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Enhanced Service Gateway

Project description

Enhanced Service Gateway

Enhanced Service Gateway.

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Introduction

ESG is a speed-oriented ASGI server implementation with HTTP/1.1 and WebSockets support.

Is a hard fork of the awesome uvicorn project.

Protocol implementation based on:

  • llhttp - For HTTP payload
  • http-parser - For URL parsing
  • httptools - Clean and fast binding for the previous two. ESG Cython part development started from its forking.

Performance

Speed comparison ESG vs Uvicorn

PS > docker-compose run --rm bench-esg
Running 15s test @ http://esg:8000/
  4 threads and 64 connections
  Thread Stats   Avg      Stdev     Max   +/- Stdev
    Latency     2.15ms  390.13us   9.51ms   92.82%
    Req/Sec     7.47k   455.23     9.39k    68.00%
  445749 requests in 15.01s, 66.32MB read
Requests/sec:  29694.49
Transfer/sec:      4.42MB
PS > docker-compose run --rm bench-uvicorn
Running 15s test @ http://uvicorn:8000/
  4 threads and 64 connections
  Thread Stats   Avg      Stdev     Max   +/- Stdev
    Latency     4.03ms    0.85ms  16.28ms   91.16%
    Req/Sec     3.99k   376.72     4.53k    82.67%
  238272 requests in 15.01s, 36.36MB read
Requests/sec:  15874.17
Transfer/sec:      2.42MB

Quickstart

Install using pip:

$ pip install esg[standard]

standart extra will also install:

  • uvloop if applicable to system arch
  • websockets if available *
  • watchgod for development's mode flag --reload
  • PyYAML for using *.yaml config files in --log-config parameter
  • python-dotenv for enabling --env-file parameter functionality
  • colorama for Windows users

*If you want use wsproto instead of websockets you'd need to install it manually

Running simple ASGI application

Create an application, in example.py:

async def app(scope, receive, send):
    assert scope['type'] == 'http'

    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.start',
        'status': 200,
        'headers': [
            [b'content-type', b'text/plain'],
        ],
    })
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.body',
        'body': b'Hello, world!',
        'more_body': False
     })

Run the server:

$ esg example:app

ASGI frameworks

Squall

Squall framework which looks ahead.

High performance API framework.

Starlette

Starlette is a lightweight ASGI framework/toolkit.

It is ideal for building high performance asyncio services, and supports both HTTP and WebSockets.

Django Channels

The ASGI specification was originally designed for use with Django Channels.

Channels is a little different to other ASGI frameworks in that it provides an asynchronous frontend onto a threaded-framework backend. It allows Django to support WebSockets, background tasks, and long-running connections, with application code still running in a standard threaded context.

Quart

Quart is a Flask-like ASGI web framework.

FastAPI

FastAPI is an API framework based on Starlette and Pydantic, heavily inspired by previous server versions of APIStar.

You write your API function parameters with Python 3.6+ type declarations and get automatic data conversion, data validation, OpenAPI schemas (with JSON Schemas) and interactive API documentation UIs.

BlackSheep

BlackSheep is a web framework based on ASGI, inspired by Flask and ASP.NET Core.

Its most distinctive features are built-in support for dependency injection, automatic binding of parameters by request handler's type annotations, and automatic generation of OpenAPI documentation and Swagger UI.

Usage

The ESG command line tool is the easiest way to run your application...

