Introduction

ASGI is a spiritual successor to WSGI, the long-standing Python standard for compatibility between web servers, frameworks, and applications.

WSGI succeeded in allowing much more freedom and innovation in the Python web space, and ASGI’s goal is to continue this onward into the land of asynchronous Python.

What’s wrong with WSGI?

You may ask “why not just upgrade WSGI”? This has been asked many times over the years, and the problem usually ends up being that WSGI’s single-callable interface just isn’t suitable for more involved Web protocols like WebSocket.

WSGI applications are a single, synchronous callable that takes a request and returns a response; this doesn’t allow for long-lived connections, like you get with long-poll HTTP or WebSocket connections.

Even if we made this callable asynchronous, it still only has a single path to provide a request, so protocols that have multiple incoming events (like receiving WebSocket frames) can’t trigger this.

How does ASGI work?

ASGI is structured as a single, asynchronous callable. It takes a scope, which is a dict containing details about the specific connection, send, an asynchronous callable, that lets the application send event messages to the client, and receive, an asynchronous callable which lets the application receive event messages from the client.

This not only allows multiple incoming events and outgoing events for each application, but also allows for a background coroutine so the application can do other things (such as listening for events on an external trigger, like a Redis queue).

In its simplest form, an application can be written as an asynchronous function, like this:

async def application(scope, receive, send):
    event = await receive()
    ...
    await send({"type": "websocket.send", ...})

Every event that you send or receive is a Python dict, with a predefined format. It’s these event formats that form the basis of the standard, and allow applications to be swappable between servers.

These events each have a defined type key, which can be used to infer the event’s structure. Here’s an example event that you might receive from receive with the body from a HTTP request:

{
    "type": "http.request",
    "body": b"Hello World",
    "more_body": False,
}

And here’s an example of an event you might pass to send to send an outgoing WebSocket message:

{
    "type": "websocket.send",
    "text": "Hello world!",
}

WSGI compatibility

ASGI is also designed to be a superset of WSGI, and there’s a defined way of translating between the two, allowing WSGI applications to be run inside ASGI servers through a translation wrapper (provided in the asgiref library). A threadpool can be used to run the synchronous WSGI applications away from the async event loop.