Following system colour scheme Selected dark colour scheme Selected light colour scheme

Python Enhancement Proposals

PEP 555 – Context-local variables (contextvars)

Author:
Koos Zevenhoven
Status:
Withdrawn
Type:
Standards Track
Created:
06-Sep-2017
Python-Version:
3.7
Post-History:
06-Sep-2017

Table of Contents

Abstract

Sometimes, in special cases, it is desired that code can pass information down the function call chain to the callees without having to explicitly pass the information as arguments to each function in the call chain. This proposal describes a construct which allows code to explicitly switch in and out of a context where a certain context variable has a given value assigned to it. This is a modern alternative to some uses of things like global variables in traditional single-threaded (or thread-unsafe) code and of thread-local storage in traditional concurrency-unsafe code (single- or multi-threaded). In particular, the proposed mechanism can also be used with more modern concurrent execution mechanisms such as asynchronously executed coroutines, without the concurrently executed call chains interfering with each other’s contexts.

The “call chain” can consist of normal functions, awaited coroutines, or generators. The semantics of context variable scope are equivalent in all cases, allowing code to be refactored freely into subroutines (which here refers to functions, sub-generators or sub-coroutines) without affecting the semantics of context variables. Regarding implementation, this proposal aims at simplicity and minimum changes to the CPython interpreter and to other Python interpreters.

Rationale

Consider a modern Python call chain (or call tree), which in this proposal refers to any chained (nested) execution of subroutines, using any possible combinations of normal function calls, or expressions using await or yield from. In some cases, passing necessary information down the call chain as arguments can substantially complicate the required function signatures, or it can even be impossible to achieve in practice. In these cases, one may search for another place to store this information. Let us look at some historical examples.

The most naive option is to assign the value to a global variable or similar, where the code down the call chain can access it. However, this immediately makes the code thread-unsafe, because with multiple threads, all threads assign to the same global variable, and another thread can interfere at any point in the call chain. Sooner or later, someone will probably find a reason to run the same code in parallel threads.

A somewhat less naive option is to store the information as per-thread information in thread-local storage, where each thread has its own “copy” of the variable which other threads cannot interfere with. Although non-ideal, this has been the best solution in many cases. However, thanks to generators and coroutines, the execution of the call chain can be suspended and resumed, allowing code in other contexts to run concurrently. Therefore, using thread-local storage is concurrency-unsafe, because other call chains in other contexts may interfere with the thread-local variable.

Note that in the above two historical approaches, the stored information has the widest available scope without causing problems. For a third solution along the same path, one would first define an equivalent of a “thread” for asynchronous execution and concurrency. This could be seen as the largest amount of code and nested calls that is guaranteed to be executed sequentially without ambiguity in execution order. This might be referred to as concurrency-local or task-local storage. In this meaning of “task”, there is no ambiguity in the order of execution of the code within one task. (This concept of a task is close to equivalent to a Task in asyncio, but not exactly.) In such concurrency-locals, it is possible to pass information down the call chain to callees without another code path interfering with the value in the background.

Common to the above approaches is that they indeed use variables with a wide but just-narrow-enough scope. Thread-locals could also be called thread-wide globals—in single-threaded code, they are indeed truly global. And task-locals could be called task-wide globals, because tasks can be very big.

The issue here is that neither global variables, thread-locals nor task-locals are really meant to be used for this purpose of passing information of the execution context down the call chain. Instead of the widest possible variable scope, the scope of the variables should be controlled by the programmer, typically of a library, to have the desired scope—not wider. In other words, task-local variables (and globals and thread-locals) have nothing to do with the kind of context-bound information passing that this proposal intends to enable, even if task-locals can be used to emulate the desired semantics. Therefore, in the following, this proposal describes the semantics and the outlines of an implementation for context-local variables (or context variables, contextvars). In fact, as a side effect of this PEP, an async framework can use the proposed feature to implement task-local variables.

