to use this if you have multiple network cards and want to use a specific one. timeout (`int` | `float`, optional): The timeout in seconds to be used when connecting. This is **not** the timeout to be used when ``await``'ing for invoked requests, and you should use ``asyncio.wait`` or ``asyncio.wait_for`` for that. request_retries (`int` | `None`, optional): How many times a request should be retried. Request are retried when Telegram is having internal issues (due to either ``errors.ServerError`` or ``errors.RpcCallFailError``), when there is a ``errors.FloodWaitError`` less than `flood_sleep_threshold`, or when there's a migrate error. May take a negative or `None` value for infinite retries, but this is not recommended, since some requests can always trigger a call fail (such as searching for messages). connection_retries (`int` | `None`, optional): How many times the reconnection should retry, either on the initial connection or when Telegram disconnects us. May be set to a negative or `None` value for infinite retries, but this is not recommended, since the program can get stuck in an infinite loop. retry_delay (`int` | `float`, optional): The delay in seconds to sleep between automatic reconnections. auto_reconnect (`bool`, optional): Whether reconnection should be retried `connection_retries` times automatically if Telegram disconnects us or not. sequential_updates (`bool`, optional): By default every incoming update will create a new task, so you can handle several updates in parallel. Some scripts need the order in which updates are processed to be sequential, and this setting allows them to do so. If set to `True`, incoming updates will be put in a queue and processed sequentially. This means your event handlers should *not* perform long-running operations since new updates are put inside of an unbounded queue. flood_sleep_threshold (`int` | `float`, optional): The threshold below which the library should automatically sleep on flood wait and slow mode wait errors (inclusive). For instance, if a ``FloodWaitError`` for 17s occurs and `flood_sleep_threshold` is 20s, the library will ``sleep`` automatically. If the error was for 21s, it would ``raise FloodWaitError`` instead. Values larger than a day (like ``float('inf')``) will be changed to a day. raise_last_call_error (`bool`, optional): When API calls fail in a way that causes Telethon to retry automatically, should the RPC error of the last attempt be raised instead of a generic ValueError. This is mostly useful for detecting when Telegram has internal issues. device_model (`str`, optional): "Device model" to be sent when creating the initial connection. Defaults to 'PC (n)bit' derived from ``platform.uname().machine``, or its direct value if unknown. system_version (`str`, optional): "System version" to be sent when creating the initial connection. Defaults to ``platform.uname().release`` stripped of everything ahead of -. app_version (`str`, optional): "App version" to be sent when creating the initial connection. Defaults to `telethon.version.__version__`. lang_code (`str`, optional): "Language code" to be sent when creating the initial connection. Defaults to ``'en'``. system_lang_code (`str`, optional): "System lang code" to be sent when creating the initial connection. Defaults to `lang_code`. loop (`asyncio.AbstractEventLoop`, optional): Asyncio event loop to use. Defaults to `asyncio.get_running_loop()`. This argument is ignored. base_logger (`str` | `logging.Logger`, optional): Base logger name or instance to use. If a `str` is given, it'll be passed to `logging.getLogger()`. If a `logging.Logger` is given, it'll be used directly. If something else or nothing is given, the default logger will be used. receive_updates (`bool`, optional): Whether the client will receive updates or not. By default, updates will be received from Telegram as they occur. Turning this off means that Telegram will not send updates at all so event handlers, conversations, and QR login will not work. However, certain scripts don't need updates, so this will reduce the amount of bandwidth used. entity_cache_limit (`int`, optional): How many users, chats and channels to keep in the in-memory cache at most. This limit is checked against when processing updates. When this limit is reached or exceeded, all entities that are not required for update handling will be flushed to the session file. Note that this implies that there is a lower bound to the amount of entities that must be kept in memory. Setting this limit too low will cause the library to attempt to flush entities to the session file even if no entities can be removed from the in-memory cache, which will degrade performance. """ # Current TelegramClient version __version__ = version.