Reference Manual

Coroutines

Curio executes coroutines. A coroutine is a function defined using async def:

async def hello(name):
      return 'Hello ' + name

Coroutines call other coroutines using await:

async def main(name):
      s = await hello(name)
      print(s)

Coroutines never run on their own. They always execute under the supervision of a manager (e.g., an event-loop, a kernel, etc.). In Curio, the initial coroutine is executed using run():

import curio
curio.run(main, 'Guido')

When executing, a coroutine is encapsulated by a “Task.”

Basic Execution

The following function runs an initial coroutine:

run(corofunc, *args, debug=None, selector=None, with_monitor=False, taskcls=Task)

Run corofunc and return its result. args are the arguments provided to corofunc. with_monitor enables the task monitor. selector is an optional selector from the selectors standard library. debug is a list of debugging features (see the section on debugging). taskcls is the class used to encapsulate coroutines. If run() is called when a task is already running, a RuntimeError is raised.

If you are going to repeatedly execute coroutines one after the other, it is more efficient to create a Kernel instance and submit them using the run() method.

Kernel(selector=None, debug=None, taskcls=Task):

Create a runtime kernel. The arguments are the same as described above for run().

There is only one method that may be used on a Kernel instance.

Kernel.run(corofunc=None, *args, shutdown=False)

Run corofunc and return its result. args are the arguments given to corofunc. If shutdown is True, the kernel cancels all remaining tasks and performs a clean shutdown upon return. Calling this method with corofunc set to None executes a single scheduling cycle of background tasks before returning immediately. Raises a RuntimeError if called on an already running kernel or if an attempt is made to run more than one kernel in the same thread.

A kernel is commonly used as a context manager. For example:

with Kernel() as kernel:
    kernel.run(corofunc1)
    kernel.run(corofunc2)
    ...
# Kernel shuts down here

When submitting work, you can either provide an async function and arguments or you can provide an already instantiated coroutine. Both of these run() invocations work:

async def hello(name):
    print('hello', name)

run(hello, 'Guido')    # Preferred
run(hello('Guido'))    # Ok

This convention is observed by nearly all other functions that accept coroutines (e.g., spawning tasks, waiting for timeouts, etc.).

Tasks

The following functions manage the execution of concurrent tasks.

await spawn(corofunc, *args, daemon=False)

Create a new task that concurrently executes the async function corofunc. args are the arguments provided to corofunc. Returns a Task instance as a result. The daemon option specifies that the task is never joined and that its result may be disregarded.

await current_task()

Returns the Task instance corresponding to the caller.

spawn() and current_task() return a Task instance t with the following methods and attributes:

await t.join()

Wait for the task to terminate and return its result. Raises curio.TaskError if the task failed with an exception. The __cause__ attribute contains the actual exception raised by the task when it crashed.

await t.wait()

Waits for task to terminate, but returns no value.

await t.cancel(*, blocking=True, exc=TaskCancelled)

Cancels the task by raising a curio.TaskCancelled exception (or the exception specified by exc). If blocking=True (the default), waits for the task to actually terminate. A task may only be cancelled once. If invoked more than once, the second request waits until the task is cancelled from the first request. If the task has already terminated, this method does nothing and returns immediately. Note: uncaught exceptions that occur as a result of cancellation are logged, but not propagated out of the Task.cancel() method.

t.traceback()

Creates a stack traceback string. Useful for debugging.

t.where()

Return (filename, lineno) where the task is executing.

t.id

The task’s integer id. Monotonically increases.

t.coro

The coroutine associated with the task.

t.daemon

Boolean flag that indicates whether or not a task is daemonic.

t.state

The name of the task’s current state. Useful for debugging.

t.cycles

The number of scheduling cycles the task has completed.

t.result

A property holding the task result. If accessed before the task terminates, a RuntimeError exception is raised. If a task crashed with an exception, that exception is reraised on access.

t.exception

Exception raised by a task, if any. None otherwise.

t.cancelled

A boolean flag that indicates whether or not the task was cancelled.

t.terminated

A boolean flag that indicates whether or not the task has terminated.

Task Groups

Tasks may be grouped together to better manage their execution and collect results. To do this, create a TaskGroup instance.

class TaskGroup(tasks=(), *, wait=all)

A class representing a group of executing tasks. tasks is an optional set of existing tasks to put into the group. wait specifies the policy used by join() to wait for tasks. If wait is all, then wait for all tasks to complete. If wait is any then wait for any task to terminate and cancel any remaining tasks. If wait is object, then wait for any task to return a non-None object, cancelling all remaining tasks afterwards. If wait is None, then immediately cancel all running tasks. Task groups do not form a hierarchy or have any kind of relationship to other previously created task groups or tasks. Moreover, Tasks created by the top level spawn() function are not placed into any task group. To create a task in a group, it should be created using TaskGroup.spawn() or explicitly added using TaskGroup.add_task().

The following methods and attributes are supported on a TaskGroup instance g:

await g.spawn(corofunc, *args, daemon=False)

Create a new task in the group. Returns a Task instance. daemon specifies whether or not the result of the task is disregarded. Daemonic tasks are both ignored and cancelled by the join() method.

await g.add_task(task)

Add an already existing task to the group.

await g.next_done()

Wait for and return the next completed task. Return None if no more tasks remain.

await g.next_result()

Wait for and return the result of the next completed task. If the task failed with an exception, the exception is raised.

await g.join()

Wait for all tasks in the group to terminate according to the wait policy set for the group. If any of the monitored tasks exits with an exception or if the join() operation itself is cancelled, all remaining tasks in the group are cancelled. If a TaskGroup is used as a context manager, the join() method is called on block exit.

await g.cancel_remaining()

Cancel and remove all remaining non-daemonic tasks from the group.

g.completed

The first task that completed with a valid result after calling join().

g.result

The result of the first task that completed after calling join(). May raise an exception if the task exited with an exception.

g.exception

Exception raised by the first task that completed (if any).

g.results

A list of all results collected by join(), ordered by task id. May raise an exception if any task exited with an exception.

g.exceptions

A list of all exceptions collected by join().

g.tasks

A list of all non-daemonic tasks managed by the group, ordered by task id. Does not include tasks where Task.join() or Task.cancel() has been directly called already.