Proposal

Because the proposed semantics are not a direct extension to anything already available in Python, this proposal is first described in terms of semantics and API at a fairly high level. In particular, Python with statements are heavily used in the description, as they are a good match with the proposed semantics. However, the underlying __enter__ and __exit__ methods correspond to functions in the lower-level speed-optimized (C) API. For clarity of this document, the lower-level functions are not explicitly named in the definition of the semantics. After describing the semantics and high-level API, the implementation is described, going to a lower level.

Semantics and higher-level API

Core concept

A context-local variable is represented by a single instance of contextvars.Var, say cvar. Any code that has access to the cvar object can ask for its value with respect to the current context. In the high-level API, this value is given by the cvar.value property:

cvar = contextvars.Var(default="the default value",
                       description="example context variable")

assert cvar.value == "the default value"  # default still applies

# In code examples, all ``assert`` statements should
# succeed according to the proposed semantics.

No assignments to cvar have been applied for this context, so cvar.value gives the default value. Assigning new values to contextvars is done in a highly scope-aware manner:

with cvar.assign(new_value):
    assert cvar.value is new_value
    # Any code here, or down the call chain from here, sees:
    #     cvar.value is new_value
    # unless another value has been assigned in a
    # nested context
    assert cvar.value is new_value
# the assignment of ``cvar`` to ``new_value`` is no longer visible
assert cvar.value == "the default value"

Here, cvar.assign(value) returns another object, namely contextvars.Assignment(cvar, new_value). The essential part here is that applying a context variable assignment (Assignment.__enter__) is paired with a de-assignment (Assignment.__exit__). These operations set the bounds for the scope of the assigned value.

Assignments to the same context variable can be nested to override the outer assignment in a narrower context:

assert cvar.value == "the default value"
with cvar.assign("outer"):
    assert cvar.value == "outer"
    with cvar.assign("inner"):
        assert cvar.value == "inner"
    assert cvar.value == "outer"
assert cvar.value == "the default value"

Also multiple variables can be assigned to in a nested manner without affecting each other:

cvar1 = contextvars.Var()
cvar2 = contextvars.Var()

assert cvar1.value is None # default is None by default
assert cvar2.value is None

with cvar1.assign(value1):
    assert cvar1.value is value1
    assert cvar2.value is None
    with cvar2.assign(value2):
        assert cvar1.value is value1
        assert cvar2.value is value2
    assert cvar1.value is value1
    assert cvar2.value is None
assert cvar1.value is None
assert cvar2.value is None

Or with more convenient Python syntax:

with cvar1.assign(value1), cvar2.assign(value2):
    assert cvar1.value is value1
    assert cvar2.value is value2

In another context, in another thread or otherwise concurrently executed task or code path, the context variables can have a completely different state. The programmer thus only needs to worry about the context at hand.

Refactoring into subroutines

Code using contextvars can be refactored into subroutines without affecting the semantics. For instance:

assi = cvar.assign(new_value)
def apply():
    assi.__enter__()
assert cvar.value == "the default value"
apply()
assert cvar.value is new_value
assi.__exit__()
assert cvar.value == "the default value"

Or similarly in an asynchronous context where await expressions are used. The subroutine can now be a coroutine:

assi = cvar.assign(new_value)
async def apply():
    assi.__enter__()
assert cvar.value == "the default value"
await apply()
assert cvar.value is new_value
assi.__exit__()
assert cvar.value == "the default value"

Or when the subroutine is a generator:

def apply():
    yield
    assi.__enter__()

which is called using yield from apply() or with calls to next or .send. This is discussed further in later sections.

Semantics for generators and generator-based coroutines

Generators, coroutines and async generators act as subroutines in much the same way that normal functions do. However, they have the additional possibility of being suspended by yield expressions. Assignment contexts entered inside a generator are normally preserved across yields:

def genfunc():
    with cvar.assign(new_value):
        assert cvar.value is new_value
        yield
        assert cvar.value is new_value
g = genfunc()
next(g)
assert cvar.value == "the default value"
with cvar.assign(another_value):
    next(g)

However, the outer context visible to the generator may change state across yields:

def genfunc():
    assert cvar.value is value2
    yield
    assert cvar.value is value1
    yield
    with cvar.assign(value3):
        assert cvar.value is value3

with cvar.assign(value1):
    g = genfunc()
    with cvar.assign(value2):
        next(g)
    next(g)
    next(g)
    assert cvar.value is value1

Similar semantics apply to async generators defined by async def ... yield ... ).