__version__ # Cached server configuration (with .dc_options), can be "global" _config = None _cdn_config = None # region Initialization def __init__( self: 'TelegramClient', session: 'typing.Union[str, Session]', api_id: int, api_hash: str, *, connection: 'typing.Type[Connection]' = ConnectionTcpFull, use_ipv6: bool = False, proxy: typing.Union[tuple, dict] = None, local_addr: typing.Union[str, tuple] = None, timeout: int = 10, request_retries: int = 5, connection_retries: int = 5, retry_delay: int = 1, auto_reconnect: bool = True, sequential_updates: bool = False, flood_sleep_threshold: int = 60, raise_last_call_error: bool = False, device_model: str = None, system_version: str = None, app_version: str = None, lang_code: str = 'en', system_lang_code: str = 'en', loop: asyncio.AbstractEventLoop = None, base_logger: typing.Union[str, logging.Logger] = None, receive_updates: bool = True, catch_up: bool = False, entity_cache_limit: int = 5000 ): if not api_id or not api_hash: raise ValueError( "Your API ID or Hash cannot be empty or None. " "Refer to telethon.rtfd.io for more information.") self._use_ipv6 = use_ipv6 if isinstance(base_logger, str): base_logger = logging.getLogger(base_logger) elif not isinstance(base_logger, logging.Logger): base_logger = _base_log class _Loggers(dict): def __missing__(self, key): if key.startswith("telethon."): key = key.split('.', maxsplit=1)[1] return base_logger.getChild(key) self._log = _Loggers() # Determine what session object we have if isinstance(session, str) or session is None: try: session = SQLiteSession(session) except ImportError: import warnings warnings.warn( 'The sqlite3 module is not available under this ' 'Python installation and no custom session ' 'instance was given; using MemorySession.\n' 'You will need to re-login every time unless ' 'you use another session storage' ) session = MemorySession() elif not isinstance(session, Session): raise TypeError( 'The given session must be a str or a Session instance.' ) # ':' in session.server_address is True if it's an IPv6 address if (not session.server_address or (':' in session.server_address) != use_ipv6): session.set_dc( DEFAULT_DC_ID, DEFAULT_IPV6_IP if self._use_ipv6 else DEFAULT_IPV4_IP, DEFAULT_PORT ) self.flood_sleep_threshold = flood_sleep_threshold # TODO Use AsyncClassWrapper(session) # ChatGetter and SenderGetter can use the in-memory _mb_entity_cache # to avoid network access and the need for await in session files. # # The session files only wants the entities to persist # them to disk, and to save additional useful information. # TODO Session should probably return all cached # info of entities, not just the input versions self.session = session self.api_id = int(api_id) self.api_hash = api_hash # Current proxy implementation requires `sock_connect`, and some # event loops lack this method. If the current loop is missing it, # bail out early and suggest an alternative. # # TODO A better fix is obviously avoiding the use of `sock_connect` # # See https://github.com/LonamiWebs/Telethon/issues/1337 for details. if not callable(getattr(self.loop, 'sock_connect', None)): raise TypeError( 'Event loop of type {} lacks `sock_connect`, which is needed to use proxies.\n\n' 'Change the event loop in use to use proxies:\n' '# https://github.com/LonamiWebs/Telethon/issues/1337\n' 'import asyncio\n' 'asyncio.set_event_loop(asyncio.SelectorEventLoop())'.format( self.loop.__class__.__name__ ) ) if local_addr is not None: if use_ipv6 is False and ':' in local_addr: raise TypeError( 'A local IPv6 address must only be used with `use_ipv6=True`.' ) elif use_ipv6 is True and ':' not in local_addr: raise TypeError( '`use_ipv6=True` must only be used with a local IPv6 address.' ) self._raise_last_call_error = raise_last_call_error self._request_retries = request_retries self._connection_retries = connection_retries self._retry_delay = retry_delay or 0 self._proxy = proxy self._local_addr = local_addr self._timeout = timeout self._auto_reconnect = auto_reconnect assert isinstance(connection, type) self._connection = connection init_proxy = None if not issubclass(connection, TcpMTProxy) else \ types.InputClientProxy(*connection.address_info(proxy)) # Used on connection. Capture the variables in a lambda since # exporting clients need to create this InvokeWithLayerRequest. system = platform.uname() if system.machine in ('x86_64', 'AMD64'): default_device_model = 'PC 64bit' elif system.machine in ('i386','i686','x86'): default_device_model = 'PC 32bit' else: default_device_model = system.machine default_system_version = re.sub(r'-.