The preferred way to use a TaskGroup is as a context manager. Here are a few common usage patterns:

# Spawn multiple tasks and collect all of their results
async with TaskGroup(wait=all) as g:
    await g.spawn(coro1)
    await g.spawn(coro2)
    await g.spawn(coro3)
print('Results:', g.results)

# Spawn multiple tasks and collect the result of the first one
# that completes--cancelling other tasks
async with TaskGroup(wait=any) as g:
    await g.spawn(coro1)
    await g.spawn(coro2)
    await g.spawn(coro3)
print('Result:', g.result)

# Spawn multiple tasks and collect their results as they complete
async with TaskGroup() as g:
    await g.spawn(coro1)
    await g.spawn(coro2)
    await g.spawn(coro3)
    async for task in g:
        print(task, 'completed.', task.result)

In these examples, access to the result or results attribute may raise an exception if a task failed for some reason.

If an exception is raised inside the task group context, all managed tasks are cancelled and the exception is propagated. For example:

try:
    async with TaskGroup() as g:
        t1 = await g.spawn(func1)
        t2 = await g.spawn(func2)
        t3 = await g.spawn(func3)
        raise RuntimeError()
except RuntimeError:
    # All launched tasks will have terminated or been cancelled here
    assert t1.terminated
    assert t2.terminated
    assert t3.terminated

It is important to emphasize that no tasks placed in a task group survive past the join() operation or exit from a context manager. This includes any daemonic tasks running in the background.

Time

Curio manages time with an internal monotonic clock. The following functions are provided:

await sleep(seconds)

Sleep for a specified number of seconds. If the number of seconds is 0, execution switches to the next ready task (if any). Returns the current clock value.

await clock()

Returns the current value of the monotonic clock. Use this to get a base clock value for the wake_at() function.

Timeouts

Any blocking operation can be cancelled by a timeout.

await timeout_after(seconds, corofunc=None, *args)

Execute corofunc(*args) and return its result. If no result is returned before seconds have elapsed, a curio.TaskTimeout exception is raised on the current blocking operation. If corofunc is None, the function returns an asynchronous context manager that applies a timeout to a block of statements.

Every call to timeout_after() must have a matching exception handler to catch the resulting timeout. For example:

try:
    result = await timeout_after(10, coro, arg1, arg2)
except TaskTimeout:
    ...

# Alternative (context-manager)
try:
    async with timeout_after(10):
        result = coro(arg1, arg2)
        ...
except TaskTimeout:
    ...

When timeout operations are nested, the resulting TaskTimeout exception is paired to the matching timeout_after() operation that produced it. Consider this subtle example:

async def main():
    try:
        async with timeout_after(1):        # Expires first
            try:
                async with timeout_after(5):
                    await sleep(1000)
            except TaskTimeout:             # (a) Does NOT match
                print("Inner timeout")
    except TaskTimeout:                     # (b) Matches!
        print("Outer timeout")

run(main)

If you run this, you will see output of “Outer timeout” from the exception handler at (b). This is because the outer timeout is the one that expired. The exception handler at (a) does not match (at that point, the exception being reported is curio.TimeoutCancellationError which indicates that a timeout/cancellation has occurred somewhere, but that it is NOT due to the inner-most timeout).

If a nested timeout_after() is used without a matching except clause, a timeout is reported as a curio.UncaughtTimeoutError exception. Remember that all timeouts should have a matching exception handler.

If you don’t care about exception handling, you can also use the following functions:

await ignore_after(seconds, corofunc=None, *args, timeout_result=None)

Execute corofunc(*args) and return its result. If seconds elapse, the operation is cancelled with a curio.TaskTimeout exception, but the exception is discarded and the value of timeout_result is returned. If corofunc is None, returns an asynchronous context manager that applies a timeout to a block of statements. For this case, the resulting context manager object has an expired attribute set to True if time expired.

Here are some examples:

result = await ignore_after(5, coro, args)
if result is None:
    # Timeout occurred (if you care)
    ...

# Execute multiple statements with a 5 second timeout
async with ignore_after(5) as s:
    await coro1(args)
    await coro2(args)

if s.expired:
    # Timeout occurred
    ...

The ignore_after() function is just a convenience layer to simplify exception handling. All of the timeout-related functions can be composed and layered together in any configuration and it should still work.

Cancellation Control

Sometimes it is necessary to disable or control cancellation on critical operations. The following functions can control this:

await disable_cancellation(corofunc=None, *args)

Disables the delivery of cancellation-related exceptions while executing corofunc. args are the arguments to corofunc. The result of corofunc is returned. Any pending cancellation is delivered to the first-blocking operation after cancellation is reenabled. If corofunc is None, a context manager is returned that shields a block of statements from cancellation.

await check_cancellation(exc=None)

Explicitly check if a cancellation is pending for the calling task. If cancellation is enabled, any pending exception is raised immediately. If cancellation is disabled, it returns the pending cancellation exception instance (if any) or None. If exc is supplied and it matches the type of the pending exception, the exception is returned and any pending cancellation exception is cleared.

await set_cancellation(exc)

Set the pending cancellation exception for the calling task to exc. If cancellation is enabled, it will be raised immediately on the next blocking operation. Returns any previously set, but pending cancellation exception.

A common use of these functions is to more precisely control cancellation points. Here is an example that shows how to check for cancellation at a specific code location (a):

async def coro():
    async with disable_cancellation():
        while True:
            await coro1()
            await coro2()
            if await check_cancellation():    # (a)
                break   # Bail out!

    await check_cancellation()  # Cancellation (if any) delivered here

If you only need to shield a single operation, you can write statements like this:

async def coro():
    ...
    await disable_cancellation(some_operation, x, y, z)
    ...

Note: It is not possible for cancellation to be reenabled inside code where it has been disabled.

Synchronization Primitives

The following synchronization primitives are available. Their behavior is identical to their equivalents in the threading module. However, none of these primitives are safe to use with threads.

class Event

An event object.

An Event instance e supports the following methods:

e.is_set()

Return True if set

e.clear()

Clear the event value

await e.wait()

Wait for the event to be set

await e.set()

Set the event. Wake all waiting tasks (if any)

class Result

A synchronized result object. This is like an Event except that it additionally carries a value or exception.

An Result instance r supports the following methods:

r.is_set()

Return True if a result value or exception has been set

await r.set_value(value)

Set the result value, waking any waiters.

await r.set_exception(exc)

Set the result exception, waking any waiters.

await r.unwrap()

Wait and return the set value. If an exception was set, it is reraised.

Lock, RLock, Semaphore classes that allow for mutual exclusion and inter-task coordination.

class Lock

A mutual exclusion lock.

class RLock

A recursive mutual-exclusion lock that can be acquired multiple times within the same task.

class Semaphore(value=1)

Semaphores are based on a counter. acquire() and release() decrement and increment the counter respectively. If the counter is 0, acquire() blocks until the value is incremented by another task. The value attribute of a semaphore is a read-only property holding the current value of the internal counter.