By default, values assigned inside a generator do not leak through yields to the code that drives the generator. However, the assignment contexts entered and left open inside the generator do become visible outside the generator after the generator has finished with a StopIteration or another exception:

assi = cvar.assign(new_value)
def genfunc():
    yield
    assi.__enter__():
    yield

g = genfunc()
assert cvar.value == "the default value"
next(g)
assert cvar.value == "the default value"
next(g)  # assi.__enter__() is called here
assert cvar.value == "the default value"
next(g)
assert cvar.value is new_value
assi.__exit__()

Special functionality for framework authors

Frameworks, such as asyncio or third-party libraries, can use additional functionality in contextvars to achieve the desired semantics in cases which are not determined by the Python interpreter. Some of the semantics described in this section are also afterwards used to describe the internal implementation.

Leaking yields

Using the contextvars.leaking_yields decorator, one can choose to leak the context through yield expressions into the outer context that drives the generator:

@contextvars.leaking_yields
def genfunc():
    assert cvar.value == "outer"
    with cvar.assign("inner"):
        yield
        assert cvar.value == "inner"
    assert cvar.value == "outer"

g = genfunc():
with cvar.assign("outer"):
    assert cvar.value == "outer"
    next(g)
    assert cvar.value == "inner"
    next(g)
    assert cvar.value == "outer"

Capturing contextvar assignments

Using contextvars.capture(), one can capture the assignment contexts that are entered by a block of code. The changes applied by the block of code can then be reverted and subsequently reapplied, even in another context:

assert cvar1.value is None # default
assert cvar2.value is None # default
assi1 = cvar1.assign(value1)
assi2 = cvar1.assign(value2)
with contextvars.capture() as delta:
    assi1.__enter__()
    with cvar2.assign("not captured"):
        assert cvar2.value is "not captured"
    assi2.__enter__()
assert cvar1.value is value2
delta.revert()
assert cvar1.value is None
assert cvar2.value is None
...
with cvar1.assign(1), cvar2.assign(2):
    delta.reapply()
    assert cvar1.value is value2
    assert cvar2.value == 2

However, reapplying the “delta” if its net contents include deassignments may not be possible (see also Implementation and Open Issues).

Getting a snapshot of context state

The function contextvars.get_local_state() returns an object representing the applied assignments to all context-local variables in the context where the function is called. This can be seen as equivalent to using contextvars.capture() to capture all context changes from the beginning of execution. The returned object supports methods .revert() and reapply() as above.

Running code in a clean state

Although it is possible to revert all applied context changes using the above primitives, a more convenient way to run a block of code in a clean context is provided:

with context_vars.clean_context():
    # here, all context vars start off with their default values
# here, the state is back to what it was before the with block.

Implementation

This section describes to a variable level of detail how the described semantics can be implemented. At present, an implementation aimed at simplicity but sufficient features is described. More details will be added later.

Alternatively, a somewhat more complicated implementation offers minor additional features while adding some performance overhead and requiring more code in the implementation.

Data structures and implementation of the core concept

Each thread of the Python interpreter keeps its own stack of contextvars.Assignment objects, each having a pointer to the previous (outer) assignment like in a linked list. The local state (also returned by contextvars.get_local_state()) then consists of a reference to the top of the stack and a pointer/weak reference to the bottom of the stack. This allows efficient stack manipulations. An object produced by contextvars.capture() is similar, but refers to only a part of the stack with the bottom reference pointing to the top of the stack as it was in the beginning of the capture block.

