On 3/10/2014 4:38 PM, Chris Withers wrote:
Hi All,
I see python now has a plethora of async frameworks and I need to try
and pick one to use from:
- asyncio/tulip
- tornado
- twisted
From my side, I'm looking to experimentally build a network testing
tool that will need to speak a fair few network protocols, both classic
tcp and multicast-based, and have a web api living on top of it that
most likely will have a websocket for pumping data to the browser.
I'd like to be able to serve the rest of the web api using a pyramid
wsgi app if possible, and I'd like to be able to write the things that
process requests in and validation out in a synchronous fashion, most
likely spinning off a thread for each one.
If you are writing 'standard' blocking, synchronous code, I am not sure
why you would use any of the above.
The protocols are all financial (do we really not have a pure-python FIX
library?!) but none are likely to have existing python implementations.
How should I pick between the options? What would people recommend and why?
I know nothing of tornado. I personally would use asyncio over twisted
if I could because it is simpler, in the stdlib, has the option to write
'untwisted' non-blocking code similar to blocking code, and the docs
easier for me to read.
--
Terry Jan Reedy
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