1742

This question is not for the discussion of whether or not the singleton design pattern is desirable, is an anti-pattern, or for any religious wars, but to discuss how this pattern is best implemented in Python in such a way that is most pythonic. In this instance I define 'most pythonic' to mean that it follows the 'principle of least astonishment'.

I have multiple classes which would become singletons (my use-case is for a logger, but this is not important). I do not wish to clutter several classes with added gumph when I can simply inherit or decorate.

Best methods:


Method 1: A decorator

def singleton(class_):
    instances = {}
    def getinstance(*args, **kwargs):
        if class_ not in instances:
            instances[class_] = class_(*args, **kwargs)
        return instances[class_]
    return getinstance

@singleton
class MyClass(BaseClass):
    pass

Pros

  • Decorators are additive in a way that is often more intuitive than multiple inheritance.

Cons

  • While objects created using MyClass() would be true singleton objects, MyClass itself is a function, not a class, so you cannot call class methods from it. Also for

    x = MyClass();
    y = MyClass();
    t = type(n)();
    

then x == y but x != t && y != t


Method 2: A base class

class Singleton(object):
    _instance = None
    def __new__(class_, *args, **kwargs):
        if not isinstance(class_._instance, class_):
            class_._instance = object.__new__(class_, *args, **kwargs)
        return class_._instance

class MyClass(Singleton, BaseClass):
    pass

Pros

  • It's a true class

Cons

  • Multiple inheritance - eugh! __new__ could be overwritten during inheritance from a second base class? One has to think more than is necessary.

Method 3: A metaclass

class Singleton(type):
    _instances = {}
    def __call__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        if cls not in cls._instances:
            cls._instances[cls] = super(Singleton, cls).__call__(*args, **kwargs)
        return cls._instances[cls]

#Python2
class MyClass(BaseClass):
    __metaclass__ = Singleton

#Python3
class MyClass(BaseClass, metaclass=Singleton):
    pass

Pros

  • It's a true class
  • Auto-magically covers inheritance
  • Uses __metaclass__ for its proper purpose (and made me aware of it)

Cons

  • Are there any?

Method 4: decorator returning a class with the same name

def singleton(class_):
    class class_w(class_):
        _instance = None
        def __new__(class_, *args, **kwargs):
            if class_w._instance is None:
                class_w._instance = super(class_w,
                                    class_).__new__(class_,
                                                    *args,
                                                    **kwargs)
                class_w._instance._sealed = False
            return class_w._instance
        def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
            if self._sealed:
                return
            super(class_w, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
            self._sealed = True
    class_w.__name__ = class_.__name__
    return class_w

@singleton
class MyClass(BaseClass):
    pass

Pros

  • It's a true class
  • Auto-magically covers inheritance

Cons

  • Is there not an overhead for creating each new class? Here we are creating two classes for each class we wish to make a singleton. While this is fine in my case, I worry that this might not scale. Of course there is a matter of debate as to whether it aught to be too easy to scale this pattern...
  • What is the point of the _sealed attribute
  • Can't call methods of the same name on base classes using super() because they will recurse. This means you can't customize __new__ and can't subclass a class that needs you to call up to __init__.

Method 5: a module

a module file singleton.py

Pros

  • Simple is better than complex

Cons

  • Not lazily instantiated
38
  • 21
    Another three techniques: use a module instead (often - generally, I think - this is a more appropriate pattern for Python but it depends a bit on what you're doing with it); make a single instance and deal with it instead (foo.x or if you insist Foo.x instead of Foo().x); use class attributes and static/class methods (Foo.x). Commented Jul 20, 2011 at 10:55
  • 23
    @ChrisMorgan: If you're going to use class/static methods only, then don't bother making a class, really. Commented Jul 20, 2011 at 10:57
  • 6
    @Cat: The effect is similar, however the reasons behind creating a global variable can be just about anything, including not knowing any better. Why does one create a singleton? If you have to ask you shouldn't be here. This explicitness is not only more pythonic, but makes maintenance a lot more simple. Yes singletons are syntactic sugar for globals, but then classes are syntactic sugar for a whole bunch of unsightly stuff and I don't think anyone will tell you you're always better off without them. Commented Jul 20, 2011 at 14:22
  • 38
    The anti-signletons sentiment is cargo cult programming at its worst. Same with people hearing (few bothered to actually read) "Goto statement considered harmful" and think gotos are a sign of bad code regardless of context.
    – Hejazzman
    Commented Nov 30, 2015 at 13:31
  • 6
    Hi, thanks for your elaborate post. I am fairly new to pattern programming and to python actually, and I am surprised that although method 2 seems to most well known one (it s everywhere), hardly ever someone mentions that despite only one object is created, init__() is called every time Singleton() or MyClass() are used anywhere. I didn't try, but AFAIK this is true for all other methods too. This hardly seems desirable when implementing a singleton, or am i missing something? Of course the solution consists of setting an attribute to avoid performing __init twice. Just curious
    – chrisvp
    Commented Sep 4, 2016 at 11:52

44 Answers 44

1151
+50

Use a Metaclass

I would recommend Method #2, but you're better off using a metaclass than a base class. Here is a sample implementation:

class Singleton(type):
    _instances = {}
    def __call__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        if cls not in cls._instances:
            cls._instances[cls] = super(Singleton, cls).__call__(*args, **kwargs)
        return cls._instances[cls]
        
class Logger(object):
    __metaclass__ = Singleton

Or in Python3

class Logger(metaclass=Singleton):
    pass

If you want to run __init__ every time the class is called, add

        else:
            cls._instances[cls].__init__(*args, **kwargs)

to the if statement in Singleton.__call__.

A few words about metaclasses. A metaclass is the class of a class; that is, a class is an instance of its metaclass. You find the metaclass of an object in Python with type(obj). Normal new-style classes are of type type. Logger in the code above will be of type class 'your_module.Singleton', just as the (only) instance of Logger will be of type class 'your_module.Logger'. When you call logger with Logger(), Python first asks the metaclass of Logger, Singleton, what to do, allowing instance creation to be pre-empted. This process is the same as Python asking a class what to do by calling __getattr__ when you reference one of its attributes by doing myclass.attribute.