Command line options

$ esg --help
Usage: esg [OPTIONS] APP

Options:
  --host TEXT                     Bind socket to this host.  [default:
                                  127.0.0.1]
  --port INTEGER                  Bind socket to this port.  [default: 8000]
  --uds TEXT                      Bind to a UNIX domain socket.
  --fd INTEGER                    Bind to socket from this file descriptor.
  --reload                        Enable auto-reload.
  --reload-dir PATH               Set reload directories explicitly, instead
                                  of using the current working directory.
  --reload-include TEXT           Set glob patterns to include while watching
                                  for files. Includes '*.py' by default; these
                                  defaults can be overridden in `--reload-
                                  exclude`.
  --reload-exclude TEXT           Set glob patterns to exclude while watching
                                  for files. Includes '.*, .py[cod], .sw.*,
                                  ~*' by default; these defaults can be
                                  overridden in `--reload-include`.
  --reload-delay FLOAT            Delay between previous and next check if
                                  application needs to be. Defaults to 0.25s.
                                  [default: 0.25]
  --workers INTEGER               Number of worker processes. Defaults to the
                                  $WEB_CONCURRENCY environment variable if
                                  available, or 1. Not valid with --reload.
  --loop [auto|asyncio|uvloop]    Event loop implementation.  [default: auto]
  --ws [auto|none|websockets|wsproto]
                                  WebSocket protocol implementation.
                                  [default: auto]
  --ws-max-size INTEGER           WebSocket max size message in bytes
                                  [default: 16777216]
  --ws-ping-interval FLOAT        WebSocket ping interval  [default: 20.0]
  --ws-ping-timeout FLOAT         WebSocket ping timeout  [default: 20.0]
  --lifespan [auto|on|off]        Lifespan implementation.  [default: auto]
  --interface [auto|asgi3|asgi2|wsgi]
                                  Select ASGI3, ASGI2, or WSGI as the
                                  application interface.  [default: auto]
  --env-file PATH                 Environment configuration file.
  --log-config PATH               Logging configuration file. Supported
                                  formats: .ini, .json, .yaml.
  --log-level [critical|error|warning|info|debug|trace]
                                  Log level. [default: info]
  --access-log / --no-access-log  Enable/Disable access log.
  --use-colors / --no-use-colors  Enable/Disable colorized logging.
  --proxy-headers / --no-proxy-headers
                                  Enable/Disable X-Forwarded-Proto,
                                  X-Forwarded-For, X-Forwarded-Port to
                                  populate remote address info.
  --server-header / --no-server-header
                                  Enable/Disable default Server header.
  --date-header / --no-date-header
                                  Enable/Disable default Date header.
  --forwarded-allow-ips TEXT      Comma seperated list of IPs to trust with
                                  proxy headers. Defaults to the
                                  $FORWARDED_ALLOW_IPS environment variable if
                                  available, or '127.0.0.1'.
  --root-path TEXT                Set the ASGI 'root_path' for applications
                                  submounted below a given URL path.
  --limit-concurrency INTEGER     Maximum number of concurrent connections to
                                  allow, before issuing HTTP 503 responses.
  --backlog INTEGER               Maximum number of connections to hold in
                                  backlog
  --limit-max-requests INTEGER    Maximum number of requests to service before
                                  terminating the process.
  --timeout-keep-alive INTEGER    Close Keep-Alive connections if no new data
                                  is received within this timeout.  [default:
                                  5]
  --ssl-keyfile TEXT              SSL key file
  --ssl-certfile TEXT             SSL certificate file
  --ssl-keyfile-password TEXT     SSL keyfile password
  --ssl-version INTEGER           SSL version to use (see stdlib ssl module's)
                                  [default: 17]
  --ssl-cert-reqs INTEGER         Whether client certificate is required (see
                                  stdlib ssl module's)  [default: 0]
  --ssl-ca-certs TEXT             CA certificates file
  --ssl-ciphers TEXT              Ciphers to use (see stdlib ssl module's)
                                  [default: TLSv1]
  --header TEXT                   Specify custom default HTTP response headers
                                  as a Name:Value pair
  --version                       Display the esg version and exit.
  --app-dir TEXT                  Look for APP in the specified directory, by
                                  adding this to the PYTHONPATH. Defaults to
                                  the current working directory.  [default: .]
  --factory                       Treat APP as an application factory, i.e. a
                                  () -> <ASGI app> callable.  [default: False]
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

Running programmatically

To run ESG directly from your application

example.py:

import esg

async def app(scope, receive, send):
    assert scope['type'] == 'http'

    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.start',
        'status': 200,
        'headers': [
            [b'content-type', b'text/plain'],
        ],
    })
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.body',
        'body': b'Hello, world!',
        'more_body': False
     })

if __name__ == "__main__":
    esg.run("example:app", host="127.0.0.1", port=5000, log_level="info")

Running with Gunicorn

Gunicorn is a mature, fully featured server and process manager.

ESG includes a Gunicorn worker class allowing you to run ASGI applications, with all of ESG's performance benefits, while also giving you Gunicorn's fully-featured process management.

This allows you to increase or decrease the number of worker processes on the fly, restart worker processes gracefully, or perform server upgrades without downtime.

For production deployments we recommend using gunicorn with the ESG worker class.

gunicorn example:app -w 4 -k esg.workers.ESGWorker

For more information, see the deployment documentation.