+','',system.release) self._init_request = functions.InitConnectionRequest( api_id=self.api_id, device_model=device_model or default_device_model or 'Unknown', system_version=system_version or default_system_version or '1.0', app_version=app_version or self.__version__, lang_code=lang_code, system_lang_code=system_lang_code, lang_pack='', # "langPacks are for official apps only" query=None, proxy=init_proxy ) # Remember flood-waited requests to avoid making them again self._flood_waited_requests = {} # Cache ``{dc_id: (_ExportState, MTProtoSender)}`` for all borrowed senders self._borrowed_senders = {} self._borrow_sender_lock = asyncio.Lock() self._updates_error = None self._updates_handle = None self._keepalive_handle = None self._last_request = time.time() self._no_updates = not receive_updates # Used for non-sequential updates, in order to terminate all pending tasks on disconnect. self._sequential_updates = sequential_updates self._event_handler_tasks = set() self._authorized = None # None = unknown, False = no, True = yes # Some further state for subclasses self._event_builders = [] # {chat_id: {Conversation}} self._conversations = collections.defaultdict(set) # Hack to workaround the fact Telegram may send album updates as # different Updates when being sent from a different data center. # {grouped_id: AlbumHack} # # FIXME: We don't bother cleaning this up because it's not really # worth it, albums are pretty rare and this only holds them # for a second at most. self._albums = {} # Default parse mode self._parse_mode = markdown # Some fields to easy signing in. Let {phone: hash} be # a dictionary because the user may change their mind. self._phone_code_hash = {} self._phone = None self._tos = None # A place to store if channels are a megagroup or not (see `edit_admin`) self._megagroup_cache = {} # This is backported from v2 in a very ad-hoc way just to get proper update handling self._catch_up = catch_up self._updates_queue = asyncio.Queue() self._message_box = MessageBox(self._log['messagebox']) self._mb_entity_cache = MbEntityCache() # required for proper update handling (to know when to getDifference) self._entity_cache_limit = entity_cache_limit self._sender = MTProtoSender( self.session.auth_key, loggers=self._log, retries=self._connection_retries, delay=self._retry_delay, auto_reconnect=self._auto_reconnect, connect_timeout=self._timeout, auth_key_callback=self._auth_key_callback, updates_queue=self._updates_queue, auto_reconnect_callback=self._handle_auto_reconnect ) # endregion # region Properties @property def loop(self: 'TelegramClient') -> asyncio.AbstractEventLoop: """ Property with the ``asyncio`` event loop used by this client. Example .. code-block:: python # Download media in the background task = client.loop.create_task(message.download_media()) # Do some work ... # Join the task (wait for it to complete) await task """ return helpers.get_running_loop() @property def disconnected(self: 'TelegramClient') -> asyncio.Future: """ Property with a ``Future`` that resolves upon disconnection. Example .. code-block:: python # Wait for a disconnection to occur try: await client.disconnected except OSError: print('Error on disconnect') """ return self._sender.disconnected @property def flood_sleep_threshold(self): return self._flood_sleep_threshold @flood_sleep_threshold.setter def flood_sleep_threshold(self, value): # None -> 0, negative values don't really matter self._flood_sleep_threshold = min(value or 0, 24 * 60 * 60) # endregion # region Connecting async def connect(self: 'TelegramClient') -> None: """ Connects to Telegram. .. note:: Connect means connect and nothing else, and only one low-level request is made to notify Telegram about which layer we will be using. Before Telegram sends you updates, you need to make a high-level request, like `client.get_me() `, as described in https://core.telegram.org/api/updates. Example .. code-block:: python try: await client.connect() except OSError: print('Failed to connect') """ if self.session is