Now, the stack evolves according to the assignment __enter__ and __exit__ methods. For example:

cvar1 = contextvars.Var()
cvar2 = contextvars.Var()
# stack: []
assert cvar1.value is None
assert cvar2.value is None

with cvar1.assign("outer"):
    # stack: [Assignment(cvar1, "outer")]
    assert cvar1.value == "outer"

    with cvar1.assign("inner"):
        # stack: [Assignment(cvar1, "outer"),
        #         Assignment(cvar1, "inner")]
        assert cvar1.value == "inner"

        with cvar2.assign("hello"):
            # stack: [Assignment(cvar1, "outer"),
            #         Assignment(cvar1, "inner"),
            #         Assignment(cvar2, "hello")]
            assert cvar2.value == "hello"

        # stack: [Assignment(cvar1, "outer"),
        #         Assignment(cvar1, "inner")]
        assert cvar1.value == "inner"
        assert cvar2.value is None

    # stack: [Assignment(cvar1, "outer")]
    assert cvar1.value == "outer"

# stack: []
assert cvar1.value is None
assert cvar2.value is None

Getting a value from the context using cvar1.value can be implemented as finding the topmost occurrence of a cvar1 assignment on the stack and returning the value there, or the default value if no assignment is found on the stack. However, this can be optimized to instead be an O(1) operation in most cases. Still, even searching through the stack may be reasonably fast since these stacks are not intended to grow very large.

The above description is already sufficient for implementing the core concept. Suspendable frames require some additional attention, as explained in the following.

Implementation of generator and coroutine semantics

Within generators, coroutines and async generators, assignments and deassignments are handled in exactly the same way as anywhere else. However, some changes are needed in the builtin generator methods send, __next__, throw and close. Here is the Python equivalent of the changes needed in send for a generator (here _old_send refers to the behavior in Python 3.6):

def send(self, value):
    if self.gi_contextvars is LEAK:
        # If decorated with contextvars.leaking_yields.
        # Nothing needs to be done to leak context through yields :)
        return self._old_send(value)
    try:
        with contextvars.capture() as delta:
            if self.gi_contextvars:
                # non-zero captured content from previous iteration
                self.gi_contextvars.reapply()
            ret = self._old_send(value)
    except Exception:
        raise  # back to the calling frame (e.g. StopIteration)
    else:
        # suspending, revert context changes but save them for later
        delta.revert()
        self.gi_contextvars = delta
    return ret

The corresponding modifications to the other methods is essentially identical. The same applies to coroutines and async generators.

For code that does not use contextvars, the additions are O(1) and essentially reduce to a couple of pointer comparisons. For code that does use contextvars, the additions are still O(1) in most cases.

More on implementation

The rest of the functionality, including contextvars.leaking_yields, contextvars.capture(), contextvars.get_local_state() and contextvars.clean_context() are in fact quite straightforward to implement, but their implementation will be discussed further in later versions of this proposal. Caching of assigned values is somewhat more complicated, and will be discussed later, but it seems that most cases should achieve O(1) complexity.

Backwards compatibility

There are no direct backwards-compatibility concerns, since a completely new feature is proposed.

However, various traditional uses of thread-local storage may need a smooth transition to contextvars so they can be concurrency-safe. There are several approaches to this, including emulating task-local storage with a little bit of help from async frameworks. A fully general implementation cannot be provided, because the desired semantics may depend on the design of the framework.

Another way to deal with the transition is for code to first look for a context created using contextvars. If that fails because a new-style context has not been set or because the code runs on an older Python version, a fallback to thread-local storage is used.

Open Issues

Out-of-order de-assignments

In this proposal, all variable deassignments are made in the opposite order compared to the preceding assignments. This has two useful properties: it encourages using with statements to define assignment scope and has a tendency to catch errors early (forgetting a .__exit__() call often results in a meaningful error. To have this as a requirement is beneficial also in terms of implementation simplicity and performance. Nevertheless, allowing out-of-order context exits is not completely out of the question, and reasonable implementation strategies for that do exist.

Rejected Ideas

Dynamic scoping linked to subroutine scopes

The scope of value visibility should not be determined by the way the code is refactored into subroutines. It is necessary to have per-variable control of the assignment scope.

Acknowledgements

To be added.

References

To be added.


Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0555.rst

Last modified: 2022-10-06 19:14:32 GMT