Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: async-timeout
Version: 3.0.1
Summary: Timeout context manager for asyncio programs
Home-page: https://github.com/aio-libs/async_timeout/
Author: Andrew Svetlov
Author-email: andrew.svetlov@gmail.com
License: Apache 2
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP
Classifier: Framework :: AsyncIO
Requires-Python: >=3.5.3

async-timeout
=============
.. image:: https://travis-ci.org/aio-libs/async-timeout.svg?branch=master
    :target: https://travis-ci.org/aio-libs/async-timeout
.. image:: https://codecov.io/gh/aio-libs/async-timeout/branch/master/graph/badge.svg
    :target: https://codecov.io/gh/aio-libs/async-timeout
.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/async-timeout.svg
    :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/async-timeout
.. image:: https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg
    :target: https://gitter.im/aio-libs/Lobby
    :alt: Chat on Gitter

asyncio-compatible timeout context manager.


Usage example
-------------


The context manager is useful in cases when you want to apply timeout
logic around block of code or in cases when ``asyncio.wait_for()`` is
not suitable. Also it's much faster than ``asyncio.wait_for()``
because ``timeout`` doesn't create a new task.

The ``timeout(timeout, *, loop=None)`` call returns a context manager
that cancels a block on *timeout* expiring::

   async with timeout(1.5):
       await inner()

1. If ``inner()`` is executed faster than in ``1.5`` seconds nothing
   happens.
2. Otherwise ``inner()`` is cancelled internally by sending
   ``asyncio.CancelledError`` into but ``asyncio.TimeoutError`` is
   raised outside of context manager scope.

*timeout* parameter could be ``None`` for skipping timeout functionality.


Context manager has ``.expired`` property for check if timeout happens
exactly in context manager::

   async with timeout(1.5) as cm:
       await inner()
   print(cm.expired)

The property is ``True`` if ``inner()`` execution is cancelled by
timeout context manager.

If ``inner()`` call explicitly raises ``TimeoutError`` ``cm.expired``
is ``False``.

Installation
------------

::

   $ pip install async-timeout

The library is Python 3 only!



Authors and License
-------------------

The module is written by Andrew Svetlov.

It's *Apache 2* licensed and freely available.


CHANGES
=======

3.0.1 (2018-10-09)
------------------

- More aggressive typing (#48)

3.0.0 (2018-05-05)
------------------

- Drop Python 3.4, the minimal supported version is Python 3.5.3

- Provide type annotations

2.0.1 (2018-03-13)
------------------

* Fix ``PendingDeprecationWarning`` on Python 3.7 (#33)


2.0.0 (2017-10-09)
------------------

* Changed `timeout <= 0` behaviour

  * Backward incompatibility change, prior this version `0` was
    shortcut for `None`
  * when timeout <= 0 `TimeoutError` raised faster

1.4.0 (2017-09-09)
------------------

* Implement `remaining` property (#20)

  * If timeout is not started yet or started unconstrained:
    `remaining` is `None`
  * If timeout is expired: `remaining` is `0.0`
  * All others: roughly amount of time before `TimeoutError` is triggered

1.3.0 (2017-08-23)
------------------

* Don't suppress nested exception on timeout. Exception context points
  on cancelled line with suspended `await` (#13)

* Introduce `.timeout` property (#16)

* Add methods for using as async context manager (#9)

1.2.1 (2017-05-02)
------------------

* Support unpublished event loop's "current_task" api.


1.2.0 (2017-03-11)
------------------

* Extra check on context manager exit

* 0 is no-op timeout


1.1.0 (2016-10-20)
------------------

* Rename to `async-timeout`

1.0.0 (2016-09-09)
------------------

* The first release.