An instance lock of any of the above classes supports the following methods:

await lock.acquire()

Acquire the lock

await lock.release()

Release the lock.

lock.locked()

Return True if the lock is currently held.

The preferred way to use a Lock is as an asynchronous context manager. For example:

import curio
lock = curio.Lock()

async def sometask():
    async with lock:
        print("Have the lock")
        ...
class Condition(lock=None)

Condition variable. lock is the underlying lock to use. If None, then a Lock object is used.

An instance cv of Condition supports the following methods:

await cv.acquire()

Acquire the underlying lock

await cv.release()

Release the underlying lock.

cv.locked()

Return True if the lock is currently held.

await cv.wait()

Wait on the condition variable. Releases the underlying lock.

await cv.wait_for(pred)

Wait on the condition variable until a supplied predicate function returns True. pred is a callable that takes no arguments.

await cv.notify(n=1)

Notify one or more tasks, cause them to wake from cv.wait().

await cv.notify_all()

Notify all waiting tasks.

Proper use of a condition variable is tricky. The following example shows how to implement producer-consumer synchronization on top of a collections.deque object:

import curio
from collections import deque

async def consumer(items, cond):
    while True:
        async with cond:
            while not items:         # (a)
                await cond.wait()    # Wait for items
            item = items.popleft()
        print('Got', item)

 async def producer(items, cond):
     for n in range(10):
          async with cond:
              items.append(n)
              await cond.notify()
          await curio.sleep(1)

 async def main():
     items = deque()
     cond = curio.Condition()
     await curio.spawn(producer, items, cond)
     await curio.spawn(consumer, items, cond)

 curio.run(main())

In this code, it is critically important that the wait() and notify() operations take place in a block where the condition variable has been properly acquired. Also, the while-loop at (a) is not a typo. Condition variables are often used to “signal” that some condition has become true, but it is standard practice to re-test the condition before proceding (it might be the case that a condition was only briefly transient and by the time a notified task awakes, the condition no longer holds).

Queues

To communicate between tasks, use a Queue.

class Queue(maxsize=0)

Creates a queue with a maximum number of elements in maxsize. If not specified, the queue can hold an unlimited number of items.

An instance q of Queue supports the following methods:

q.empty()

Return True if the queue is empty.

q.full()

Return True if the queue is full.

q.size()

Return number of items currently in the queue.

await q.get()

Return an item from the queue. Block if no items are available.

await q.put(item)

Put an item on the queue. Blocks if the queue is at capacity.

await q.join()

Wait for all elements to be processed. Consumers must call q.task_done() to indicate the completion of each element.

await q.task_done()

Indicate that the processing has finished for an item. If all items have been processed and there are tasks waiting on q.join(), they will be awakened.

Here is an example of using queues in a producer-consumer problem:

import curio

async def producer(queue):
    for n in range(10):
        await queue.put(n)
    await queue.join()
    print('Producer done')

async def consumer(queue):
    while True:
        item = await queue.get()
        print('Consumer got', item)
        await queue.task_done()

async def main():
    q = curio.Queue()
    prod_task = await curio.spawn(producer(q))
    cons_task = await curio.spawn(consumer(q))
    await prod_task.join()
    await cons_task.cancel()

curio.run(main())

The following variants of the basic Queue class are also provided:

class PriorityQueue(maxsize=0)

Creates a priority queue with a maximum number of elements in maxsize. The priority of items is determined by standard relational operators such as < and <=. Lowest priority items are returned first.

class LifoQueue(maxsize=0)

A queue with “Last In First Out” retrieval policy. In other words, a stack.

Universal Synchronizaton

Sometimes it is necessary to synchronize Curio with threads and foreign event loops. For this, use the following queue and event classes.

class UniversalQueue(maxsize=0, withfd=False)

A queue that can be simultaneously used from Curio tasks, threads, and asyncio. The same programming API is used in all environments, but await is required for asynchronous operations. If used to coordinate Curio and asyncio, they must be executing in separate threads. The withfd option specifies whether or not the queue should optionally set up an I/O loopback that allows it to be polled by a foreign event loop. When withfd is True, adding something to the queue writes a single byte of data to the I/O loopback. Removing an item with get() reads this byte.

class UniversalEvent

An event object that can be used from Curio tasks, threads, and asyncio. The same programming interface is used in both. Asynchronous operations must be prefaced by await. If used to coordinate Curio and asyncio, they must be executing in separate threads.

class UniversalResult

A result object that can be used from Curio tasks, threads, and asyncio. A result is somewhat similar to an event, but it additionally carries an attached value or exception. To set the result, use set_value() or set_exception(). To return the result, blocking if necessary, use unwrap(). If used in an asynchronous environment, these operations must be prefaced by await. If used to coordinate Curio and asyncio, they must be executing in separate threads. A UniversalResult() is somewhat similar to a Future in usage, but it has a much more restrictive API.

Here is an example of a producer-consumer problem with a UniversalQueue involving Curio, threads, and asyncio all running at once:

from curio import run, UniversalQueue, spawn, run_in_thread

import time
import threading
import asyncio

# An async task
async def consumer(name, q):
    print(f'{name} consumer starting')
    while True:
        item = await q.get()
        if item is None:
            break
        print(f'{name} got: {item}')
        await q.task_done()
    print(f'{name} consumer done')
    await q.put(None)

# A threaded producer
def producer(q):
    for i in range(10):
        q.put(i)
        time.sleep(1)
    q.join()
    print('Producer done')

async def main():
    q = UniversalQueue()
    # A Curio consumer
    t1 = await spawn(consumer('curio', q))

    # An asyncio consumer
    t2 = threading.Thread(target=asyncio.run, args=[consumer('asyncio', q)])
    t2.start()

    # A threaded producer
    t3 = threading.Thread(target=producer, args=[q])
    t3.start()
    await run_in_thread(t3.join)

    # Shutdown with a sentinel
    await q.put(None)
    await t1.join()
    await run_in_thread(t2.join)

run(main())

In this code, the consumer() coroutine is used simultaneously in Curio and asyncio. producer() is an ordinary thread.

