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https://github.com/LonamiWebs/Telethon.git
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1c3e7dda01
This behaviour is deprecated and will be removed in future versions of Python. Technically, it could be considered a bug (invalid usage causing different behaviour from the expected one), and in practice it should not break much code (because .get_event_loop() would likely be the same event loop anyway).
112 lines
4.0 KiB
Python
112 lines
4.0 KiB
Python
import asyncio
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import collections
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import io
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import struct
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from ..tl import TLRequest
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from ..tl.core.messagecontainer import MessageContainer
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from ..tl.core.tlmessage import TLMessage
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class MessagePacker:
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"""
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This class packs `RequestState` as outgoing `TLMessages`.
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The purpose of this class is to support putting N `RequestState` into a
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queue, and then awaiting for "packed" `TLMessage` in the other end. The
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simplest case would be ``State -> TLMessage`` (1-to-1 relationship) but
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for efficiency purposes it's ``States -> Container`` (N-to-1).
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This addresses several needs: outgoing messages will be smaller, so the
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encryption and network overhead also is smaller. It's also a central
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point where outgoing requests are put, and where ready-messages are get.
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"""
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def __init__(self, state, loggers):
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self._state = state
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self._deque = collections.deque()
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self._ready = asyncio.Event()
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self._log = loggers[__name__]
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def append(self, state):
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self._deque.append(state)
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self._ready.set()
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def extend(self, states):
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self._deque.extend(states)
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self._ready.set()
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async def get(self):
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"""
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Returns (batch, data) if one or more items could be retrieved.
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If the cancellation occurs or only invalid items were in the
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queue, (None, None) will be returned instead.
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"""
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if not self._deque:
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self._ready.clear()
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await self._ready.wait()
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buffer = io.BytesIO()
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batch = []
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size = 0
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# Fill a new batch to return while the size is small enough,
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# as long as we don't exceed the maximum length of messages.
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while self._deque and len(batch) <= MessageContainer.MAXIMUM_LENGTH:
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state = self._deque.popleft()
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size += len(state.data) + TLMessage.SIZE_OVERHEAD
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if size <= MessageContainer.MAXIMUM_SIZE:
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state.msg_id = self._state.write_data_as_message(
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buffer, state.data, isinstance(state.request, TLRequest),
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after_id=state.after.msg_id if state.after else None
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)
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batch.append(state)
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self._log.debug('Assigned msg_id = %d to %s (%x)',
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state.msg_id, state.request.__class__.__name__,
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id(state.request))
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continue
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if batch:
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# Put the item back since it can't be sent in this batch
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self._deque.appendleft(state)
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break
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# If a single message exceeds the maximum size, then the
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# message payload cannot be sent. Telegram would forcibly
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# close the connection; message would never be confirmed.
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#
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# We don't put the item back because it can never be sent.
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# If we did, we would loop again and reach this same path.
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# Setting the exception twice results in `InvalidStateError`
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# and this method should never return with error, which we
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# really want to avoid.
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self._log.warning(
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'Message payload for %s is too long (%d) and cannot be sent',
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state.request.__class__.__name__, len(state.data)
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)
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state.future.set_exception(
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ValueError('Request payload is too big'))
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size = 0
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continue
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if not batch:
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return None, None
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if len(batch) > 1:
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# Inlined code to pack several messages into a container
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data = struct.pack(
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'<Ii', MessageContainer.CONSTRUCTOR_ID, len(batch)
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) + buffer.getvalue()
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buffer = io.BytesIO()
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container_id = self._state.write_data_as_message(
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buffer, data, content_related=False
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)
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for s in batch:
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s.container_id = container_id
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data = buffer.getvalue()
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return batch, data
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