catalogue
is a tiny, zero-dependencies library that makes it easy to add
function (or object) registries to your code. Function registries are helpful
when you have objects that need to be both easily serializable and fully
customizable. Instead of passing a function into your object, you pass in an
identifier name, which the object can use to lookup the function from the
registry. This makes the object easy to serialize, because the name is a simple
string. If you instead saved the function, you'd have to use Pickle for
serialization, which has many drawbacks.
pip install catalogue
conda install -c conda-forge catalogue
β οΈ Important note:catalogue
v2.0+ is only compatible with Python 3.6+. For Python 2.7+ compatibility, usecatalogue
v1.x.
Let's imagine you're developing a Python package that needs to load data
somewhere. You've already implemented some loader functions for the most common
data types, but you want to allow the user to easily add their own. Using
catalogue.create
you can create a new registry under the namespace
your_package
β loaders
.
# YOUR PACKAGE
import catalogue
loaders = catalogue.create("your_package", "loaders")
This gives you a loaders.register
decorator that your users can import and
decorate their custom loader functions with.
# USER CODE
from your_package import loaders
@loaders.register("custom_loader")
def custom_loader(data):
# Load something here...
return data
The decorated function will be registered automatically and in your package,
you'll be able to access all loaders by calling loaders.get_all
.
# YOUR PACKAGE
def load_data(data, loader_id):
print("All loaders:", loaders.get_all()) # {"custom_loader": <custom_loader>}
loader = loaders.get(loader_id)
return loader(data)
The user can now refer to their custom loader using only its string name
("custom_loader"
) and your application will know what to do and will use their
custom function.
# USER CODE
from your_package import load_data
load_data(data, loader_id="custom_loader")
Sure, that's the more classic callback approach. Instead of a string ID,
load_data
could also take a function, in which case you wouldn't need a
package like this. catalogue
helps you when you need to produce a serializable
record of which functions were passed in. For instance, you might want to write
a log message, or save a config to load back your object later. With
catalogue
, your functions can be parameterized by strings, so logging and
serialization remains easy β while still giving you full extensibility.
Decorators normally run when modules are imported. Relying on this side-effect can sometimes lead to confusion, especially if there's no other reason the module would be imported. One solution is to use entry points.
For instance, in spaCy we're starting to use function
registries to make the pipeline components much more customizable. Let's say one
user, Jo, develops a better tagging model using new machine learning research.
End-users of Jo's package should be able to write
spacy.load("jo_tagging_model")
. They shouldn't need to remember to write
import jos_tagged_model
first, just to run the function registries as a
side-effect. With entry points, the registration happens at install time β so
you don't need to rely on the import side-effects.
Create a new registry for a given namespace. Returns a setter function that can
be used as a decorator or called with a name and func
keyword argument. If
entry_points=True
is set, the registry will check for
Python entry points
advertised for the given namespace, e.g. the entry point group
spacy_architectures
for the namespace "spacy", "architectures"
, in
Registry.get
and Registry.get_all
. This allows other packages to
auto-register functions.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
*namespace |
str | The namespace, e.g. "spacy" or "spacy", "architectures" . |
entry_points |
bool | Whether to check for entry points of the given namespace and pre-populate the global registry. |
RETURNS | Registry |
The Registry object with methods to register and retrieve functions. |
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures")
# Use as decorator
@architectures.register("custom_architecture")
def custom_architecture():
pass
# Use as regular function
architectures.register("custom_architecture", func=custom_architecture)
The registry object that can be used to register and retrieve functions. It's
usually created internally when you call catalogue.create
.
Initialize a new registry. If entry_points=True
is set, the registry will
check for
Python entry points
advertised for the given namespace, e.g. the entry point group
spacy_architectures
for the namespace "spacy", "architectures"
, in
Registry.get
and Registry.get_all
.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
namespace |
Tuple[str] | The namespace, e.g. "spacy" or "spacy", "architectures" . |
entry_points |
bool | Whether to check for entry points of the given namespace in get and get_all . |
RETURNS | Registry |
The newly created object. |
# User-facing API
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures")
# Internal API
architectures = Registry(("spacy", "architectures"))
Check whether a name is in the registry.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
str | The name to check. |
RETURNS | bool | Whether the name is in the registry. |
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures")
@architectures.register("custom_architecture")
def custom_architecture():
pass
assert "custom_architecture" in architectures
Register a function in the registry's namespace. Can be used as a decorator or
called as a function with the func
keyword argument supplying the function to
register. Delegates to Registry.register
.
Register a function in the registry's namespace. Can be used as a decorator or
called as a function with the func
keyword argument supplying the function to
register.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
str | The name to register under the namespace. |
func |
Any | Optional function to register (if not used as decorator). |
RETURNS | Callable | The decorator that takes one argument, the name. |
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures")
# Use as decorator
@architectures.register("custom_architecture")
def custom_architecture():
pass
# Use as regular function
architectures.register("custom_architecture", func=custom_architecture)
Get a function registered in the namespace.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
str | The name. |
RETURNS | Any | The registered function. |
custom_architecture = architectures.get("custom_architecture")
Get all functions in the registry's namespace.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
RETURNS | Dict[str, Any] | The registered functions, keyed by name. |
all_architectures = architectures.get_all()
# {"custom_architecture": <custom_architecture>}
Get registered entry points from other packages for this namespace. The name of
the entry point group is the namespace joined by _
.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
RETURNS | Dict[str, Any] | The loaded entry points, keyed by name. |
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures", entry_points=True)
# Will get all entry points of the group "spacy_architectures"
all_entry_points = architectures.get_entry_points()
Check if registered entry point is available for a given name in the namespace and load it. Otherwise, return the default value.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
str | Name of entry point to load. |
default |
Any | The default value to return. Defaults to None . |
RETURNS | Any | The loaded entry point or the default value. |
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures", entry_points=True)
# Will get entry point "custom_architecture" of the group "spacy_architectures"
custom_architecture = architectures.get_entry_point("custom_architecture")
Find the information about a registered function, including the module and path to the file it's defined in, the line number and the docstring, if available.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
str | Name of the registered function. |
RETURNS | Dict[str, Union[str, int]] | The information about the function. |
import catalogue
architectures = catalogue.create("spacy", "architectures", entry_points=True)
@architectures("my_architecture")
def my_architecture():
"""This is an architecture"""
pass
info = architectures.find("my_architecture")
# {'module': 'your_package.architectures',
# 'file': '/path/to/your_package/architectures.py',
# 'line_no': 5,
# 'docstring': 'This is an architecture'}
Check if a namespace exists.
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
*namespace |
str | The namespace, e.g. "spacy" or "spacy", "architectures" . |
RETURNS | bool | Whether the namespace exists. |