Here is example that has Curio wait for the result produced by a thread using a UniversalResult object:

import threading
import curio
import time

def worker(x, y, result):
    time.sleep(10)
    try:
        result.set_value(x+y)
    except Exception as err:
        result.set_exception(err)

async def main():
    result = curio.UniversalResult()
    threading.Thread(target=worker, args=[2,3,result]).start()
    print("Result:", await result.unwrap())

curio.run(main)

When in doubt, queues, events, and results are the preferred mechanism of coordinating Curio with foreign environments. Higher-level abstractions can often be built from these.

Blocking Operations and External Work

Sometimes you need to perform work that takes a long time to complete or otherwise blocks the progress of other tasks. This includes CPU-intensive calculations and blocking operations carried out by foreign libraries. Use the following functions to do that:

await run_in_process(callable, *args)

Run callable(*args) in a separate process and returns the result. If cancelled, the underlying worker process is immediately cancelled by a SIGTERM signal. The given callable executes in an entirely independent Python interpreter and there is no shared global state. The separate process is launched using the “spawn” method of the multiprocessing module.

await run_in_thread(callable, *args)

Run callable(*args) in a separate thread and return the result. If the calling task is cancelled, the underlying worker thread (if started) is set aside and sent a termination request. However, since there is no underlying mechanism to forcefully kill threads, the thread won’t recognize the termination request until it runs the requested work to completion. It’s important to note that a cancellation won’t block other tasks from using threads. Instead, cancellation produces a kind of “zombie thread” that executes the requested work, discards the result, and then disappears. For reliability, work submitted to threads should have a timeout or some other mechanism that puts a bound on execution time.

await block_in_thread(callable, *args)

The same as run_in_thread(), but guarantees that only one background thread is used for each unique callable regardless of how many tasks simultaneously try to carry out the same operation at once. Only use this function if there is an expectation that the provided callable is going to block for an undetermined amount of time and that there might be a large amount of contention from multiple tasks on the same resource. The primary use is on waiting operations involving foreign locks and queues. For example, if you launched a hundred Curio tasks and they all decided to block on a shared thread queue, using this would be much more efficient than run_in_thread().

await run_in_executor(exc, callable, *args)

Run callable(*args) callable in a user-supplied executor and returns the result. exc is an executor from the concurrent.futures module in the standard library. This executor is expected to implement a submit() method that executes the given callable and returns a Future instance for collecting its result.

When performing external work, it’s almost always better to use the run_in_process() and run_in_thread() functions instead of run_in_executor(). These functions have no external library dependencies, have less communication overhead, and more predictable cancellation semantics.

The following values in curio.workers define how many worker threads and processes are used. If you are going to change these values, do it before any tasks are executed.

MAX_WORKER_THREADS

Specifies the maximum number of threads used by a single kernel using the run_in_thread() function. Default value is 64.

MAX_WORKER_PROCESSES

Specifies the maximum number of processes used by a single kernel using the run_in_process() function. Default value is the number of CPUs on the host system.

I/O Classes

I/O in Curio is managed by a collection of classes in curio.io. These classes act as asynchronous proxies around sockets, streams, and ordinary files. The programming interface is meant to be the same as in normal synchronous Python code.

Socket

The Socket class wraps an existing socket-like object with an async interface.

class Socket(sockobj)

Creates a proxy around an existing socket sockobj. sockobj is put in non-blocking mode when wrapped. sockobj is not closed unless the created Socket instance is explicitly closed or used as a context manager.

The following methods are redefined on an instance s of Socket.

await s.recv(maxbytes, flags=0)

Receive up to maxbytes of data.

await s.recv_into(buffer, nbytes=0, flags=0)

Receive up to nbytes of data into a buffer.

await s.recvfrom(maxsize, flags=0)

Receive up to maxbytes of data. Returns a tuple (data, client_address).

await s.recvfrom_into(buffer, nbytes=0, flags=0)

Receive up to nbytes of data into a buffer.

await s.recvmsg(bufsize, ancbufsize=0, flags=0)

Receive normal and ancillary data.

await s.recvmsg_into(buffers, ancbufsize=0, flags=0)

Receive normal and ancillary data into a buffer.

await s.send(data, flags=0)

Send data. Returns the number of bytes sent.

await s.sendall(data, flags=0)

Send all of the data in data. If cancelled, the bytes_sent attribute of the exception contains the number of bytes sent.

await s.sendto(data, address)

Send data to the specified address.

await s.sendto(data, flags, address)

Send data to the specified address (alternate).

await s.sendmsg(buffers, ancdata=(), flags=0, address=None)

Send normal and ancillary data to the socket.

await s.accept()

Wait for a new connection. Returns a tuple (sock, address) where sock is an instance of Socket.

await s.connect(address)

Make a connection.

await s.connect_ex(address)

Make a connection and return an error code instead of raising an exception.

await s.close()

Close the connection.

await s.shutdown(how)

Shutdown the socket. how is one of SHUT_RD, SHUT_WR, or SHUT_RDWR.

await s.do_handshake()

Perform an SSL client handshake (only on SSL sockets).

s.makefile(mode, buffering=0)

Make a curio.io.FileStream instance wrapping the socket. Prefer to use Socket.as_stream() instead. Not supported on Windows.

s.as_stream()

Wrap the socket as a stream using curio.io.SocketStream.

s.blocking()

A context manager that returns the internal socket placed into blocking mode.

Any socket method not listed here (e.g., s.setsockopt()) will be delegated directly to the underlying socket as an ordinary method. Socket objects may be used as an asynchronous context manager which cause the underlying socket to be closed when done.

Streams

A stream is an asynchronous file-like object that wraps around an object that natively implements non-blocking I/O. Curio implements two basic classes:

class FileStream(fileobj)

Create a file-like wrapper around an existing file as might be created by the built-in open() function or socket.makefile(). fileobj must be in in binary mode and must support non-blocking I/O. The file is placed into non-blocking mode using os.set_blocking(fileobj.fileno()). fileobj is not closed unless the resulting instance is explicitly closed or used as a context manager. Not supported on Windows.

class SocketStream(sockobj)

Create a file-like wrapper around a socket. sockobj is an existing socket-like object. The socket is put into non-blocking mode. sockobj is not closed unless the resulting instance is explicitly closed or used as a context manager. Instantiated by Socket.as_stream().