A metaclass essentially decides what the definition of a class means and how to implement that definition. See for example http://code.activestate.com/recipes/498149/, which essentially recreates C-style structs in Python using metaclasses. The thread What are some (concrete) use-cases for metaclasses? also provides some examples, they generally seem to be related to declarative programming, especially as used in ORMs.

In this situation, if you use your Method #2, and a subclass defines a __new__ method, it will be executed every time you call SubClassOfSingleton() -- because it is responsible for calling the method that returns the stored instance. With a metaclass, it will only be called once, when the only instance is created. You want to customize what it means to call the class, which is decided by its type.

In general, it makes sense to use a metaclass to implement a singleton. A singleton is special because its instance is created only once, and a metaclass is the way you customize the creation of a class, allowing it to behave differenly than a normal class. Using a metaclass gives you more control in case you need to customize the singleton class definitions in other ways.

Your singletons won't need multiple inheritance (because the metaclass is not a base class), but for subclasses of the created class that use multiple inheritance, you need to make sure the singleton class is the first / leftmost one with a metaclass that redefines __call__ This is very unlikely to be an issue. The instance dict is not in the instance's namespace so it won't accidentally overwrite it.

You will also hear that the singleton pattern violates the "Single Responsibility Principle" -- each class should do only one thing. That way you don't have to worry about messing up one thing the code does if you need to change another, because they are separate and encapsulated. The metaclass implementation passes this test. The metaclass is responsible for enforcing the pattern and the created class and subclasses need not be aware that they are singletons. Method #1 fails this test, as you noted with "MyClass itself is a a function, not a class, so you cannot call class methods from it."

Python 2 and 3 Compatible Version

Writing something that works in both Python2 and 3 requires using a slightly more complicated scheme. Since metaclasses are usually subclasses of type type, it's possible to use one to dynamically create an intermediary base class at run time with it as its metaclass and then use that as the baseclass of the public Singleton base class. It's harder to explain than to do, as illustrated next:

# works in Python 2 & 3
class _Singleton(type):
    """ A metaclass that creates a Singleton base class when called. """
    _instances = {}
    def __call__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        if cls not in cls._instances:
            cls._instances[cls] = super(_Singleton, cls).__call__(*args, **kwargs)
        return cls._instances[cls]

class Singleton(_Singleton('SingletonMeta', (object,), {})): pass

class Logger(Singleton):
    pass

An ironic aspect of this approach is that it's using subclassing to implement a metaclass. One possible advantage is that, unlike with a pure metaclass, isinstance(inst, Singleton) will return True.

Corrections

On another topic, you've probably already noticed this, but the base class implementation in your original post is wrong. _instances needs to be referenced on the class, you need to use super() or you're recursing, and __new__ is actually a static method that you have to pass the class to, not a class method, as the actual class hasn't been created yet when it is called. All of these things will be true for a metaclass implementation as well.

class Singleton(object):
  _instances = {}
  def __new__(class_, *args, **kwargs):
    if class_ not in class_._instances:
        class_._instances[class_] = super(Singleton, class_).__new__(class_, *args, **kwargs)
    return class_._instances[class_]

class MyClass(Singleton):
  pass

c = MyClass()

Decorator Returning A Class

I originally was writing a comment but it was too long, so I'll add this here. Method #4 is better than the other decorator version, but it's more code than needed for a singleton, and it's not as clear what it does.

The main problems stem from the class being its own base class. First, isn't it weird to have a class be a subclass of a nearly identical class with the same name that exists only in its __class__ attribute? This also means that you can't define any methods that call the method of the same name on their base class with super() because they will recurse. This means your class can't customize __new__, and can't derive from any classes that need __init__ called on them.

When to use the singleton pattern

Your use case is one of the better examples of wanting to use a singleton. You say in one of the comments "To me logging has always seemed a natural candidate for Singletons." You're absolutely right.

When people say singletons are bad, the most common reason is they are implicit shared state. While with global variables and top-level module imports are explicit shared state, other objects that are passed around are generally instantiated. This is a good point, with two exceptions.

The first, and one that gets mentioned in various places, is when the singletons are constant. Use of global constants, especially enums, is widely accepted, and considered sane because no matter what, none of the users can mess them up for any other user. This is equally true for a constant singleton.

The second exception, which get mentioned less, is the opposite -- when the singleton is only a data sink, not a data source (directly or indirectly). This is why loggers feel like a "natural" use for singletons. As the various users are not changing the loggers in ways other users will care about, there is not really shared state. This negates the primary argument against the singleton pattern, and makes them a reasonable choice because of their ease of use for the task.

Here is a quote from http://googletesting.blogspot.com/2008/08/root-cause-of-singletons.html:

Now, there is one kind of Singleton which is OK. That is a singleton where all of the reachable objects are immutable. If all objects are immutable than Singleton has no global state, as everything is constant. But it is so easy to turn this kind of singleton into mutable one, it is very slippery slope. Therefore, I am against these Singletons too, not because they are bad, but because it is very easy for them to go bad. (As a side note Java enumeration are just these kind of singletons. As long as you don't put state into your enumeration you are OK, so please don't.)

The other kind of Singletons, which are semi-acceptable are those which don't effect the execution of your code, They have no "side effects". Logging is perfect example. It is loaded with Singletons and global state. It is acceptable (as in it will not hurt you) because your application does not behave any different whether or not a given logger is enabled. The information here flows one way: From your application into the logger. Even thought loggers are global state since no information flows from loggers into your application, loggers are acceptable. You should still inject your logger if you want your test to assert that something is getting logged, but in general Loggers are not harmful despite being full of state.

