Are there any sorts of useful idioms I can make use of when writing an API that is asynchronous? I would like to standardize on something as I seem to be using a few different styles throughout. It seems hard to make asynchronous code simple; I suppose this is because asynchronous operations are anything but.
At the most basic level, the user of the API must be able to:
- Have data pushed to them as it becomes available
- Check the status of the asynchronous operation
- Be notified of errors that occur
- Wait for completion (converting the asynchronous operation to a synchronous one)
My classes support several asynchronous operations. I have been putting some of the status/error callbacks in the class around it, but the class is becoming gunked up with a lot of incidental fields, as well as getting too large. I am curious if anyone has used an asynchronous API they found to be well-organized. I have looked at .NET's Begin/EndAsyncOperation + AsyncResult design, as well as some classes in Java (e.g. Future).
This is being written in Python, so it remains very flexible. There is a caveat: some of these asynchronous operations are being marshaled to a remote machine and executed over there. Thus, not every operation necessarily executes in a separate thread.