An instance s of either stream class implement the following methods:

await s.read(maxbytes=-1)

Read up to maxbytes of data on the file. If omitted, reads as much data as is currently available.

await s.readall()

Return all data up to EOF.

await s.read_exactly(n)

Read exactly n bytes of data.

await s.readline()

Read a single line of data.

await s.readlines()

Read all of the lines. If cancelled, the lines_read attribute of the exception contains all lines read.

await s.write(bytes)

Write all of the data in bytes.

await s.writelines(lines)

Writes all of the lines in lines. If cancelled, the bytes_written attribute of the exception contains the total bytes written so far.

await s.flush()

Flush any unwritten data from buffers.

await s.close()

Flush any unwritten data and close the file. Not called on garbage collection.

s.blocking()

A context manager that temporarily places the stream into blocking mode and returns the raw file object used internally. Note: for SocketStream this creates a file using open(sock.fileno(), 'rb+', closefd=False) which is not supported on Windows.

Other methods (e.g., tell(), seek(), setsockopt(), etc.) are available if the underlying fileobj or sockobj provides them. A Stream may be used as an asynchronous context manager.

Files

The curio.file module provides an asynchronous compatible replacement for the built-in open() function and associated file objects. Use this to read and write traditional files on the filesystem while avoiding blocking. How this is accomplished is an implementation detail (although threads are used in the initial version).

aopen(*args, **kwargs)

Creates a curio.file.AsyncFile wrapper around a traditional file object as returned by Python’s builtin open() function. The arguments are exactly the same as for open(). The returned file object must be used as an asynchronous context manager.

class AsyncFile(fileobj)

This class represents an asynchronous file as returned by the aopen() function. Normally, instances are created by the aopen() function. However, it can be wrapped around an already-existing file object.

The following methods are redefined on AsyncFile objects to be compatible with coroutines. Any method not listed here will be delegated directly to the underlying file. These methods take the same arguments as the underlying file object. Be aware that not all of these methods are available on all kinds of files (e.g., read1(), readinto() and similar methods are only available in binary-mode files).

await f.read(maxbytes=-1)

Read up to maxbytes of data on the file. If omitted, reads as much data as is currently available.

await f.read1(maxbytes=-1)

Same as read(), but uses a single system call.

await f.readline(maxbytes=-1)

Read a line of input.

await f.readlines(maxbytes=-1)

Read all lines of input data

await f.readinto(buffer)

Read data into a buffer.

await f.readinto1(buffer)

Read data into a buffer using a single system call.

await f.readall()

Read all available data up to EOF.

await f.write(data)

Write data

await f.writelines(lines)

Write all lines.

await f.truncate(pos=None)

Truncate the file to a given size/position. If None, file is truncated at position of current file pointer.

await f.seek(offset, whence=os.SEEK_SET)

Seek to a new file position.

await f.tell()

Report current file pointer.

await f.flush()

Flush data to a file

await f.close()

Flush remaining data and close.

The preferred way to use an AsyncFile object is as an asynchronous context manager. For example:

async with aopen(filename) as f:
    # Use the file
    data = await f.read()

AsyncFile objects may also be used with asynchronous iteration. For example:

async with aopen(filename) as f:
    async for line in f:
        ...

AsyncFile objects are intentionally incompatible with code that uses files in a synchronous manner. Partly, this is to help avoid unintentional errors in your program where blocking might occur without you realizing it. If you know what you’re doing and you need to access the underlying file in synchronous code, use the blocking() context manager like this:

async with aopen(filename) as f:
    ...
    # Pass to synchronous code (danger: might block)
    with f.blocking() as sync_f:
         # Use synchronous I/O operations
         data = sync_f.read()
         ...

At first glance, the API to streams and files might look identical. The difference concerns internal implementation. A stream works natively with non-blocking I/O. An AsyncFile uses a combination of threads and synchronous calls to provide an async-compatible API. Given a choice, you should use streams. However, some systems don’t provide non-blocking implementations of certain system calls. In those cases, an AsyncFile is a fallback.

Networking

Curio provides a number of submodules for different kinds of network programming.

High Level Networking

The following functions are use to make network connections and implement socket-based servers.

await open_connection(host, port, *, ssl=None, source_addr=None, server_hostname=None, alpn_protocols=None)

Creates an outgoing connection to a server at host and port. This connection is made using the socket.create_connection() function and might be IPv4 or IPv6 depending on the network configuration (although you’re not supposed to worry about it). ssl specifies whether or not SSL should be used. ssl can be True or an instance of curio.ssl.SSLContext. source_addr specifies the source address to use on the socket. server_hostname specifies the hostname to check against when making SSL connections. It is highly advised that this be supplied to avoid man-in-the-middle attacks. alpn_protocols specifies a list of protocol names for use with the TLS ALPN extension (RFC7301). A typical value might be ['h2', 'http/1.1'] for negotiating either a HTTP/2 or HTTP/1.1 connection.

await open_unix_connection(path, *, ssl=None, server_hostname=None, alpn_protocols=None)

Creates a connection to a Unix domain socket with optional SSL applied.

await tcp_server(host, port, client_connected_task, *, family=AF_INET, backlog=100, ssl=None, reuse_address=True, reuse_port=False)

Runs a server for receiving TCP connections on a given host and port. client_connected_task is a coroutine that is to be called to handle each connection. Family specifies the address family and is either socket.AF_INET or socket.AF_INET6. backlog is the argument to the socket.socket.listen() method. ssl specifies an curio.ssl.SSLContext instance to use. reuse_address specifies whether to use the SO_REUSEADDR socket option. reuse_port specifies whether to use the SO_REUSEPORT socket option.

await unix_server(path, client_connected_task, *, backlog=100, ssl=None)

Runs a Unix domain server on a given path. client_connected_task is a coroutine to execute on each connection. backlog is the argument given to the socket.socket.listen() method. ssl is an optional curio.ssl.SSLContext to use if setting up an SSL connection.

await run_server(sock, client_connected_task, ssl=None)

Runs a server on a given socket. sock is a socket already configured to receive incoming connections. client_connected_task and ssl have the same meaning as for the tcp_server() and unix_server() functions. If you need to perform some kind of special socket setup, not possible with the normal tcp_server() function, you can create the underlying socket yourself and then call this function to run a server on it.

tcp_server_socket(host, port, family=AF_INET, backlog=100, reuse_address=True, reuse_port=False)

Creates and returns a TCP socket. Arguments are the same as for the tcp_server() function. The socket is suitable for use with other async operations as well as the run_server() function.

unix_server_socket(path, backlog=100)

Creates and returns a Unix socket. Arguments are the same as for the unix_server() function. The socket is suitable for use with other async operations as well as the run_server() function.

Message Passing and Channels

Curio provides a Channel class that can be used to perform message passing between interpreters running in separate processes. Message passing uses the same protocol as the multiprocessing standard library.

class Channel(address, family=socket.AF_INET)

Represents a communications endpoint for message passing. address is the address and family is the protocol family.

