27

Since Django now supports async views, I'm trying to change my code base which contains a lot of function based views to be async but for some reason its not working.

@api_view(["GET"])
async def test_async_view(request):
    ...
    data = await get_data()
    return Response(data)

When I send a request to this endpoint, I get an error saying:

AssertionError: Expected a Response, HttpResponse or HttpStreamingResponse to be returned from the view, but received a <class 'coroutine'>

Does DRF not support async views yet? Is there an alternative I can do to get this working?

3 Answers 3

11

As of now, DRF doesn't support async "api views". Here is an open issue (#7260) in the DRF community and it is still in the discussion stage.

But, Django providing a decorator/wrapper which allow us to convert our sync views/function to async using sync_to_async(...) wrapper.

Example,

@sync_to_async
@api_view(["GET"])
def sample_view(request):
    data = get_data()
    return Response(data)

Note that, here, sample_view(...) and get_data(...) are sync functions.

4
  • 3
    How would that help? If get_data is sync?
    – ninesalt
    Jan 25, 2021 at 8:34
  • 1
    as I mentioned, DRF doesn't support "async API views*. The least workaround is to use the sync_to_async(...). That means the sample_view(...) must be a sync function and thus get_data(...) should also be a sync function.
    – JPG
    Jan 25, 2021 at 10:47
  • 13
    I am also confused by this. If get_data() is the bulk of the work and must be sync, then what can @sync_to_async possibly achieve? Apr 26, 2021 at 12:51
  • You can call it with thread safety turned off, and it will run it in a separate thread. Otherwise it will simply wrap the sync code in a wrapper context that allows the async generator to consume it, however there will be a performance loss as it will run in the same thread as the async loop and effectively block other async contexts from executing. Oct 13 at 18:28
5

You can do it with adrf:

pip install adrf

then add it to INSTALLED_APPS

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'adrf',
]

import asyncio
from asgiref.sync import sync_to_async

@sync_to_async  
def do_a_network_call(some_input):  
    expensive_result = do_expensive_network_call(some_input)
    return expensive_result
    
# Class Based Views:
from adrf.views import APIView

class AsyncView(APIView):
    async def get(self, request):
        result = await asyncio.gather(do_a_network_call("some_input"))  
        return Response({"result": result})


# Function Based Views:
from adrf.decorators import api_view

@api_view(['GET'])
async def async_view(request):
    result = await asyncio.gather(do_a_network_call("some_input"))
    return Response({"result": result})
0

I think you can Use this decorator in DRF

import asyncio
from functools import wraps


def to_async(blocking):
    @wraps(blocking)
    def run_wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
        return asyncio.run(blocking(*args, **kwargs))

    return run_wrapper

Example of usage

@to_async
@api_view(["GET"])
async def sample_view(request):
    ...
1
  • Do not use asyncio.run with Django, as it does allow asgiref.sync.sync_to_async functions to work as intended(which need to be wrapped around Database calls) Please use asgiref.sync.async_to_sync instead
    – JayTurnr
    Mar 15, 2022 at 10:27

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