33
  • 18
    Look at googletesting.blogspot.com/2008/08/…. It is generally anti-singleton (for good reason) but it has a good explaination of why immutable singletons and singletons without side effects don't have the same problems, if you're careful. I'm going to quote it a bit at the end of my post.
    – agf
    Commented Jul 23, 2011 at 11:36
  • 5
    My problem with singletons is the stupid premise of "only one instance". That and tonne of thread safety problems. And dependency hiding. Globals are bad, and singletons are just globals with more problems. Commented Jul 23, 2011 at 11:46
  • 10
    @Cat There are very good uses for singletons. Lazy instantiation of hardware modules (especially in single threaded applications) is one of them (but thread safe singletons also exist).
    – Paul Manta
    Commented Aug 6, 2011 at 13:47
  • 5
    @agf, when implementing Singleton through metaclass, why did you use "call" not "new"? and What's the difference?
    – Alcott
    Commented Sep 20, 2011 at 6:25
  • 4
    @Alcott __new__ in a metaclass is when the class is new -- when it's defined, not when the instance would be new. Calling the class (MyClass()) is the operation you want to override, not the definition of the class. If you really want to understand how Python works, the best thing you can do (other than keep using it) is read docs.python.org/reference/datamodel.html. A good reference on metaclasses is eli.thegreenplace.net/2011/08/14/python-metaclasses-by-example. A good article on singletons is the series from the google blog I linked in this answer.
    – agf
    Commented Sep 20, 2011 at 6:28
157
class Foo(object):
     pass

some_global_variable = Foo()

Modules are imported only once, everything else is overthinking. Don't use singletons and try not to use globals.

16
  • 55
    why did you say "Don't use singletons"? Any reason?
    – Alcott
    Commented Sep 20, 2011 at 1:30
  • 4
    This won't work if the singleton has to be pickled. Using the example you gave: s = some_global_variable; str = pickle.dumps(s); s1 = pickle.loads(str); print s is s1; # False Commented Jan 20, 2012 at 11:47
  • 19
    @dividebyzero: the is operator tests for pointer equality. I would be rather surprised---to the point of calling it a bug---if pickle.loads returned a reference to a pre-existing object rather than a reference to a newly created one. Thus, testing whether s is s1 doesn't tell you anything about the suitability of using modules as singletons. Commented Feb 17, 2014 at 10:52
  • 5
    @leo-the-manic: fair point; however, that's just a side effect of Python interning the objects True, False and None, and has nothing to do with the code behind pickle.loads. Also, it's safe to do only for read-only objects. If pickle.loads were to return a reference to an already existing modifiable object—such as a module—that would be a bug. (And so I'm standing by my implication that dividebyzero's code example doesn't prove anything.) Commented May 3, 2014 at 0:18
  • 7
    I imported the module in several different script files (all of which would use the "singleton"), with import ABC as X, and it was actually imported once for every script that had the import statement for the "singleton" module. So the variable I defined had its value reassigned each time the module was imported. I also tried removing the alias, and even importing it in every file of the project, same results. I'm on Python 3.9.6. Singleton with metaclass (from agf's answer) did the trick fantastically for my use case (logging, with a variable that must be initialized at compile time once) Commented Oct 29, 2021 at 20:05
102

Use a module. It is imported only once. Define some global variables in it - they will be singleton's 'attributes'. Add some functions - the singleton's 'methods'.

9
  • 21
    So what you end up with is... Not a class. You can't use it as a class, you can't base other classes upon it, you use import syntax, and all of a sudden you lose all the benefits of OOP... Commented Jul 25, 2011 at 13:04
  • 31
    if you can base other classes on it, then it might not be a singleton. you could create one of the derived class, but also one of the base class, but the derived class is also a member of the base, and you have two of the base, which one are you supposed to use? Commented Jul 25, 2011 at 19:32
  • 1
    @PaulKenjora You must have an error in your code. If you define a global variable in a module, when you access it from another module it should have the value.
    – warvariuc
    Commented Mar 30, 2017 at 19:40
  • 1
    @theheadofabroom you could import * from base_module... rethink OOP my friend! hahahah
    – polvoazul
    Commented Mar 7, 2018 at 4:46
  • 3
    How could you init a singleton object with arguments in a module?
    – nn0p
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 4:51
72

You probably never need a singleton in Python. Just define all your data and functions in a module and you have a de facto singleton:

import datetime
file_name=None

def set_file_name(new_file_name: str):
    global file_name
    file_name=new_file_name

def write(message: str):
    global file_name
    if file_name:
        with open(file_name, 'a+') as f:
            f.write("{} {}\n".format(datetime.datetime.now(), message))
    else:
        print("LOG: {}", message)

To use:

import log
log.set_file_name("debug.log")
log.write("System starting")
...

If you really absolutely have to have a singleton class then I'd go with:

class MySingleton(object):
    def foo(self):
        pass

my_singleton = MySingleton()

To use:

from mysingleton import my_singleton
my_singleton.foo()

where mysingleton.py is your filename that MySingleton is defined in. This works because after the first time a file is imported, Python doesn't re-execute the code.

8
  • 15
    Mostly true, but sometimes that's not enough. E.g. I have a project with a need to log instantiations of many classes at DEBUG level. I need command line options parsed at startup in order to set the user-specified logging level before those classes are instantiated. Module-level instantiations make that problematic. It's possible that I could carefully structure the app so that all of those classes don't get imported until the CLI processing is done, but natural structure of my app is more important than dogmatic adherence to "singletons are bad", since they can be done quite cleanly.
    – mikenerone
    Commented Aug 27, 2016 at 21:29
  • if you were to test your code while patching my_singleton, would that be possible ? since this my_singleton could be instantiated in some other module.
    – Naveen
    Commented Apr 24, 2018 at 3:04
  • @Naveen - my_singleton is a single object. If you "patch" it that change will affect all future references, even in other modules.
    – Alan Dyke
    Commented Apr 24, 2018 at 19:30
  • This might work in some cases, but sometimes lazy initialization is important. In my use case, initialization costs 400ms, so I don't want to incur that just because I imported the module. It has to be incurred only when the singleton is really needed.
    – joanis
    Commented Apr 7, 2021 at 21:48
  • @joanis. Agreed there is no perfect solution for every possible use case. Maybe, you can still use lazy initialization for the time consuming part of your code, by not putting it into your constructor. Or maybe you need one of the other more complicated suggestions on this page.
    – Alan Dyke
    Commented Apr 8, 2021 at 16:00
29