The following methods are used to establish a connection on a Channel instance ch.

await ch.accept(*, authkey=None)

Wait for an incoming connection and return a Connection instance. authkey is an optional authentication key.

await ch.connect(*, authkey=None)

Make an outgoing connection and return a Connection instance. authkey is an optional authentication key.

ch.bind()

Performs the address binding step of the accept() method. Use this to have the host operating system to assign a port number. For example, use an address of ('localhost', socket.INADDR_ANY) and call bind(). Afterwards, ch.address contains the assigned address.

await ch.close()

Close the channel.

The connect() and accept() methods of Channel instances return an instance of the Connection class:

class Connection(reader, writer)

Represents a connection on which message passing of Python objects is supported. reader and writer are I/O streams on which reading and writing are to take place (for example, instances of SocketStream or FileStream).

An instance c of Connection supports the following methods:

await c.close()

Close the connection.

await c.recv()

Receive a Python object.

await c.recv_bytes()

Receive a raw message of bytes.

await c.send(obj)

Send a Python object.

await c.send_bytes(buf, offset=0, size=None)

Send a buffer of bytes as a single message. offset and size specify an optional byte offset and size into the underlying memory buffer.

await c.authenticate_server(authkey)

Authenticate server endpoint.

await c.authenticate_client(authkey)

Authenticate client endpoint.

A Connection instance may also be used as a context manager.

Here is an example of a producer program using channels:

# producer.py
from curio import Channel, run

async def producer(ch):
    c = await ch.accept(authkey=b'peekaboo')
    for i in range(10):
        await c.send(i)
    await c.send(None)   # Sentinel

if __name__ == '__main__':
    ch = Channel(('localhost', 30000))
    run(producer(ch))

Here is an example of a corresponding consumer program using a channel:

# consumer.py
from curio import Channel, run

async def consumer(ch):
    c = await ch.connect(authkey=b'peekaboo')
    while True:
        msg = await c.recv()
        if msg is None:
            break
        print('Got:', msg)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    ch = Channel(('localhost', 30000))
    run(consumer(ch))

socket module

The curio.socket module provides a wrapper around selected functions in the built-in socket module–allowing it to be used as a stand-in in Curio-related code. The module provides exactly the same functionality except that certain operations have been replaced by asynchronous equivalents.

socket(family=AF_INET, type=SOCK_STREAM, proto=0, fileno=None)

Creates a curio.io.Socket wrapper the around socket objects created in the built-in socket module. The arguments for construction are identical and have the same meaning. The resulting socket instance is set in non-blocking mode.

The following module-level functions have been modified so that the returned socket objects are compatible with Curio:

socketpair(family=AF_UNIX, type=SOCK_STREAM, proto=0)
fromfd(fd, family, type, proto=0)
create_connection(address, source_address)

The following module-level functions have been redefined as coroutines so that they don’t block the kernel when interacting with DNS. This is accomplished through the use of threads.

await getaddrinfo(host, port, family=0, type=0, proto=0, flags=0)
await getfqdn(name)
await gethostbyname(hostname)
await gethostbyname_ex(hostname)
await gethostname()
await gethostbyaddr(ip_address)
await getnameinfo(sockaddr, flags)

ssl module

The curio.ssl module provides Curio-compatible functions for creating an SSL wrapped Curio socket. The following functions are redefined (and have the same calling signature as their counterparts in the standard ssl module:

await wrap_socket(*args, **kwargs)
await get_server_certificate(*args, **kwargs)
create_default_context(*args, **kwargs)
class SSLContext

A redefined and modified variant of ssl.SSLContext so that the wrap_socket() method returns a socket compatible with Curio.

Don’t attempt to use the curio.ssl module without a careful read of Python’s official documentation at https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html.

It is usually easier to apply SSL to a connection using the high level network functions previously described. For example, here’s how you make an outgoing SSL connection:

sock = await curio.open_connection('www.python.org', 443,
                                   ssl=True,
                                   server_hostname='www.python.org')

Here’s how you create a server that uses SSL:

import curio
from curio import ssl

KEYFILE = "privkey_rsa"       # Private key
CERTFILE = "certificate.crt"  # Server certificat

async def handler(client, addr):
    ...

if __name__ == '__main__':
    ssl_context = ssl.create_default_context(ssl.Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH)
    ssl_context.load_cert_chain(certfile=CERTFILE, keyfile=KEYFILE)
    curio.run(curio.tcp_server('', 10000, handler, ssl=ssl_context))

Subprocesses

The curio.subprocess module implements the same functionality as the built-in subprocess module.

class Popen(*args, **kwargs)

A wrapper around the subprocess.Popen class. The same arguments are accepted. On the resulting Popen instance, the stdin, stdout, and stderr file attributes have been wrapped by the curio.io.FileStream class. You can use these in an asynchronous context.

The following methods of Popen have been replaced by asynchronous equivalents:

await Popen.wait()

Wait for a subprocess to exit. Cancellation does not terminate the process.

await Popen.communicate(input=b'')

Communicate with the subprocess, sending the specified input on standard input. Returns a tuple (stdout, stderr) with the resulting output of standard output and standard error. If cancelled, the resulting exception has stdout and stderr attributes that contain the output read prior to cancellation. Cancellation does not terminate the underlying subprocess.

The following functions are also available. They accept the same arguments as their equivalents in the subprocess module:

await run(args, stdin=None, input=None, stdout=None, stderr=None, shell=False, check=False)

Run a command in a subprocess. Returns a subprocess.CompletedProcess instance. If cancelled, the underlying process is terminated using the process kill() method. The resulting exception will have stdout and stderr attributes containing output read prior to cancellation.

await check_output(args, stdout=None, stderr=None, shell=False)

Run a command in a subprocess and return the resulting output. Raises a subprocess.CalledProcessError exception if an error occurred. The behavior on cancellation is the same as for run().

Here is an example of using Popen to read streaming output off of a subprocess with Curio:

import curio
from curio import subprocess

async def main():
    p = subprocess.Popen(['ping', 'www.python.org'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
    async for line in p.stdout:
        print('Got:', line.decode('ascii'), end='')

if __name__ == '__main__':
    kernel = curio.Kernel()
    kernel.add_task(main())
    kernel.run()

Asynchronous Threads

If you need to perform a lot of synchronous operations, but still interact with Curio, you can launch an async-thread. An asynchronous thread flips the whole world around–instead of executing selected synchronous operations using run_in_thread(), you run everything in a thread and perform selected async operations using the AWAIT() function.

