This is an async Python implementation of the circuitbreaker library.
The project is available on PyPI. Simply run:
$ pip install aiocircuitbreaker
This is the simplest example. Just decorate a async function with the @circuit
decorator:
from aiocircuitbreaker import circuit @circuit async def external_call(): ...
This decorator sets up a circuit breaker with the default settings. The circuit breaker:
- monitors the function execution and counts failures
- resets the failure count after every successful execution (while it is closed)
- opens and prevents further executions after 5 subsequent failures
- switches to half-open and allows one test-execution after 30 seconds recovery timeout
- closes if the test-execution succeeded
- considers all raised exceptions (based on class
Exception
) as an expected failure - is named "external_call" - the name of the function it decorates
A failure is a raised exception, which was not caught during the function call.
By default, the circuit breaker listens for all exceptions based on the class Exception
.
That means, that all exceptions raised during the function call are considered as an
"expected failure" and will increase the failure count.
It is important, to be as specific as possible, when defining the expected exception.
The main purpose of a circuit breaker is to protect your distributed system from a cascading failure.
That means, you probably want to open the circuit breaker only, if the integration point on the other
end is unavailable. So e.g. if there is an ConnectionError
or a request Timeout
.
If you are e.g. using the requests library (http://docs.python-requests.org/) for making HTTP calls,
its RequestException
class would be a great choice for the expected_exception
parameter.
All recognized exceptions will be re-raised anyway, but the goal is, to let the circuit breaker only recognize those exceptions which are related to the communication to your integration point.
The following configuration options can be adjusted via decorator parameters. For example:
from aiocircuitbreaker import circuit @circuit(failure_threshold=10, expected_exception=ConnectionError) async def external_call(): ...
By default, the circuit breaker opens after 5 subsequent failures. You can adjust this value with the failure_threshold
parameter.
By default, the circuit breaker stays open for 30 seconds to allow the integration point to recover.
You can adjust this value with the recovery_timeout
parameter.
By default, the circuit breaker listens for all exceptions which are based on the Exception
class.
You can adjust this with the expected_exception
parameter. It can be either an exception class or a tuple of exception classes.
By default, the circuit breaker name is empty string. You can adjust the name with parameter name
.
By default, the circuit breaker will raise a CircuitBreaker
exception when the circuit is opened.
You can instead specify a function (async function) to be called when the circuit is opened. This function can be specified with the
fallback_function
parameter and will be called with the same parameters as the decorated function would be.
If you apply circuit breakers to a couple of functions and you always set specific options other than the default values,
you can extend the CircuitBreaker
class and create your own circuit breaker subclass instead:
from aiocircuitbreaker import CircuitBreaker class MyCircuitBreaker(CircuitBreaker): FAILURE_THRESHOLD = 10 RECOVERY_TIMEOUT = 60 EXPECTED_EXCEPTION = RequestException
Now you have two options to apply your circuit breaker to a function. As an Object directly:
@MyCircuitBreaker() async def external_call(): ...
Please note, that the circuit breaker class has to be initialized, you have to use a class instance as decorator (@MyCircuitBreaker()
), not the class itself (@MyCircuitBreaker
).
Or via the decorator proxy:
@circuit(cls=MyCircuitBreaker) async def external_call(): ...