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Tenacity

Tenacity is an Apache 2.0 licensed general-purpose retrying library, written in Python, to simplify the task of adding retry behavior to just about anything. It originates from a fork of retrying.

The simplest use case is retrying a flaky function whenever an Exception occurs until a value is returned.

.. testcode::

    import random
    from tenacity import retry

    @retry
    def do_something_unreliable():
        if random.randint(0, 10) > 1:
            raise IOError("Broken sauce, everything is hosed!!!111one")
        else:
            return "Awesome sauce!"

    print(do_something_unreliable())

.. testoutput::
   :hide:

   Awesome sauce!

Features

  • Generic Decorator API
  • Specify stop condition (i.e. limit by number of attempts)
  • Specify wait condition (i.e. exponential backoff sleeping between attempts)
  • Customize retrying on Exceptions
  • Customize retrying on expected returned result
  • Retry on coroutines

Installation

To install tenacity, simply:

$ pip install tenacity

Examples

.. testsetup:: *

    import logging
    from tenacity import *

    class MyException(Exception):
        pass

As you saw above, the default behavior is to retry forever without waiting when an exception is raised.

.. testcode::

    @retry
    def never_give_up_never_surrender():
        print("Retry forever ignoring Exceptions, don't wait between retries")
        raise Exception

Let's be a little less persistent and set some boundaries, such as the number of attempts before giving up.

.. testcode::

    @retry(stop=stop_after_attempt(7))
    def stop_after_7_attempts():
        print("Stopping after 7 attempts")
        raise Exception

We don't have all day, so let's set a boundary for how long we should be retrying stuff.

.. testcode::

    @retry(stop=stop_after_delay(10))
    def stop_after_10_s():
        print("Stopping after 10 seconds")
        raise Exception

You can combine several stop conditions by using the | operator:

.. testcode::

    @retry(stop=(stop_after_delay(10) | stop_after_attempt(5)))
    def stop_after_10_s_or_5_retries():
        print("Stopping after 10 seconds or 5 retries")
        raise Exception

Most things don't like to be polled as fast as possible, so let's just wait 2 seconds between retries.

.. testcode::

    @retry(wait=wait_fixed(2))
    def wait_2_s():
        print("Wait 2 second between retries")
        raise Exception

Some things perform best with a bit of randomness injected.

.. testcode::

    @retry(wait=wait_random(min=1, max=2))
    def wait_random_1_to_2_s():
        print("Randomly wait 1 to 2 seconds between retries")
        raise Exception

Then again, it's hard to beat exponential backoff when retrying distributed services and other remote endpoints.

.. testcode::

    @retry(wait=wait_exponential(multiplier=1, max=10))
    def wait_exponential_1():
        print("Wait 2^x * 1 second between each retry, up to 10 seconds, then 10 seconds afterwards")
        raise Exception


Then again, it's also hard to beat combining fixed waits and jitter (to help avoid thundering herds) when retrying distributed services and other remote endpoints.

.. testcode::

    @retry(wait=wait_fixed(3) + wait_random(0, 2))
    def wait_fixed_jitter():
        print("Wait at least 3 seconds, and add up to 2 seconds of random delay")
        raise Exception

When multiple processes are in contention for a shared resource, exponentially increasing jitter helps minimise collisions.

.. testcode::

    @retry(wait=wait_random_exponential(multiplier=1, max=60))
    def wait_exponential_jitter():
        print("Randomly wait up to 2^x * 1 seconds between each retry until the range reaches 60 seconds, then randomly up to 60 seconds afterwards")
        raise Exception


Sometimes it's necessary to build a chain of backoffs.

.. testcode::

    @retry(wait=wait_chain(*[wait_fixed(3) for i in range(3)] +
                           [wait_fixed(7) for i in range(2)] +
                           [wait_fixed(9)]))
    def wait_fixed_chained():
        print("Wait 3s for 3 attempts, 7s for the next 2 attempts and 9s for all attempts thereafter")
        raise Exception

We have a few options for dealing with retries that raise specific or general exceptions, as in the cases here.

.. testcode::

    @retry(retry=retry_if_exception_type(IOError))
    def might_io_error():
        print("Retry forever with no wait if an IOError occurs, raise any other errors")
        raise Exception

We can also use the result of the function to alter the behavior of retrying.

.. testcode::

    def is_none_p(value):
        """Return True if value is None"""
        return value is None

    @retry(retry=retry_if_result(is_none_p))
    def might_return_none():
        print("Retry with no wait if return value is None")

We can also combine several conditions:

.. testcode::

    def is_none_p(value):
        """Return True if value is None"""
        return value is None

    @retry(retry=(retry_if_result(is_none_p) | retry_if_exception_type()))
    def might_return_none():
        print("Retry forever ignoring Exceptions with no wait if return value is None")

Any combination of stop, wait, etc. is also supported to give you the freedom to mix and match.

It's also possible to retry explicitly at any time by raising the TryAgain exception:

.. testcode::

   @retry
   def do_something():
       result = something_else()
       if result == 23:
          raise TryAgain

While callables that "timeout" retrying raise a RetryError by default, we can reraise the last attempt's exception if needed:

.. testcode::

    @retry(reraise=True, stop=stop_after_attempt(3))
    def raise_my_exception():
        raise MyException("Fail")

    try:
        raise_my_exception()
    except MyException:
        # timed out retrying
        pass

It's possible to execute an action before any attempt of calling the function by using the before callback function:

.. testcode::

    logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

    @retry(stop=stop_after_attempt(3), before=before_log(logger, logging.DEBUG))
    def raise_my_exception():
        raise MyException("Fail")

In the same spirit, It's possible to execute after a call that failed:

.. testcode::

    logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

    @retry(stop=stop_after_attempt(3), after=after_log(logger, logging.DEBUG))
    def raise_my_exception():
        raise MyException("Fail")

You can access the statistics about the retry made over a function by using the retry attribute attached to the function and its statistics attribute:

.. testcode::

    @retry(stop=stop_after_attempt(3))
    def raise_my_exception():
        raise MyException("Fail")

    try:
        raise_my_exception()
    except Exception:
        pass

    print(raise_my_exception.retry.statistics)

.. testoutput::
   :hide:

   ...

You can change the arguments of a retry decorator as needed when calling it by using the retry_with function attached to the wrapped function:

.. testcode::

    @retry(stop=stop_after_attempt(3))
    def raise_my_exception():
        raise MyException("Fail")

    try:
        raise_my_exception.retry_with(stop=stop_after_attempt(4))()
    except Exception:
        pass

    print(raise_my_exception.retry.statistics)

.. testoutput::
   :hide:

   ...


Contribute

  1. Check for open issues or open a fresh issue to start a discussion around a feature idea or a bug.
  2. Fork the repository on GitHub to start making your changes to the master branch (or branch off of it).
  3. Write a test which shows that the bug was fixed or that the feature works as expected.
  4. Make the docs better (or more detailed, or more easier to read, or ...)

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Retrying library for Python

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