To create an asynchronous thread, use spawn_thread():

await spawn_thread(func, *args, daemon=False)

Launch an asynchronous thread that runs the callable func(*args). daemon specifies if the thread runs in daemonic mode. Returns an AsyncThread instance.

An instance t of AsyncThread supports the following methods.

await t.join()

Waits for the thread to terminate, returning the final result. The final result is returned in the same manner as Task.join().

await t.wait()

Waits for the thread to terminate, but does not return any result.

await t.cancel(*, blocking=True, exc=TaskCancelled)

Cancels the asynchronous thread. The behavior is the same as with Task. Note: An asynchronous thread can only be cancelled when it performs operations using AWAIT().

t.result

The final result of the thread. If the thread crashed with an exception, that exception is reraised on access.

t.exception

The final exception (if any)

t.id

Thread ID. A monotonically increasing integer.

t.terminated

True if the thread is terminated.

t.cancelled

True if the thread was cancelled.

Within a thread, the following function is used to execute any coroutine.

AWAIT(coro)

Execute a coroutine on behalf of an asynchronous thread. The requested coroutine executes in Curio’s main execution thread. The caller is blocked until it completes. If used outside of an asynchronous thread, an AsyncOnlyError exception is raised. If coro is not a coroutine, it is returned unmodified. The reason AWAIT is all-caps is to make it more easily heard when there are all of these coders yelling at you to just use pure async code instead of launching a thread. Also, await is a reserved keyword in Python 3.7.

Here is an example of an asynchronous thread reading off a Curio queue:

from curio import run, Queue, sleep, CancelledError
from curio.thread import spawn_thread, AWAIT

def consumer(queue):
    try:
        while True:
            item = AWAIT(queue.get())
            print('Got:', item)
            AWAIT(queue.task_done())

    except CancelledError:
        print('Consumer goodbye!')
        raise

async def main():
    q = Queue()
    t = await spawn_thread(consumer, q)

    for i in range(10):
        await q.put(i)
        await sleep(1)

    await q.join()
    await t.cancel()

run(main())

Asynchronous threads can perform any combination of blocking operations including those that might involve normal thread-related primitives such as locks and queues. These operations will block the thread itself, but will not block the Curio kernel loop. In a sense, this is the whole point–if you run things in an async threads, the rest of Curio is protected. Asynchronous threads can be cancelled in the same manner as normal Curio tasks. However, the same rules apply–an asynchronous thread can only be cancelled on blocking operations involving AWAIT().

Scheduler Activations

Every task in Curio goes through a life-cycle of creation, running, suspension, and termination. These steps are managed by an internal scheduler. A scheduler activation is a mechanism for monitoring these steps. To do this, you define a class that inherits from Activation in the submodule curio.activation.

class Activation

Base class for defining scheduler activations.

An instance a of Activation implements the following methods:

a.activate(kernel)

Executed once upon initialization of the Curio kernel. kernel is a reference to the Kernel instance.

a.created(task)

Called when a new task is created. task is the newly created Task instance.

a.running(task)

Called immediately prior to the execution cycle of a task.

a.suspended(task, trap)

Called when a task has suspended execution. trap is the trap executed.

a.terminated(task)

Called when a task has terminated execution. Note: the suspended() method is always called immediately prior to a task being terminated.

Activations are used to implement debugging and diagnostic tools. As an example, here is a scheduler activation that monitors for long-execution times and reports warnings:

from curio.activation import Activation
import time

class LongBlock(Activation):
    def __init__(self, maxtime):
        self.maxtime = maxtime

    def running(self, task):
        self.start = time.time()

    def suspended(self, task, trap):
        end = time.time()
        if end - self.start > self.maxtime:
            print(f'Long blocking in {task.name}: {end - self.start}')

Scheduler activations are registered when a Kernel is created or with the top-level run() function:

kern = Kernel(activations=[LongBlock(0.05)])
with kern:
    kern.run(coro)

# Alternative
run(coro, activations=[LongBlock(0.05)])

Asynchronous Metaprogramming

The curio.meta module provides some functions that might be useful if implementing more complex programs and APIs involving coroutines.

curio_running():

Return True if Curio is running in the current thread.

iscoroutinefunction(func)

True True if the supplied func is a coroutine function or is known to resolve into a coroutine. Unlike a similar function in inspect, this function knows about functools.partial(), awaitable objects, and async generators.

instantiate_coroutine(corofunc, *args, **kwargs)

Instantiate a coroutine from corofunc. If corofunc is already a coroutine object, it is returned unmodified. If it’s a coroutine function, it’s executed within an async context using the given arguments. If it’s not a coroutine, corofunc is called with the given arguments with the expectation that whatever is returned will be a coroutine instance.

from_coroutine(level=2)

Returns True if the caller is calling function is being invoked from inside a coroutine or not. This is primarily of use when writing decorators and other advanced metaprogramming features. The implementation requires stack-frame inspection. The level argument controls the stack frame in which information is obtained and might need to be adjusted depending on the nature of code calling this function.

awaitable(syncfunc)

A decorator that allows an asynchronous implementation of a function to be attached to an existing synchronous function. If the resulting function is called from synchronous code, the synchronous function is used. If the function is called from asynchronous code, the asynchronous function is used.

Here is an example that illustrates:

import curio
from curio.meta import awaitable

def spam(x, y):
    print('Synchronous ->', x, y)

@awaitable(spam)
async def spam(x, y):
    print('Asynchronous ->', x, y)

async def main():
    await spam(2, 3)        # Calls asynchronous spam()

if __name__ == '__main__':
   spam(2, 3)               # Calls synchronous spam()
   curio.run(main())

Exceptions

The following exceptions are defined. All are subclasses of the CurioError base class.

CurioError

Base class for all Curio-specific exceptions.

CancelledError

Base class for all cancellation-related exceptions.

TaskCancelled

Exception raised in a coroutine if it has been cancelled using the Task.cancel() method. If ignored, the coroutine is silently terminated. If caught, a coroutine can continue to run, but should work to terminate execution. Ignoring a cancellation request and continuing to execute will likely cause some other task to hang.

TaskTimeout

Exception raised in a coroutine if it has been cancelled by timeout. A subclass of CancelledError.

TimeoutCancellationError

Exception raised in a coroutine if it has been cancelled due to a timeout, but not one related to the inner-most timeout operation. A subclass of CancelledError.