You just need a decorator, depending on the python version:


Python 3.2+

Implementation

from functools import lru_cache

@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
class CustomClass(object):

    def __init__(self, arg):
        print(f"CustomClass initialised with {arg}")
        self.arg = arg

Usage

c1 = CustomClass("foo")
c2 = CustomClass("foo")
c3 = CustomClass("bar")

print(c1 == c2)
print(c1 == c3)

Output

>>> CustomClass initialised with foo
>>> CustomClass initialised with bar
>>> True
>>> False

Notice how foo got printed only once


Python 3.9+

Implementation:

from functools import cache

@cache
class CustomClass(object):
    ...
5
  • 4
    The object won't be garbage collected in this case and you have to clear the cache (somewhere/sometime) if the class shouldn't life for the applications lifetime and is clearly a downside over the, already for this task, intended __new__ method. Commented Dec 14, 2022 at 12:23
  • 6
    The term singleton describes that there is only one instance of it. Consider a larger application that uses the pattern in a "branch" and you keep accidentally a huge class in memory. I don't say your solution is a "no no" but it should be mentioned somewhere. Commented Dec 14, 2022 at 15:01
  • 3
    Also CustomClass is of type functools._lru_cache_wrapper, so you completely lose type information of the original class and isinstance(obj, CustomClass) doesn't work either. Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 11:01
  • Old-style classes are a Python 2 thing: remove object as base class.
    – Joren
    Commented Oct 7 at 20:43
  • 1
    I just discovered this.. Absolutely brilliant.
    – Richard
    Commented Oct 11 at 11:45
18

Here's a one-liner for you:

singleton = lambda c: c()

Here's how you use it:

@singleton
class wat(object):
    def __init__(self): self.x = 1
    def get_x(self): return self.x

assert wat.get_x() == 1

Your object gets instantiated eagerly. This may or may not be what you want.

4
  • 2
    Why do you need to know use the class of a singleton? Just use the singleton object..
    – Tolli
    Commented Oct 17, 2014 at 23:41
  • 1
    It's not singleton pattern, so IMO the function should be named differently. Commented Dec 30, 2014 at 21:53
  • 9
    Wikipedia: "the singleton pattern is a design pattern that restricts the instantiation of a class to one object". I would say that my solution does just that. Okay, I guess one could do wat2 = type(wat)(), but this is python, we're all consenting adults and all that. You can't guarantee that there will be only one instance, but you can guarantee that if people make a second one, it will look ugly and—if they're decent, upstanding people—like a warning sign to them. What am I missing? Commented Jan 2, 2015 at 19:35
  • 1
    if you are really looking for a one-line solution try a python's module as a singleton, which is actually a zero-line solution. Commented Apr 5, 2021 at 8:54
10
  • If one wants to have multiple number of instances of the same class, but only if the args or kwargs are different, one can use the third-party python package Handy Decorators (package decorators).
  • Ex.
    1. If you have a class handling serial communication, and to create an instance you want to send the serial port as an argument, then with traditional approach won't work
    2. Using the above mentioned decorators, one can create multiple instances of the class if the args are different.
    3. For same args, the decorator will return the same instance which is already been created.
>>> from decorators import singleton
>>>
>>> @singleton
... class A:
...     def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
...         pass
...
>>>
>>> a = A(name='Siddhesh')
>>> b = A(name='Siddhesh', lname='Sathe')
>>> c = A(name='Siddhesh', lname='Sathe')
>>> a is b  # has to be different
False
>>> b is c  # has to be same
True
>>>
3
  • A need to make this kind of singleton is what led me to this question. Much appreciated! I tried pip install handy-decorators and I get ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement handy-decorators. Any suggestion?
    – Ben Kovitz
    Commented Apr 8, 2021 at 16:19
  • I went ahead and copied the source code from here and decorated a dataclass. It worked the first time. Happily, it has no dependencies on any other code! Everything in that module is wonderfully simple and straightforward, truly Pythonic. If you aren't teaching Python, you should be.
    – Ben Kovitz
    Commented Apr 8, 2021 at 17:09
  • 1
    Caveat: The previous_instances dictionary of the implementation of @singleton does not look thread safe. If one thread is constructing an object while another object checks the dictionary, there is a race condition there... Commented Nov 14, 2021 at 9:56
10

Using a function attribute is also very simple

def f():
    if not hasattr(f, 'value'):
        setattr(f, 'value', singletonvalue)
    return f.value
0
10

I will recommend an elegant solution using metaclasses

class Singleton(type): 
    # Inherit from "type" in order to gain access to method __call__
    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        self.__instance = None # Create a variable to store the object reference
        super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)

    def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        if self.__instance is None:
            # if the object has not already been created
            self.__instance = super().__call__(*args, **kwargs) # Call the __init__ method of the subclass (Spam) and save the reference
            return self.__instance
        else:
            # if object (Spam) reference already exists; return it
            return self.__instance

class Spam(metaclass=Singleton):
    def __init__(self, x):
        print('Creating Spam')
        self.x = x


if __name__ == '__main__':
    spam = Spam(100)
    spam2 = Spam(200)

Output:

Creating Spam

As you can see from the output, only one object is instantiated

1
  • 1
    +1 This implementation is a bit better than the one in the currently top-rated answer IMO. There is no need for a dictionary _instances attribute on the actual class, just a single _instance is sufficient. That is kind of the point of the singleton. Since that attribute is an instance attribute of the metaclass, it will be independently created as a class attribute on every class, regardless of inheritance. Commented Jul 23 at 16:27
9

