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Python Microservices Development

You're reading from   Python Microservices Development Build, test, deploy, and scale microservices in Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785881114
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Tarek Ziadé Tarek Ziadé
Author Profile Icon Tarek Ziadé
Tarek Ziadé
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Microservices 2. Discovering Flask FREE CHAPTER 3. Coding, Testing, and Documenting - the Virtuous Cycle 4. Designing Runnerly 5. Interacting with Other Services 6. Monitoring Your Services 7. Securing Your Services 8. Bringing It All Together 9. Packaging and Running Runnerly 10. Containerized Services 11. Deploying on AWS 12. What Next?

The asyncio library

The asyncio (https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio.html) library, which was originally an experiment called Tulip run by Guido, provides all the infrastructure to build asynchronous programs based on an event loop.

The library predates the introduction of async, await, and native coroutines in the language.

The asyncio library is inspired by Twisted, and offers classes that mimic Twisted transports and protocols. Building a network application based on these consists of combining a transport class (like TCP) and a protocol class (such as HTTP), and using callbacks to orchestrate the execution of the various parts.

But, with the introduction of native coroutines, callback-style programming is less appealing, since it's much more readable to orchestrate the execution order via await calls. You can use coroutine with asyncio protocol and transport classes...

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