Application factories

The --factory flag allows loading the application from a factory function, rather than an application instance directly. The factory will be called with no arguments and should return an ASGI application.

example.py:

def create_app():
    app = ...
    return app
$ esg --factory example:create_app

The ASGI interface

ESG uses the ASGI specification for interacting with an ASGI application.

The application should expose an async callable which takes three arguments:

  • scope - A dictionary containing information about the incoming connection.
  • receive - A channel on which to receive incoming messages from the server.
  • send - A channel on which to send outgoing messages to the server.

Two common patterns you might use are either function-based applications:

async def app(scope, receive, send):
    assert scope['type'] == 'http'
    ...

Or instance-based applications:

class App:
    async def __call__(self, scope, receive, send):
        assert scope['type'] == 'http'
        ...

app = App()

It's good practice for applications to raise an exception on scope types that they do not handle.

The content of the scope argument, and the messages expected by receive and send depend on the protocol being used.

The format for HTTP messages is described in the ASGI HTTP Message format.

HTTP Scope

An incoming HTTP request might have a connection scope like this:

{
    'type': 'http.request',
    'scheme': 'http',
    'root_path': '',
    'server': ('127.0.0.1', 8000),
    'http_version': '1.1',
    'method': 'GET',
    'path': '/',
    'headers': [
        [b'host', b'127.0.0.1:8000'],
        [b'user-agent', b'curl/7.51.0'],
        [b'accept', b'*/*']
    ]
}

HTTP Messages

The instance coroutine communicates back to the server by sending messages to the send coroutine.

await send({
    'type': 'http.response.start',
    'status': 200,
    'headers': [
        [b'content-type', b'text/plain'],
    ]
})
await send({
    'type': 'http.response.body',
    'body': b'Hello, world!',
})

Requests & responses

Here's an example that displays the method and path used in the incoming request:

async def app(scope, receive, send):
    """
    Echo the method and path back in an HTTP response.
    """
    assert scope['type'] == 'http'

    body = f'Received {scope["method"]} request to {scope["path"]}'
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.start',
        'status': 200,
        'headers': [
            [b'content-type', b'text/plain'],
        ]
    })
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.body',
        'body': body.encode('utf-8'),
    })

Reading the request body

You can stream the request body without blocking the asyncio task pool, by fetching messages from the receive coroutine.

async def read_body(receive):
    """
    Read and return the entire body from an incoming ASGI message.
    """
    body = b''
    more_body = True

    while more_body:
        message = await receive()
        body += message.get('body', b'')
        more_body = message.get('more_body', False)

    return body


async def app(scope, receive, send):
    """
    Echo the request body back in an HTTP response.
    """
    body = await read_body(receive)
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.start',
        'status': 200,
        'headers': [
            [b'content-type', b'text/plain'],
        ]
    })
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.body',
        'body': body,
    })

Streaming responses

You can stream responses by sending multiple http.response.body messages to the send coroutine.

import asyncio


async def app(scope, receive, send):
    """
    Send a slowly streaming HTTP response back to the client.
    """
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.start',
        'status': 200,
        'headers': [
            [b'content-type', b'text/plain'],
        ]
    })
    for chunk in [b'Hello', b', ', b'world!']:
        await send({
            'type': 'http.response.body',
            'body': chunk,
            'more_body': True
        })
        await asyncio.sleep(1)
    await send({
        'type': 'http.response.body',
        'body': b'',
    })

Alternative ASGI servers

Uvicorn

The most famous ASGI server. ESG development started from hard-forking of exactly Uvicorn.

Uvicorn has a clean codebase and superior fast performance.

$ pip install uvicorn
$ uvicorn app:App

Daphne

The first ASGI server implementation, originally developed to power Django Channels, is the Daphne webserver.

It is run widely in production, and supports HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, and WebSockets.

Any of the example applications given here can equally well be run using daphne instead.

$ pip install daphne
$ daphne app:App

Hypercorn

Hypercorn was initially part of the Quart web framework, before being separated out into a standalone ASGI server.

Hypercorn supports HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, and WebSockets.

$ pip install hypercorn
$ hypercorn app:App

Roadmap

  • Better security setting.
    • Header timeout
    • Body timeout (timeout between calling receive and data arrive)
    • Headers size limit
    • Request body size limit
  • Statistic
  • Cythonized WebSocket protocol

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