I prefer this solution which I found very clear and straightforward. It is using double check for instance, if some other thread already created it. Additional thing to consider is to make sure that deserialization isn't creating any other instances. https://gist.github.com/werediver/4396488

import threading


# Based on tornado.ioloop.IOLoop.instance() approach.
# See https://github.com/facebook/tornado
class SingletonMixin(object):
    __singleton_lock = threading.Lock()
    __singleton_instance = None

    @classmethod
    def instance(cls):
        if not cls.__singleton_instance:
            with cls.__singleton_lock:
                if not cls.__singleton_instance:
                    cls.__singleton_instance = cls()
        return cls.__singleton_instance


if __name__ == '__main__':
    class A(SingletonMixin):
        pass

    class B(SingletonMixin):
        pass

    a, a2 = A.instance(), A.instance()
    b, b2 = B.instance(), B.instance()

    assert a is a2
    assert b is b2
    assert a is not b

    print('a:  %s\na2: %s' % (a, a2))
    print('b:  %s\nb2: %s' % (b, b2))
6
  • Pardon my ignorance, but why do you need to check twice for __singleton_instance? Could you not just always take __singleton_lock and then only check once? Commented Oct 26, 2020 at 22:21
  • 2
    As I mentioned before, we need it to make sure that, while we are performing 'if' and using the lock, some other thread haven't created this instance already en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-checked_locking It's a fairly popular concept to be asked at interviews :)
    – Andrei R.
    Commented Oct 26, 2020 at 22:29
  • But surely the cost of acquiring an uncontested lock is low enough that if it were significant, you would be better off implementing it in C? IIRC the cost of acquiring the lock is about half that of a function call, and so the better optimisation here might be to avoid using the context manager and acquire the lock manually. If this is an unnecessary optimisation I'd argue double checking is even more so. Commented Oct 26, 2020 at 23:54
  • Double checking is not an optimization, it is to make sure that we don't create two instances of a Singleton. It's also, good to point out that these checks will be executed only once, at the first initialization. After that it is just returning the instance. So any optimizations will be pointless.
    – Andrei R.
    Commented Oct 27, 2020 at 22:04
  • This is what I don't seem to be getting. Surely as long as you check while holding the lock you only need to check once? That's what the lock is there for, to synchronise access. Commented Oct 27, 2020 at 22:08
9

One liner solution:

Add this to any init self.__class__.__new__ = lambda _: self

class WhateverClass():
    def __init__(self):
        self.__class__.__new__ = lambda _: self

Pros

  • Extremely simple and concise. Just add one line to __init__
  • True class, no modules needed
  • Pythonic use of lambda, closure, and monkey patching

How does it work? __new__ is overwritten after the first call to __init__ so the constructor is essentially single-use. The lambda is used to return a reference to self using a closure which makes everything very anonymous.

8

Here's my own implementation of singletons. All you have to do is decorate the class; to get the singleton, you then have to use the Instance method. Here's an example:

@Singleton
class Foo:
    def __init__(self):
        print 'Foo created'

f = Foo() # Error, this isn't how you get the instance of a singleton

f = Foo.Instance() # Good. Being explicit is in line with the Python Zen
g = Foo.Instance() # Returns already created instance

print f is g # True

And here's the code:

class Singleton:
    """
    A non-thread-safe helper class to ease implementing singletons.
    This should be used as a decorator -- not a metaclass -- to the
    class that should be a singleton.

    The decorated class can define one `__init__` function that
    takes only the `self` argument. Other than that, there are
    no restrictions that apply to the decorated class.
 
    To get the singleton instance, use the `Instance` method. Trying
    to use `__call__` will result in a `TypeError` being raised.

    Limitations: The decorated class cannot be inherited from.

    """

    def __init__(self, decorated):
        self._decorated = decorated

    def Instance(self):
        """
        Returns the singleton instance. Upon its first call, it creates a
        new instance of the decorated class and calls its `__init__` method.
        On all subsequent calls, the already created instance is returned.

        """
        try:
            return self._instance
        except AttributeError:
            self._instance = self._decorated()
            return self._instance

    def __call__(self):
        raise TypeError('Singletons must be accessed through `Instance()`.')

    def __instancecheck__(self, inst):
        return isinstance(inst, self._decorated)
2
  • 3
    It's not true singleton. SingletonList = Singleton(list).Instance(); print(SingletonList is type(SingletonList)()) should print True in true singleton; with your code prints False Commented Dec 30, 2014 at 22:07
  • Also see the discussion of this approach here.
    – Alperino
    Commented Aug 20 at 15:02
8

Use a class variable (no decorator)

By overriding the __new__ method to return the same instance of the class. A boolean to only initialize the class for the first time:

class SingletonClass:
    _instance = None

    def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        # If no instance of class already exits
        if cls._instance is None:
            cls._instance = object.__new__(cls)
            cls._instance._initialized = False
        return cls._instance
        
    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        if self._initialized:
            return

        self.attr1 = args[0]
        # set the attribute to `True` to not initialize again
        self._initialized = True
0
7
from functools import cache

@cache
class xxx:
   ....

Dead easy and works!

1
  • 4
    Careful - this only works if you don't pass any arguments on instantiation. If you do, it's a cache miss and you'll end up with multiple instances. Commented Oct 19, 2022 at 23:51
4

Method 3 seems to be very neat, but if you want your program to run in both Python 2 and Python 3, it doesn't work. Even protecting the separate variants with tests for the Python version fails, because the Python 3 version gives a syntax error in Python 2.

Thanks to Mike Watkins: http://mikewatkins.ca/2008/11/29/python-2-and-3-metaclasses/. If you want the program to work in both Python 2 and Python 3, you need to do something like:

class Singleton(type):
    _instances = {}
    def __call__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        if cls not in cls._instances:
            cls._instances[cls] = super(Singleton, cls).__call__(*args, **kwargs)
        return cls._instances[cls]

MC = Singleton('MC', (object), {})

class MyClass(MC):
    pass    # Code for the class implementation

I presume that 'object' in the assignment needs to be replaced with the 'BaseClass', but I haven't tried that (I have tried code as illustrated).