None: raise ValueError('TelegramClient instance cannot be reused after logging out') if not await self._sender.connect(self._connection( self.session.server_address, self.session.port, self.session.dc_id, loggers=self._log, proxy=self._proxy, local_addr=self._local_addr )): # We don't want to init or modify anything if we were already connected return self.session.auth_key = self._sender.auth_key self.session.save() try: # See comment when saving entities to understand this hack self_id = self.session.get_input_entity(0).access_hash self_user = self.session.get_input_entity(self_id) self._mb_entity_cache.set_self_user(self_id, None, self_user.access_hash) except ValueError: pass if self._catch_up: ss = SessionState(0, 0, False, 0, 0, 0, 0, None) cs = [] for entity_id, state in self.session.get_update_states(): if entity_id == 0: # TODO current session doesn't store self-user info but adding that is breaking on downstream session impls ss = SessionState(0, 0, False, state.pts, state.qts, int(state.date.timestamp()), state.seq, None) else: cs.append(ChannelState(entity_id, state.pts)) self._message_box.load(ss, cs) for state in cs: entity = self.session.get_input_entity(state.channel_id) if entity: self._mb_entity_cache.put(Entity(EntityType.CHANNEL, entity.channel_id, entity.access_hash)) self._init_request.query = functions.help.GetConfigRequest() req = self._init_request if self._no_updates: req = functions.InvokeWithoutUpdatesRequest(req) await self._sender.send(functions.InvokeWithLayerRequest(LAYER, req)) if self._message_box.is_empty(): me = await self.get_me() if me: await self._on_login(me) # also calls GetState to initialize the MessageBox self._updates_handle = self.loop.create_task(self._update_loop()) self._keepalive_handle = self.loop.create_task(self._keepalive_loop()) def is_connected(self: 'TelegramClient') -> bool: """ Returns `True` if the user has connected. This method is **not** asynchronous (don't use ``await`` on it). Example .. code-block:: python while client.is_connected(): await asyncio.sleep(1) """ sender = getattr(self, '_sender', None) return sender and sender.is_connected() def disconnect(self: 'TelegramClient'): """ Disconnects from Telegram. If the event loop is already running, this method returns a coroutine that you should await on your own code; otherwise the loop is ran until said coroutine completes. Event handlers which are currently running will be cancelled before this function returns (in order to properly clean-up their tasks). In particular, this means that using ``disconnect`` in a handler will cause code after the ``disconnect`` to never run. If this is needed, consider spawning a separate task to do the remaining work. Example .. code-block:: python # You don't need to use this if you used "with client" await client.disconnect() """ if self.loop.is_running(): # Disconnect may be called from an event handler, which would # cancel itself during itself and never actually complete the # disconnection. Shield the task to prevent disconnect itself # from being cancelled. See issue #3942 for more details. return asyncio.shield(self.loop.create_task(self._disconnect_coro())) else: try: self.loop.run_until_complete(self._disconnect_coro()) except RuntimeError: # Python 3.5.x complains when called from # `__aexit__` and there were pending updates with: # "Event loop stopped before Future completed." # # However, it doesn't really make a lot of sense. pass def set_proxy(self: 'TelegramClient', proxy: typing.Union[tuple, dict]): """ Changes the proxy which will be used on next (re)connection. Method has no immediate effects if the client is currently connected. The new proxy will take it's effect on the next reconnection attempt: - on a call `await client.connect()` (after complete disconnect) - on auto-reconnect attempt (e.g, after previous connection was lost) """ init_proxy = None if not issubclass(self._connection, TcpMTProxy) else \ types.InputClientProxy(*self._connection.address_info(proxy)) self._init_request.proxy = init_proxy self._proxy = proxy # While `await client.connect()` passes new proxy on each new call, # auto-reconnect attempts use already set up `_connection` inside # the `_sender`, so the only way to change proxy between those # is to directly inject parameters. connection = getattr(self._sender, "_connection", None) if connection: if isinstance(connection, TcpMTProxy): connection._ip = proxy[0] connection._port = proxy[1] else: