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366 lines
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ReStructuredText
366 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _mastering-asyncio:
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=================
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Mastering asyncio
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=================
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.. contents::
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What's asyncio?
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===============
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`asyncio` is a Python 3's built-in library. This means it's already installed if
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you have Python 3. Since Python 3.5, it is convenient to work with asynchronous
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code. Before (Python 3.4) we didn't have ``async`` or ``await``, but now we do.
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`asyncio` stands for *Asynchronous Input Output*. This is a very powerful
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concept to use whenever you work IO. Interacting with the web or external
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APIs such as Telegram's makes a lot of sense this way.
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Why asyncio?
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============
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Asynchronous IO makes a lot of sense in a library like Telethon.
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You send a request to the server (such as "get some message"), and
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thanks to `asyncio`, your code won't block while a response arrives.
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The alternative would be to spawn a thread for each update so that
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other code can run while the response arrives. That is *a lot* more
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expensive.
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The code will also run faster, because instead of switching back and
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forth between the OS and your script, your script can handle it all.
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Avoiding switching saves quite a bit of time, in Python or any other
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language that supports asynchronous IO. It will also be cheaper,
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because tasks are smaller than threads, which are smaller than processes.
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What are asyncio basics?
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========================
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.. code-block:: python
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# First we need the asyncio library
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import asyncio
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# Then we need a loop to work with
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loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
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# We also need something to run
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async def main():
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for char in 'Hello, world!\n':
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print(char, end='', flush=True)
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await asyncio.sleep(0.2)
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# Then, we need to run the loop with a task
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loop.run_until_complete(main())
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What does telethon.sync do?
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===========================
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The moment you import any of these:
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.. code-block:: python
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from telethon import sync, ...
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# or
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from telethon.sync import ...
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# or
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import telethon.sync
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The ``sync`` module rewrites most ``async def``
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methods in Telethon to something similar to this:
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.. code-block:: python
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def new_method():
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result = original_method()
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if loop.is_running():
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# the loop is already running, return the await-able to the user
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return result
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else:
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# the loop is not running yet, so we can run it for the user
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return loop.run_until_complete(result)
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That means you can do this:
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.. code-block:: python
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print(client.get_me().username)
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Instead of this:
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.. code-block:: python
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me = client.loop.run_until_complete(client.get_me())
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print(me.username)
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# or, using asyncio's default loop (it's the same)
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import asyncio
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loop = asyncio.get_event_loop() # == client.loop
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me = loop.run_until_complete(client.get_me())
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print(me.username)
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As you can see, it's a lot of boilerplate and noise having to type
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``run_until_complete`` all the time, so you can let the magic module
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to rewrite it for you. But notice the comment above: it won't run
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the loop if it's already running, because it can't. That means this:
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.. code-block:: python
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async def main():
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# 3. the loop is running here
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print(
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client.get_me() # 4. this will return a coroutine!
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.username # 5. this fails, coroutines don't have usernames
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)
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loop.run_until_complete( # 2. run the loop and the ``main()`` coroutine
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main() # 1. calling ``async def`` "returns" a coroutine
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)
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Will fail. So if you're inside an ``async def``, then the loop is
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running, and if the loop is running, you must ``await`` things yourself:
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.. code-block:: python
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async def main():
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print((await client.get_me()).username)
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loop.run_until_complete(main())
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What are async, await and coroutines?
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=====================================
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The ``async`` keyword lets you define asynchronous functions,
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also known as coroutines, and also iterate over asynchronous
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loops or use ``async with``:
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.. code-block:: python
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import asyncio
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async def main():
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# ^ this declares the main() coroutine function
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async with client:
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# ^ this is an asynchronous with block
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async for message in client.iter_messages(chat):
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# ^ this is a for loop over an asynchronous generator
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print(message.sender.username)
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loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
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# ^ this assigns the default event loop from the main thread to a variable
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loop.run_until_complete(main())
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# ^ this runs the *entire* loop until the main() function finishes.
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# While the main() function does not finish, the loop will be running.
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# While the loop is running, you can't run it again.
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The ``await`` keyword blocks the *current* task, and the loop can run
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other tasks. Tasks can be thought of as "threads", since many can run
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concurrently:
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.. code-block:: python
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import asyncio
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async def hello(delay):
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await asyncio.sleep(delay) # await tells the loop this task is "busy"
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print('hello') # eventually the loop resumes the code here
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async def world(delay):
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# the loop decides this method should run first
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await asyncio.sleep(delay) # await tells the loop this task is "busy"
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print('world') # eventually the loop finishes all tasks
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loop = asyncio.get_event_loop() # get the default loop for the main thread
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loop.create_task(world(2)) # create the world task, passing 2 as delay
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loop.create_task(hello(delay=1)) # another task, but with delay 1
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try:
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# run the event loop forever; ctrl+c to stop it
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# we could also run the loop for three seconds:
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# loop.run_until_complete(asyncio.sleep(3))
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loop.run_forever()
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except KeyboardInterrupt:
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pass
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The same example, but without the comment noise:
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.. code-block:: python
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import asyncio
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async def hello(delay):
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await asyncio.sleep(delay)
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print('hello')
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async def world(delay):
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await asyncio.sleep(delay)
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print('world')
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loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
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loop.create_task(world(2))
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loop.create_task(hello(1))
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loop.run_until_complete(asyncio.sleep(3))
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Can I use threads?