2
  • surely this is not a metaclass - in python3 to use a metaclass to construct MyClass you would do class MyClass(metaclass=Singleton) Commented Jul 30, 2013 at 14:32
  • The mikewatkins.ca link is (effectively) broken. Commented Mar 14, 2016 at 21:54
4

I'll toss mine into the ring. It's a simple decorator.

from abc import ABC

def singleton(real_cls):

    class SingletonFactory(ABC):

        instance = None

        def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
            if not cls.instance:
                cls.instance = real_cls(*args, **kwargs)
            return cls.instance

    SingletonFactory.register(real_cls)
    return SingletonFactory

# Usage
@singleton
class YourClass:
    ...  # Your normal implementation, no special requirements.

Benefits I think it has over some of the other solutions:

  • It's clear and concise (to my eye ;D).
  • Its action is completely encapsulated. You don't need to change a single thing about the implementation of YourClass. This includes not needing to use a metaclass for your class (note that the metaclass above is on the factory, not the "real" class).
  • It doesn't rely on monkey-patching anything.
  • It's transparent to callers:
    • Callers still simply import YourClass, it looks like a class (because it is), and they use it normally. No need to adapt callers to a factory function.
    • What YourClass() instantiates is still a true instance of the YourClass you implemented, not a proxy of any kind, so no chance of side effects resulting from that.
    • isinstance(instance, YourClass) and similar operations still work as expected (though this bit does require abc so precludes Python <2.6).

One downside does occur to me: classmethods and staticmethods of the real class are not transparently callable via the factory class hiding it. I've used this rarely enough that I've never happen to run into that need, but it would be easily rectified by using a custom metaclass on the factory that implements __getattr__() to delegate all-ish attribute access to the real class.

A related pattern I've actually found more useful (not that I'm saying these kinds of things are required very often at all) is a "Unique" pattern where instantiating the class with the same arguments results in getting back the same instance. I.e. a "singleton per arguments". The above adapts to this well and becomes even more concise:

def unique(real_cls):

    class UniqueFactory(ABC):

        @functools.lru_cache(None)  # Handy for 3.2+, but use any memoization decorator you like
        def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
            return real_cls(*args, **kwargs)

    UniqueFactory.register(real_cls)
    return UniqueFactory

All that said, I do agree with the general advice that if you think you need one of these things, you really should probably stop for a moment and ask yourself if you really do. 99% of the time, YAGNI.

3

Maybe I missunderstand the singleton pattern but my solution is this simple and pragmatic (pythonic?). This code fullfills two goals

  1. Make the instance of Foo accessiable everywhere (global).
  2. Only one instance of Foo can exist.

This is the code.

#!/usr/bin/env python3

class Foo:
    me = None

    def __init__(self):
        if Foo.me != None:
            raise Exception('Instance of Foo still exists!')

        Foo.me = self


if __name__ == '__main__':
    Foo()
    Foo()

Output

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "./x.py", line 15, in <module>
    Foo()
  File "./x.py", line 8, in __init__
    raise Exception('Instance of Foo still exists!')
Exception: Instance of Foo still exists!
2

Well, other than agreeing with the general Pythonic suggestion on having module-level global, how about this:

def singleton(class_):
    class class_w(class_):
        _instance = None
        def __new__(class2, *args, **kwargs):
            if class_w._instance is None:
                class_w._instance = super(class_w, class2).__new__(class2, *args, **kwargs)
                class_w._instance._sealed = False
            return class_w._instance
        def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
            if self._sealed:
                return
            super(class_w, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
            self._sealed = True
    class_w.__name__ = class_.__name__
    return class_w

@singleton
class MyClass(object):
    def __init__(self, text):
        print text
    @classmethod
    def name(class_):
        print class_.__name__

x = MyClass(111)
x.name()
y = MyClass(222)
print id(x) == id(y)

Output is:

111     # the __init__ is called only on the 1st time
MyClass # the __name__ is preserved
True    # this is actually the same instance
8
  • What is the point of the _sealed attribute? As far as I see this doesn't do anything? Something is niggling me about this that says it shouldn't perform well... I'll run some comparative tests later this week. Commented Jul 25, 2011 at 10:32
  • _sealed ensures your init is ran only once; I don't see any point why it should perform worse than the regular function-like decorator - the function is executed only once per class, and returns a new inherited class
    – Guard
    Commented Jul 25, 2011 at 19:29
  • BTW, your edit contains tabs that break the indents You also say 'we are creating 2 classes' - do you mean that we are creating '1 extra class'?
    – Guard
    Commented Jul 25, 2011 at 19:31
  • Yes one extra class is what I meant. I intend to include stuff in __init__ to be called every time it's initialised. Just a simple 'Being initialised in class.method'. as for indentation - you used tabs and spaces - I fixed most of it, but seem to have missed one if you want to get it (just check the edit log) Commented Jul 26, 2011 at 6:33
  • re init: of course it's up to you, I just tried to mimic the singleton behavior in other languages, where constructor code (which is not exactly init, but very close in its sense) is only called once if you want the init to be called every time, just kill all references to _sealed re spaces / tabs - well, then my emacs needs fixing. anyway, above is the corrected version
    – Guard
    Commented Jul 26, 2011 at 6:52
2

How about this:

def singleton(cls):
    instance=cls()
    cls.__new__ = cls.__call__= lambda cls: instance
    cls.__init__ = lambda self: None
    return instance

Use it as a decorator on a class that should be a singleton. Like this:

@singleton
class MySingleton:
    #....

This is similar to the singleton = lambda c: c() decorator in another answer. Like the other solution, the only instance has name of the class (MySingleton). However, with this solution you can still "create" instances (actually get the only instance) from the class, by doing MySingleton(). It also prevents you from creating additional instances by doing type(MySingleton)() (that also returns the same instance).