connection._proxy = proxy def _save_states_and_entities(self: 'TelegramClient'): entities = self._mb_entity_cache.get_all_entities() # Piggy-back on an arbitrary TL type with users and chats so the session can understand to read the entities. # It doesn't matter if we put users in the list of chats. self.session.process_entities(types.contacts.ResolvedPeer(None, [e._as_input_peer() for e in entities], [])) # As a hack to not need to change the session files, save ourselves with ``id=0`` and ``access_hash`` of our ``id``. # This way it is possible to determine our own ID by querying for 0. However, whether we're a bot is not saved. if self._mb_entity_cache.self_id: self.session.process_entities(types.contacts.ResolvedPeer(None, [types.InputPeerUser(0, self._mb_entity_cache.self_id)], [])) ss, cs = self._message_box.session_state() self.session.set_update_state(0, types.updates.State(**ss, unread_count=0)) now = datetime.datetime.now() # any datetime works; channels don't need it for channel_id, pts in cs.items(): self.session.set_update_state(channel_id, types.updates.State(pts, 0, now, 0, unread_count=0)) async def _disconnect_coro(self: 'TelegramClient'): if self.session is None: return # already logged out and disconnected await self._disconnect() # Also clean-up all exported senders because we're done with them async with self._borrow_sender_lock: for state, sender in self._borrowed_senders.values(): # Note that we're not checking for `state.should_disconnect()`. # If the user wants to disconnect the client, ALL connections # to Telegram (including exported senders) should be closed. # # Disconnect should never raise, so there's no try/except. await sender.disconnect() # Can't use `mark_disconnected` because it may be borrowed. state._connected = False # If any was borrowed self._borrowed_senders.clear() # trio's nurseries would handle this for us, but this is asyncio. # All tasks spawned in the background should properly be terminated. if self._event_handler_tasks: for task in self._event_handler_tasks: task.cancel() await asyncio.wait(self._event_handler_tasks) self._event_handler_tasks.clear() self._save_states_and_entities() self.session.close() async def _disconnect(self: 'TelegramClient'): """ Disconnect only, without closing the session. Used in reconnections to different data centers, where we don't want to close the session file; user disconnects however should close it since it means that their job with the client is complete and we should clean it up all. """ await self._sender.disconnect() await helpers._cancel(self._log[__name__], updates_handle=self._updates_handle, keepalive_handle=self._keepalive_handle) async def _switch_dc(self: 'TelegramClient', new_dc): """ Permanently switches the current connection to the new data center. """ self._log[__name__].info('Reconnecting to new data center %s', new_dc) dc = await self._get_dc(new_dc) self.session.set_dc(dc.id, dc.ip_address, dc.port) # auth_key's are associated with a server, which has now changed # so it's not valid anymore. Set to None to force recreating it. self._sender.auth_key.key = None self.session.auth_key = None self.session.save() await self._disconnect() return await self.connect() def _auth_key_callback(self: 'TelegramClient', auth_key): """ Callback from the sender whenever it needed to generate a new authorization key. This means we are not authorized. """ self.session.auth_key = auth_key self.session.save() # endregion # region Working with different connections/Data Centers async def _get_dc(self: 'TelegramClient', dc_id, cdn=False): """Gets the Data Center (DC) associated to 'dc_id'""" cls = self.__class__ if not cls._config: cls._config = await self(functions.help.GetConfigRequest()) if cdn and not self._cdn_config: cls._cdn_config = await self(functions.help.GetCdnConfigRequest()) for pk in cls._cdn_config.public_keys: rsa.add_key(pk.public_key) try: return next( dc for dc in cls._config.dc_options if dc.id == dc_id and bool(dc.ipv6) == self._use_ipv6 and bool(dc.cdn) == cdn ) except StopIteration: self._log[__name__].warning( 'Failed to get DC %s (cdn = %s) with use_ipv6 = %s; retrying ignoring IPv6 check', dc_id, cdn, self._use_ipv6 ) return next( dc for dc in cls._config.dc_options if dc.id == dc_id and bool(dc.cdn) == cdn ) async def _create_exported_sender(self: 'TelegramClient', dc_id): """ Creates a new exported `MTProtoSender` for the given `dc_id` and returns it. This method should be used