.. _using-asyncio: ======= asyncio ======= .. versionadded:: 2.0 Scrapy has partial support for :mod:`asyncio`. After you :ref:`install the asyncio reactor `, you may use :mod:`asyncio` and :mod:`asyncio`-powered libraries in any :doc:`coroutine `. .. _install-asyncio: Installing the asyncio reactor ============================== To enable :mod:`asyncio` support, your :setting:`TWISTED_REACTOR` setting needs to be set to ``'twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor'``, which is the default value. If you are using :class:`~scrapy.crawler.CrawlerRunner`, you also need to install the :class:`~twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor` reactor manually. You can do that using :func:`~scrapy.utils.reactor.install_reactor`: .. skip: next .. code-block:: python install_reactor("twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor") .. _asyncio-preinstalled-reactor: Handling a pre-installed reactor ================================ ``twisted.internet.reactor`` and some other Twisted imports install the default Twisted reactor as a side effect. Once a Twisted reactor is installed, it is not possible to switch to a different reactor at run time. If you :ref:`configure the asyncio Twisted reactor ` and, at run time, Scrapy complains that a different reactor is already installed, chances are you have some such imports in your code. You can usually fix the issue by moving those offending module-level Twisted imports to the method or function definitions where they are used. For example, if you have something like: .. code-block:: python from twisted.internet import reactor def my_function(): reactor.callLater(...) Switch to something like: .. code-block:: python def my_function(): from twisted.internet import reactor reactor.callLater(...) Alternatively, you can try to :ref:`manually install the asyncio reactor `, with :func:`~scrapy.utils.reactor.install_reactor`, before those imports happen. .. _asyncio-await-dfd: Integrating Deferred code and asyncio code ========================================== Coroutine functions can await on Deferreds by wrapping them into :class:`asyncio.Future` objects. Scrapy provides two helpers for this: .. autofunction:: scrapy.utils.defer.deferred_to_future .. autofunction:: scrapy.utils.defer.maybe_deferred_to_future .. tip:: If you don't need to support reactors other than the default :class:`~twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor`, you can use :func:`~scrapy.utils.defer.deferred_to_future`, otherwise you should use :func:`~scrapy.utils.defer.maybe_deferred_to_future`. .. tip:: If you need to use these functions in code that aims to be compatible with lower versions of Scrapy that do not provide these functions, down to Scrapy 2.0 (earlier versions do not support :mod:`asyncio`), you can copy the implementation of these functions into your own code. Coroutines and futures can be wrapped into Deferreds (for example, when a Scrapy API requires passing a Deferred to it) using the following helpers: .. autofunction:: scrapy.utils.defer.deferred_from_coro .. autofunction:: scrapy.utils.defer.deferred_f_from_coro_f .. _enforce-asyncio-requirement: Enforcing asyncio as a requirement ================================== If you are writing a :ref:`component ` that requires asyncio to work, use :func:`scrapy.utils.reactor.is_asyncio_reactor_installed` to :ref:`enforce it as a requirement `. For example: .. code-block:: python from scrapy.utils.reactor import is_asyncio_reactor_installed class MyComponent: def __init__(self): if not is_asyncio_reactor_installed(): raise ValueError( f"{MyComponent.__qualname__} requires the asyncio Twisted " f"reactor. Make sure you have it configured in the " f"TWISTED_REACTOR setting. See the asyncio documentation " f"of Scrapy for more information." ) .. autofunction:: scrapy.utils.reactor.is_asyncio_reactor_installed .. _asyncio-windows: Windows-specific notes ====================== The Windows implementation of :mod:`asyncio` can use two event loop implementations, :class:`~asyncio.ProactorEventLoop` (default) and :class:`~asyncio.SelectorEventLoop`. However, only :class:`~asyncio.SelectorEventLoop` works with Twisted. Scrapy changes the event loop class to :class:`~asyncio.SelectorEventLoop` automatically when you change the :setting:`TWISTED_REACTOR` setting or call :func:`~scrapy.utils.reactor.install_reactor`. .. note:: Other libraries you use may require :class:`~asyncio.ProactorEventLoop`, e.g. because it supports subprocesses (this is the case with `playwright`_), so you cannot use them together with Scrapy on Windows (but you should be able to use them on WSL or native Linux). .. _playwright: https://github.com/microsoft/playwright-python .. _using-custom-loops: Using custom asyncio loops ========================== You can also use custom asyncio event loops with the asyncio reactor. Set the :setting:`ASYNCIO_EVENT_LOOP` setting to the import path of the desired event loop class to use it instead of the default asyncio event loop. .. _disable-asyncio: Switching to a non-asyncio reactor ================================== If for some reason your code doesn't work with the asyncio reactor, you can use a different reactor by setting the :setting:`TWISTED_REACTOR` setting to its import path (e.g. ``'twisted.internet.epollreactor.EPollReactor'``) or to ``None``, which will use the default reactor for your platform.