4
  • You don't define a class to use it as an object.
    – 0xc0de
    Commented Oct 16, 2014 at 8:00
  • 1
    Every time you call type(MySingleton)(), MySingleton.__init__() gets called and the object gets initialized multiple Times; you can fix it writing cls.__init__ = lambda self: pass in your singleton. Also, overriding cls.__call__ seems pointless, and even harmful - __call__ defined in this context is used when you call MySingleton(any, list, of, arguments), not when you call type(MySingleton)(any, list, of, arguments). Commented Dec 31, 2014 at 13:23
  • @GingerPlusPlus, Thanks for pointing out that __init__() gets called again when doing type(MySingleton)(). The solution you proposed (adding cls.__init__ = lambda self: pass) give a syntax error, because the last part of the lambda expression needs to be an expression, not a statement. However, adding cls.__init__ = lambda self: None works, so I added that to my answer.
    – Tolli
    Commented Jan 2, 2015 at 5:42
  • 1
    @GingerPlusPlus, Regarding the use of __call__. my intention was to make both type(MySingleton)() and MySingleton() return the instance. So it is doing what I wanted. You can think of MySingleton as either the type of the singleton or the instance of the singleton (or both).
    – Tolli
    Commented Jan 2, 2015 at 5:43
2

This answer is likely not what you're looking for. I wanted a singleton in the sense that only that object had its identity, for comparison to. In my case it was being used as a Sentinel Value. To which the answer is very simple, make any object mything = object() and by python's nature, only that thing will have its identity.

#!python
MyNone = object()  # The singleton

for item in my_list:
    if item is MyNone:  # An Example identity comparison
        raise StopIteration
4
  • I have learned that modules can actually be imported multiple times, in such case this is only a local singleton, which isn't really a singleton in any capacity. Commented Mar 23, 2018 at 20:00
  • Can you elaborate on how a module can be imported multiple times? The only time I have seen that is when an exception occurs while the module is loaded, the user may still load the module later, yet the side effects will have occurred already, so some actions may be executed a second time.
    – sleblanc
    Commented Mar 16, 2019 at 15:25
  • Once a module has been fully loaded, I don't see a way to have this module run again, other than by coercing the interpreter into doing it using eval or importlib.reload.
    – sleblanc
    Commented Mar 16, 2019 at 15:29
  • @sleblanc I thought I had an SO post on the topic, couldn't find it; here is a top google result: stackoverflow.com/a/55910681/1695680 IIRC I needed this to monkey patch some incorrect behavior in python's stdlib's ssl certificate chain of trust assertions when multiple domains were used in a particular way, allowing some modules to have their ssl interfaces replaced with the monkeypatched version and others to not, and being able to swap them as needed. I do not recommend monkey patching, but I'm sure glad the option exists :) Commented Nov 1, 2020 at 20:15
2

Pros

It's a true class Auto-magically covers inheritance Uses metaclass for its proper purpose (and made me aware of it) Cons

Are there any?

This will be problem with serialziation. If you try to deserialize object from file (pickle) it will not use __call__ so it will create new file, you can use base class inheritance with __new__ to prevent that.

2

You can use a metaclass if you want to use instance as a property. For example;

class SingletonMeta(type):
    def __init__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
        cls._instance = None
        cls._locker = threading.Lock()

    @property
    def instance(self, *args, **kwargs):
        if self._instance is None:
            with self._locker:
                if self._instance is None:
                    self._instance = self(*args, **kwargs)
        return self._instance


class MyClass(metaclass=SingletonMeta):
    def __init__(self):
        # init here
        pass


# get the instance
my_class_instance = MyClass.instance
1
  • And what's happen when we call MyClass twice ? I got two different adress here...It does not seem to avoid new instances
    – jossefaz
    Commented Jul 11, 2021 at 15:31
2

I also prefer decorator syntax to deriving from metaclass. My two cents:

from typing import Callable, Dict, Set


def singleton(cls_: Callable) -> type:
    """ Implements a simple singleton decorator
    """
    class Singleton(cls_):  # type: ignore
        __instances: Dict[type, object] = {}
        __initialized: Set[type] = set()

        def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
            if Singleton.__instances.get(cls) is None:
                Singleton.__instances[cls] = super().__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs)
            return Singleton.__instances[cls]

        def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
            if self.__class__ not in Singleton.__initialized:
                Singleton.__initialized.add(self.__class__)
                super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)

    return Singleton


@singleton
class MyClass(...):
    ...

This has some benefits above other decorators provided:

  • isinstance(MyClass(), MyClass) will still work (returning a function from the clausure instead of a class will make isinstance to fail)
  • property, classmethod and staticmethod will still work as expected
  • __init__() constructor is executed only once
  • You can inherit from your decorated class (useless?) using @singleton again

Cons:

  • print(MyClass().__class__.__name__) will return Singleton instead of MyClass. If you still need this, I recommend using a metaclass as suggested above.

If you need a different instance based on constructor parameters this solution needs to be improved (solution provided by siddhesh-suhas-sathe provides this).

Finally, as other suggested, consider using a module in python. Modules are objects. You can even pass them in variables and inject them in other classes.

2

I just made a simple one by accident and thought I'd share it...

class MySingleton(object):
    def __init__(self, *, props={}):
        self.__dict__ = props

mything = MySingleton()
mything.test = 1
mything2 = MySingleton()
print(mything2.test)
mything2.test = 5
print(mything.test)
2

It is slightly similar to the answer by fab but not exactly the same.

The singleton pattern does not require that we be able to call the constructor multiple times. As a singleton should be created once and once only, shouldn't it be seen to be created just once? "Spoofing" the constructor arguably impairs legibility.

So my suggestion is just this:

class Elvis():
    def __init__(self):
        if hasattr(self.__class__, 'instance'):
            raise Exception()
        self.__class__.instance = self
        # initialisation code...

    @staticmethod
    def the():
        if hasattr(Elvis, 'instance'):
            return Elvis.instance
        return Elvis()

This does not rule out the use of the constructor or the field instance by user code:

if Elvis() is King.instance:

... if you know for sure that Elvis has not yet been created, and that King has*.

But it encourages users to use the the method universally:

Elvis.the().leave(Building.the())

... particularly (though not exclusively) if there is doubt concerning the pre-existence of Elvis and/or of that building.