by `_borrow_exported_sender`. """ # Thanks badoualy/kotlogram on /telegram/api/DefaultTelegramClient.kt # for clearly showing how to export the authorization dc = await self._get_dc(dc_id) # Can't reuse self._sender._connection as it has its own seqno. # # If one were to do that, Telegram would reset the connection # with no further clues. sender = MTProtoSender(None, loggers=self._log) await sender.connect(self._connection( dc.ip_address, dc.port, dc.id, loggers=self._log, proxy=self._proxy, local_addr=self._local_addr )) self._log[__name__].info('Exporting auth for new borrowed sender in %s', dc) auth = await self(functions.auth.ExportAuthorizationRequest(dc_id)) self._init_request.query = functions.auth.ImportAuthorizationRequest(id=auth.id, bytes=auth.bytes) req = functions.InvokeWithLayerRequest(LAYER, self._init_request) await sender.send(req) return sender async def _borrow_exported_sender(self: 'TelegramClient', dc_id): """ Borrows a connected `MTProtoSender` for the given `dc_id`. If it's not cached, creates a new one if it doesn't exist yet, and imports a freshly exported authorization key for it to be usable. Once its job is over it should be `_return_exported_sender`. """ async with self._borrow_sender_lock: self._log[__name__].debug('Borrowing sender for dc_id %d', dc_id) state, sender = self._borrowed_senders.get(dc_id, (None, None)) if state is None: state = _ExportState() sender = await self._create_exported_sender(dc_id) sender.dc_id = dc_id self._borrowed_senders[dc_id] = (state, sender) elif state.need_connect(): dc = await self._get_dc(dc_id) await sender.connect(self._connection( dc.ip_address, dc.port, dc.id, loggers=self._log, proxy=self._proxy, local_addr=self._local_addr )) state.add_borrow() return sender async def _return_exported_sender(self: 'TelegramClient', sender): """ Returns a borrowed exported sender. If all borrows have been returned, the sender is cleanly disconnected. """ async with self._borrow_sender_lock: self._log[__name__].debug('Returning borrowed sender for dc_id %d', sender.dc_id) state, _ = self._borrowed_senders[sender.dc_id] state.add_return() async def _clean_exported_senders(self: 'TelegramClient'): """ Cleans-up all unused exported senders by disconnecting them. """ async with self._borrow_sender_lock: for dc_id, (state, sender) in self._borrowed_senders.items(): if state.should_disconnect(): self._log[__name__].info( 'Disconnecting borrowed sender for DC %d', dc_id) # Disconnect should never raise await sender.disconnect() state.mark_disconnected() async def _get_cdn_client(self: 'TelegramClient', cdn_redirect): """Similar to ._borrow_exported_client, but for CDNs""" # TODO Implement raise NotImplementedError session = self._exported_sessions.get(cdn_redirect.dc_id) if not session: dc = await self._get_dc(cdn_redirect.dc_id, cdn=True) session = self.session.clone() session.set_dc(dc.id, dc.ip_address, dc.port) self._exported_sessions[cdn_redirect.dc_id] = session self._log[__name__].info('Creating new CDN client') client = TelegramBaseClient( session, self.api_id, self.api_hash, proxy=self._sender.connection.conn.proxy, timeout=self._sender.connection.get_timeout() ) # This will make use of the new RSA keys for this specific CDN. # # We won't be calling GetConfigRequest because it's only called # when needed by ._get_dc, and also it's static so it's likely # set already. Avoid invoking non-CDN methods by not syncing updates. client.connect(_sync_updates=False) return client # endregion # region Invoking Telegram requests @abc.abstractmethod def __call__(self: 'TelegramClient', request, ordered=False): """ Invokes (sends) one or more MTProtoRequests and returns (receives) their result. Args: request (`TLObject` | `list`): The request or requests to be invoked. ordered (`bool`, optional): Whether the requests (if more than one was given) should be executed sequentially on the server. They run in arbitrary order by default. flood_sleep_threshold (`int` | `None`, optional): The flood sleep threshold to use for this request. This overrides the default value stored in `client.flood_sleep_threshold ` Returns: The result of the request (often a `TLObject`) or a list of results if more than one request was given. """ raise NotImplementedError @abc.abstractmethod def _update_loop(self: 'TelegramClient'): raise NotImplementedError @abc.abstractmethod async def _handle_auto_reconnect(self: 'TelegramClient'): raise NotImplementedError # endregion