I'm trying to generate a polling mechanism for a long running task in Python. To do this, I'm using a concurrent Future and poll with .done()
. The task exists of many iterations that are themselves blocking, which I wrapped in an async function. I don't have access to the code of the blocking functions as I'm calling third-party software. This is a minimal example of my current approach:
import asyncio
import time
async def blocking_iteration():
time.sleep(1)
async def long_running():
for i in range(5):
print(f"sleeping {i}")
await blocking_iteration()
async def poll_run():
future = asyncio.ensure_future(long_running())
while not future.done():
print("before polling")
await asyncio.sleep(0.05)
print("polling")
future.result()
if __name__ == '__main__':
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
loop.run_until_complete(poll_run())
loop.close()
The result of this is:
before polling
sleeping 0
sleeping 1
sleeping 2
sleeping 3
sleeping 4
polling
From my current understanding of the asyncio mechanism in Python, I had expected the loop to unblock after the first sleep, return control to the loop that would go back to the poll_run await
statement and would only run the second iteration of the long_running function after the subsequent poll.
So desired output is something like this:
before polling
sleeping 0
polling
before polling
sleeping 1
polling
before polling
sleeping 2
polling
before polling
sleeping 3
polling
before polling
sleeping 4
polling
Can this be achieved with the current approach somehow, or is it possible in a different way?
EDIT
Thanks to @drjackild was able to solve it by changing
async def blocking_iteration():
time.sleep(1)
into
def blocking():
time.sleep(1)
async def blocking_iteration():
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
await loop.run_in_executor(None, blocking)