To make this complete you could also override __delattr__() to raise an Exception if an attempt is made to delete instance, and override __del__() so that it raises an Exception (unless we know the program is ending...)


* some ontological issues here: could one singleton ever be another singleton? Subclassing a singleton class seems fraught with problems. And even then you'd probably be asking isinstance(), not is.


Further improvements


My thanks to those who have helped with comments and edits, of which more are welcome. While I use Jython, this should work more generally, and be thread-safe.

try:
    # This is jython-specific
    from synchronize import make_synchronized
except ImportError:
    # This should work across different python implementations
    def make_synchronized(func):
        import threading
        func.__lock__ = threading.Lock()
    
        def synced_func(*args, **kws):
            with func.__lock__:
                return func(*args, **kws)

        return synced_func

class Elvis(object): # NB must be subclass of object to use __new__
    instance = None

    @classmethod
    @make_synchronized
    def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
        if cls.instance is not None:
            raise Exception()
        cls.instance = object.__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs)
        return cls.instance
    
    def __init__(self):
        pass
        # initialisation code...

    @classmethod
    @make_synchronized
    def the(cls):
        if cls.instance is not None:
            return cls.instance
        return cls()

Points of note:

  1. If you don't subclass from object in python2.x you will get an old-style class, which does not use __new__
  2. When decorating __new__ you must decorate with @classmethod or __new__ will be an unbound instance method
  3. This could possibly be improved by way of use of a metaclass, as this would allow you to make the a class-level property, possibly renaming it to instance
2
  • Cool, the could probably benefit from being a class method for similar reasons Commented Feb 21, 2016 at 10:32
  • yes, you're right. Then you can have a SuperElvis subclass singleton and (for example) an ImaginaryElvis subclass singleton... and they can co-exist. See additional thoughts. Please feel free to improve my code. Commented Feb 21, 2016 at 11:35
1

I can't remember where I found this solution, but I find it to be the most 'elegant' from my non-Python-expert point of view:

class SomeSingleton(dict):
    __instance__ = None
    def __new__(cls, *args,**kwargs):
        if SomeSingleton.__instance__ is None:
            SomeSingleton.__instance__ = dict.__new__(cls)
        return SomeSingleton.__instance__

    def __init__(self):
        pass

    def some_func(self,arg):
        pass

Why do I like this? No decorators, no meta classes, no multiple inheritance...and if you decide you don't want it to be a Singleton anymore, just delete the __new__ method. As I am new to Python (and OOP in general) I expect someone will set me straight about why this is a terrible approach?

3
  • 3
    why this is a terrible approach? when you want create another singleton class, you have to copy & paste the __new__. Don't repeat yourself. Commented Dec 30, 2014 at 17:56
  • Also, why your new takes *args and **kwargs, and then does nothing with them? Pass them into dict.__new__ this way: dict.__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs). Commented Dec 31, 2014 at 13:29
  • This will call the __init__ method every time the class is called. If your __init__ method actually did something, you'd notice the problem. Whenever you do SomeSingleton(), your singleton's state is reset by the __init__ method.
    – Aran-Fey
    Commented Oct 24, 2018 at 12:45
1

Code based on Tolli's answer.

#decorator, modyfies new_cls
def _singleton(new_cls):
    instance = new_cls()                                              #2
    def new(cls):
        if isinstance(instance, cls):                                 #4
            return instance
        else:
            raise TypeError("I can only return instance of {}, caller wanted {}".format(new_cls, cls))
    new_cls.__new__  = new                                            #3
    new_cls.__init__ = lambda self: None                              #5
    return new_cls


#decorator, creates new class
def singleton(cls):
    new_cls = type('singleton({})'.format(cls.__name__), (cls,), {} ) #1
    return _singleton(new_cls)


#metaclass
def meta_singleton(name, bases, attrs):
    new_cls = type(name, bases, attrs)                                #1
    return _singleton(new_cls)

Explanation:

  1. Create new class, inheriting from given cls
    (it doesn't modify cls in case someone wants for example singleton(list))

  2. Create instance. Before overriding __new__ it's so easy.

  3. Now, when we have easily created instance, overrides __new__ using method defined moment ago.
  4. The function returns instance only when it's what the caller expects, otherwise raises TypeError.
    The condition is not met when someone attempts to inherit from decorated class.

  5. If __new__() returns an instance of cls, then the new instance’s __init__() method will be invoked like __init__(self[, ...]), where self is the new instance and the remaining arguments are the same as were passed to __new__().

    instance is already initialized, so function replaces __init__ with function doing nothing.

See it working online

1

If you don't need lazy initialization of the instance of the Singleton, then the following should be easy and thread-safe:

class A:
    instance = None
    # Methods and variables of the class/object A follow
A.instance = A()

This way A is a singleton initialized at module import.

1

After struggling with this for some time I eventually came up with the following, so that the config object would only be loaded once, when called up from separate modules. The metaclass allows a global class instance to be stored in the builtins dict, which at present appears to be the neatest way of storing a proper program global.

import builtins

# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# So..... you would expect that a class would be "global" in scope, however
#   when different modules use this,
#   EACH ONE effectively has its own class namespace.  
#   In order to get around this, we use a metaclass to intercept
#   "new" and provide the "truly global metaclass instance" if it already exists

class MetaConfig(type):
    def __new__(cls, name, bases, dct):
        try:
            class_inst = builtins.CONFIG_singleton

        except AttributeError:
            class_inst = super().__new__(cls, name, bases, dct)
            builtins.CONFIG_singleton = class_inst
            class_inst.do_load()

        return class_inst

# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

class Config(metaclass=MetaConfig):

    config_attr = None

    @classmethod
    def do_load(cls):
        ...<load-cfg-from-file>...
1

One liner (I am not proud, but it does the job):

import sys

class Myclass:
  def __init__(self):
     # do your stuff
      vars(sys.modules[__name__])[type(self).__name__] = lambda: self # singletonify
0

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