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==================
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Yes, you can, but you must understand that the loops themselves are
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not thread safe. and you must be sure to know what is happening. You
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may want to create a loop in a new thread and make sure to pass it to
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the client:
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.. code-block:: python
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import asyncio
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import threading
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def go():
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loop = asyncio.new_event_loop()
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client = TelegramClient(..., loop=loop)
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...
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threading.Thread(target=go).start()
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Generally, **you don't need threads** unless you know what you're doing.
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Just create another task, as shown above. If you're using the Telethon
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with a library that uses threads, you must be careful to use `threading.Lock`
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whenever you use the client, or enable the compatible mode. For that, see
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:ref:`compatibility-and-convenience`.
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You may have seen this error:
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.. code-block:: text
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RuntimeError: There is no current event loop in thread 'Thread-1'.
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It just means you didn't create a loop for that thread, and if you don't
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pass a loop when creating the client, it uses ``asyncio.get_event_loop()``,
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which only works in the main thread.
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client.run_until_disconnected() blocks!
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=======================================
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All of what `client.run_until_disconnected()
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<telethon.client.updates.UpdateMethods.run_until_disconnected>` does is
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run the `asyncio`'s event loop until the client is disconnected. That means
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*the loop is running*. And if the loop is running, it will run all the tasks
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in it. So if you want to run *other* code, create tasks for it:
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.. code-block:: python
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from datetime import datetime
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async def clock():
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while True:
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print('The time:', datetime.now())
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await asyncio.sleep(1)
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loop.create_task(clock())
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...
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client.run_until_disconnected()
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This creates a task for a clock that prints the time every second.
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You don't need to use `client.run_until_disconnected()
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<telethon.client.updates.UpdateMethods.run_until_disconnected>` either!
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You just need to make the loop is running, somehow. `loop.run_forever()
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<asyncio.loop.run_forever()>` and `loop.run_until_complete()
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<asyncio.loop.run_until_complete>` can also be used to run
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the loop, and Telethon will be happy with any approach.
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Of course, there are better tools to run code hourly or daily, see below.
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What else can asyncio do?
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=========================
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Asynchronous IO is a really powerful tool, as we've seen. There are plenty
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of other useful libraries that also use `asyncio` and that you can integrate
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with Telethon.
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* `aiohttp <https://github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp>`_ is like the infamous
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`requests <https://github.com/requests/requests/>`_ but asynchronous.
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* `quart <https://gitlab.com/pgjones/quart>`_ is an asynchronous alternative
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to `Flask <http://flask.pocoo.org/>`_.
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* `aiocron <https://github.com/gawel/aiocron>`_ lets you schedule things
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to run things at a desired time, or run some tasks hourly, daily, etc.
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And of course, `asyncio <https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio.html>`_
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itself! It has a lot of methods that let you do nice things. For example,
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you can run requests in parallel:
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.. code-block:: python
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async def main():
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last, sent, download_path = await asyncio.gather(
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client.get_messages('TelethonChat', 10),
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client.send_message('TelethonOfftopic', 'Hey guys!'),
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client.download_profile_photo('TelethonChat')
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)
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loop.run_until_complete(main())
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This code will get the 10 last messages from `@TelethonChat
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<https://t.me/TelethonChat>`_, send one to `@TelethonOfftopic
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<https://t.me/TelethonOfftopic>`_, and also download the profile
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photo of the main group. `asyncio` will run all these three tasks
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at the same time. You can run all the tasks you want this way.
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A different way would be:
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.. code-block:: python
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loop.create_task(client.get_messages('TelethonChat', 10))
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loop.create_task(client.send_message('TelethonOfftopic', 'Hey guys!'))
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loop.create_task(client.download_profile_photo('TelethonChat'))
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They will run in the background as long as the loop is running too.
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You can also `start an asyncio server
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<https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-stream.html#asyncio.start_server>`_
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in the main script, and from another script, `connect to it
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<https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-stream.html#asyncio.open_connection>`_
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to achieve `Inter-Process Communication
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<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-process_communication>`_.
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You can get as creative as you want. You can program anything you want.
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When you use a library, you're not limited to use only its methods. You can
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combine all the libraries you want. People seem to forget this simple fact!
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Why does client.start() work outside async?
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===========================================
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Because it's so common that it's really convenient to offer said
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functionality by default. This means you can set up all your event
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handlers and start the client without worrying about loops at all.
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Using the client in a ``with`` block, `start
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<telethon.client.auth.AuthMethods.start>`, `run_until_disconnected
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<telethon.client.updates.UpdateMethods.run_until_disconnected>`, and
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`disconnect <telethon.client.telegrambaseclient.TelegramBaseClient.disconnect>`
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all support this.
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Where can I read more?
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======================
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`Check out my blog post
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<https://lonamiwebs.github.io/blog/asyncio/>`_ about `asyncio`, which
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has some more examples and pictures to help you understand what happens
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when the loop runs.
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