UncaughtTimeoutError

Exception raised if a timeout from an inner timeout operation has propagated to an outer timeout, indicating the lack of a proper try-except block. A subclass of CurioError.

TaskError

Exception raised by the Task.join() method if an uncaught exception occurs in a task. It is a chained exception. The __cause__ attribute contains the exception that causes the task to fail.

SyncIOError

Exception raised if a task attempts to perform a synchronous I/O operation on an object that only supports asynchronous I/O.

AsyncOnlyError

Exception raised by the AWAIT() function if its applied to code not properly running in an async-thread.

ResourceBusy

Exception raised in an I/O operation is requested on a resource, but the resource is already busy performing the same operation on behalf of another task. The exceptions ReadResourceBusy and WriteResourceBusy are subclasses that provide a more specific cause.

Low-level Traps and Scheduling

The following system calls are available in curio.traps, but not typically used directly in user code. They are used to implement higher level objects such as locks, socket wrappers, and so forth. If you find yourself using these, you’re probably doing something wrong–or implementing a new Curio primitive.

Unless otherwise indicated, all traps are potentially blocking and may raise a cancellation exception.

await _read_wait(fileobj)

Sleep until data is available for reading on fileobj. fileobj is any file-like object with a fileno() method.

await _write_wait(fileobj)

Sleep until data can be written on fileobj. fileobj is any file-like object with a fileno() method.

await _io_release(fileobj)

Release any kernel resources associated with fileobj. Should be called prior to closing any file.

await _io_waiting(fileobj)

Returns a tuple (rtask, wtask) of tasks currently sleeping on fileobj (if any). Returns immediately.

await _future_wait(fut)

Sleep until a result is set on fut. fut is an instance of concurrent.futures.Future.

await _cancel_task(task, exc=TaskCancelled, val=None)

Cancel task. Returns immediately. exc and val specify the exception type and value.

await _scheduler_wait(sched, state_name)

Go to sleep on a kernel scheduler primitive. sched is an instance of curio.sched.SchedBase. state_name is the name of the wait state (used in debugging).

await _scheduler_wake(sched, n=1, value=None, exc=None)

Reschedule one or more tasks from a kernel scheduler primitive. n is the number of tasks to release. value and exc specify the return value or exception to raise in the task when it resumes execution. Returns immediately.

await _get_kernel()

Get a reference to the running Kernel object. Returns immediately.

await _get_current()

Get a reference to the currently running Task instance. Returns immediately.

await _sleep(seconds)

Sleep for a given number of seconds.

await _set_timeout(seconds)

Set a timeout in the currently running task. Returns immediately with the previous timeout (if any)

await _unset_timeout(previous)

Unset a timeout in the currently running task. previous is the value returned by the _set_timeout() call used to set the timeout. Returns immediately.

await _clock()

Immediately returns the current monotonic clock value.

Again, you’re unlikely to use any of these functions directly. However, here’s a small taste of how they get used. For example, the curio.io.Socket.recv() method looks roughly like this:

class Socket:
    ...
    def recv(self, maxbytes):
        while True:
            try:
                return self._socket.recv(maxbytes)
            except BlockingIOError:
                await _read_wait(self._socket)
    ...

This method first tries to receive data. If none is available, the _read_wait() call is used to put the task to sleep until reading can be performed. When it awakes, the receive operation is retried. Just to emphasize, the _read_wait() doesn’t actually perform any I/O. It’s just scheduling a task for it.

The _scheduler_wait() and _scheduler_wake() traps are used to implement high-level synchronization and queuing primitives. The sched argument to these calls is an instance of a class that inherits from SchedBase defined in the curio.sched submodule. The following specific classes are defined:

class SchedFIFO

A scheduling FIFO queue. Used to implement locks and queues.

class SchedBarrier

A scheduling barrier. Used to implement events.

The following public methods are defined on an instance s of these classes:

await s.suspend(reason)

Suspend the calling task. reason is a string describing why.

await s.wake(n=1)

Wake one or more suspended tasks.

len(s)

Number of tasks suspended.

Here is an example of how a scheduler primitive is used to implement an Event:

from curio.sched import SchedBarrier

class Event:
    def __init__(self):
        self._value = 0
        self._sched = SchedBarrier()

    async def wait(self):
        if self._value == 0:
            await self._sched.suspend('EVENT_WAIT')

    async def set(self):
        self._value = 1
        await self._sched.wake(len(self._sched))

Debugging and Diagnostics

Curio provides a few facilities for basic debugging and diagnostics. If you print a Task instance, it will tell you the name of the associated coroutine along with the current file/linenumber of where the task is currently executing. The output might look similar to this:

Task(id=3, name='child', state='TIME_SLEEP') at filename.py:9

You can additionally use the Task.traceback() method to create a current stack traceback of any given task. For example:

t = await spawn(coro)
...
print(t.traceback())

Instead of a full traceback, you can also get the current filename and line number:

filename, lineno = await t.where()

To find out more detailed information about what the kernel is doing, you can supply one or more debugging modules to the run() function. To trace all task scheduling events, use the schedtrace debugger as follows:

from curio.debug import schedtrace
run(coro, debug=schedtrace)

To additionally include information on low-level kernel traps, use the traptrace debugger instead:

from curio.debug import traptrace
run(coro, debug=traptrace)

To report all exceptions from crashed tasks, use the logcrash debugger:

from curio.debug import logcrash
run(coro, debug=logcrash)

To report warnings about long-running tasks that appear to be stalling the event loop, use the longblock debugger:

from curio.debug import longblock
run(coro, debug=longblock(max_time=0.1))

The different debuggers may be combined together if you provide a list. For example:

run(coro, debug=[schedtrace, traptrace, logcrash])

The amount of output produced by the different debugging modules might be considerable. You can filter it to a specific set of coroutine names using the filter keyword argument. For example:

async def spam():
    ...

async def coro():
    t = await spawn(spam)
    ...

run(coro, debug=schedtrace(filter={'spam'}))

The logging level used by the different debuggers can be changed using the level keyword argument:

run(coro, debug=schedtrace(level=logging.DEBUG))

A different Logger instance can be used using the log keyword argument:

import logging
run(coro, debug=schedtrace(log=logging.getLogger('spam')))

Be aware that all diagnostic logging is synchronous. As such, all logging operations might temporarily block the event loop–especially if logging output involves file I/O or network operations. If this is a concern, you should take steps to mitigate it in the configuration of logging. For example, you might use the QueueHandler and QueueListener objects from the logging module to offload log handling to a separate thread.