Consume Server-Sent Event (SSE) messages with HTTPX.
Project description
httpx-sse
Consume Server-Sent Event (SSE) messages with HTTPX.
Table of contents
Installation
NOTE: This is beta software. Please be sure to pin your dependencies.
pip install httpx-sse=="0.3.*"
Quickstart
httpx-sse
provides the connect_sse
and aconnect_sse
helpers for connecting to an SSE endpoint. The resulting EventSource
object exposes the .iter_sse()
and .aiter_sse()
methods to iterate over the server-sent events.
Example usage:
import httpx
from httpx_sse import connect_sse
with httpx.Client() as client:
with connect_sse(client, "GET", "http://localhost:8000/sse") as event_source:
for sse in event_source.iter_sse():
print(sse.event, sse.data, sse.id, sse.retry)
You can try this against this example Starlette server (credit):
# Requirements: pip install uvicorn starlette sse-starlette
import asyncio
import uvicorn
from starlette.applications import Starlette
from starlette.routing import Route
from sse_starlette.sse import EventSourceResponse
async def numbers(minimum, maximum):
for i in range(minimum, maximum + 1):
await asyncio.sleep(0.9)
yield {"data": i}
async def sse(request):
generator = numbers(1, 5)
return EventSourceResponse(generator)
routes = [
Route("/sse", endpoint=sse)
]
app = Starlette(routes=routes)
if __name__ == "__main__":
uvicorn.run(app)
How-To
Calling into Python web apps
You can call into Python web apps with HTTPX and httpx-sse
to test SSE endpoints directly.
Here's an example of calling into a Starlette ASGI app...
import asyncio
import httpx
from httpx_sse import aconnect_sse
from sse_starlette.sse import EventSourceResponse
from starlette.applications import Starlette
from starlette.routing import Route
async def auth_events(request):
async def events():
yield {
"event": "login",
"data": '{"user_id": "4135"}',
}
return EventSourceResponse(events())
app = Starlette(routes=[Route("/sse/auth/", endpoint=auth_events)])
async def main():
async with httpx.AsyncClient(app=app) as client:
async with aconnect_sse(
client, "GET", "http://localhost:8000/sse/auth/"
) as event_source:
events = [sse async for sse in event_source.aiter_sse()]
(sse,) = events
assert sse.event == "login"
assert sse.json() == {"user_id": "4135"}
asyncio.run(main())
Handling reconnections
(Advanced)
SSETransport
and AsyncSSETransport
don't have reconnection built-in. This is because how to perform retries is generally dependent on your use case. As a result, if the connection breaks while attempting to read from the server, you will get an httpx.ReadError
from iter_sse()
(or aiter_sse()
).
However, httpx-sse
does allow implementing reconnection by using the Last-Event-ID
and reconnection time (in milliseconds), exposed as sse.id
and sse.retry
respectively.
Here's how you might achieve this using stamina
...
import time
from typing import Iterator
import httpx
from httpx_sse import connect_sse, ServerSentEvent
from stamina import retry
def iter_sse_retrying(client, method, url):
last_event_id = ""
reconnection_delay = 0.0
# `stamina` will apply jitter and exponential backoff on top of
# the `retry` reconnection delay sent by the server.
@retry(on=httpx.ReadError)
def _iter_sse():
nonlocal last_event_id, reconnection_delay
time.sleep(reconnection_delay)
headers = {"Accept": "text/event-stream"}
if last_event_id:
headers["Last-Event-ID"] = last_event_id
with connect_sse(client, method, url, headers=headers) as event_source:
for sse in event_source.iter_sse():
last_event_id = sse.id
if sse.retry is not None:
reconnection_delay = sse.retry / 1000
yield sse
return _iter_sse()
Usage:
with httpx.Client() as client:
for sse in iter_sse_retrying(client, "GET", "http://localhost:8000/sse"):
print(sse.event, sse.data)
API Reference
connect_sse
def connect_sse(
client: httpx.Client,
method: str,
url: Union[str, httpx.URL],
**kwargs,
) -> ContextManager[EventSource]
Connect to an SSE endpoint and return an EventSource
context manager.
This sets Cache-Control: no-store
on the request, as per the SSE spec, as well as Accept: text/event-stream
.
If the response Content-Type
is not text/event-stream
, this will raise an SSEError
.
aconnect_sse
async def aconnect_sse(
client: httpx.AsyncClient,
method: str,
url: Union[str, httpx.URL],
**kwargs,
) -> AsyncContextManager[EventSource]
An async equivalent to connect_sse
.
EventSource
def __init__(response: httpx.Response)
Helper for working with an SSE response.
response
The underlying httpx.Response
.
iter_sse
def iter_sse() -> Iterator[ServerSentEvent]
Decode the response content and yield corresponding ServerSentEvent
.
Example usage:
for sse in event_source.iter_sse():
...
aiter_sse
async def iter_sse() -> AsyncIterator[ServerSentEvent]
An async equivalent to iter_sse
.
ServerSentEvent
Represents a server-sent event.
event: str
- Defaults to"message"
.data: str
- Defaults to""
.id: str
- Defaults to""
.retry: str | None
- Defaults toNone
.
Methods:
json() -> Any
- Returnssse.data
decoded as JSON.
SSEError
An error that occurred while making a request to an SSE endpoint.
Parents:
httpx.TransportError
License
MIT
Changelog
All notable changes to this project will be documented in this file.
The format is based on Keep a Changelog.
0.3.1 - 2023-06-01
Added
- Add
__repr__()
forServerSentEvent
model, which may help with debugging and other tasks. (Pull #16)
0.3.0 - 2023-04-27
Changed
- Raising an
SSEError
if the response content type is nottext/event-stream
is now performed as part ofiter_sse()
/aiter_sse()
, instead ofconnect_sse()
/aconnect_sse()
. This allows inspecting the response before iterating on server-sent events, such as checking for error responses. (Pull #12)
0.2.0 - 2023-03-27
Changed
connect_sse()
andaconnect_sse()
now require amethod
argument:connect_sse(client, "GET", "https://example.org")
. This provides support for SSE requests with HTTP verbs other thanGET
. (Pull #7)
0.1.0 - 2023-02-05
Initial release
Added
- Add
connect_sse
,aconnect_sse()
,ServerSentEvent
andSSEError
.
Project details
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
File details
Details for the file httpx-sse-0.3.1.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: httpx-sse-0.3.1.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 12.2 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.3
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 3bb3289b2867f50cbdb2fee3eeeefecb1e86653122e164faac0023f1ffc88aea |
|
MD5 | d1e00e4eeb02ce206e7918c404fe6122 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 58ce776afad8fb568fd1ad5e6c329022d89a03abf293bcbf969b408fdba74ddc |
File details
Details for the file httpx_sse-0.3.1-py3-none-any.whl
.
File metadata
- Download URL: httpx_sse-0.3.1-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 7.7 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.3
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 7376dd88732892f9b6b549ac0ad05a8e2341172fe7dcf9f8f9c8050934297316 |
|
MD5 | ce0550535c9eaafc419d25676d5576d2 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 6233d35b4ccf8c1ac7266bd1d068c48f842d3c7392cca87e32751c79ee553d7a |