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342 lines
13 KiB
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342 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
=======
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Signals
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=======
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.. module:: django.dispatch
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:synopsis: Signal dispatch
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Django includes a "signal dispatcher" which helps decoupled applications get
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notified when actions occur elsewhere in the framework. In a nutshell, signals
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allow certain *senders* to notify a set of *receivers* that some action has
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taken place. They're especially useful when many pieces of code may be
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interested in the same events.
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For example, a third-party app can register to be notified of settings
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changes::
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from django.apps import AppConfig
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from django.core.signals import setting_changed
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def my_callback(sender, **kwargs):
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print("Setting changed!")
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class MyAppConfig(AppConfig):
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...
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def ready(self):
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setting_changed.connect(my_callback)
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Django's :doc:`built-in signals </ref/signals>` let user code get notified of
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certain actions.
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You can also define and send your own custom signals. See
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:ref:`defining-and-sending-signals` below.
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.. warning::
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Signals give the appearance of loose coupling, but they can quickly lead to
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code that is hard to understand, adjust and debug.
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Where possible you should opt for directly calling the handling code,
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rather than dispatching via a signal.
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Listening to signals
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====================
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To receive a signal, register a *receiver* function using the
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:meth:`Signal.connect` method. The receiver function is called when the signal
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is sent. All of the signal's receiver functions are called one at a time, in
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the order they were registered.
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.. method:: Signal.connect(receiver, sender=None, weak=True, dispatch_uid=None)
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:param receiver: The callback function which will be connected to this
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signal. See :ref:`receiver-functions` for more information.
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:param sender: Specifies a particular sender to receive signals from. See
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:ref:`connecting-to-specific-signals` for more information.
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:param weak: Django stores signal handlers as weak references by
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default. Thus, if your receiver is a local function, it may be
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garbage collected. To prevent this, pass ``weak=False`` when you call
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the signal's ``connect()`` method.
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:param dispatch_uid: A unique identifier for a signal receiver in cases
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where duplicate signals may be sent. See
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:ref:`preventing-duplicate-signals` for more information.
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Let's see how this works by registering a signal that
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gets called after each HTTP request is finished. We'll be connecting to the
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:data:`~django.core.signals.request_finished` signal.
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.. _receiver-functions:
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Receiver functions
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------------------
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First, we need to define a receiver function. A receiver can be any Python
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function or method::
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def my_callback(sender, **kwargs):
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print("Request finished!")
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Notice that the function takes a ``sender`` argument, along with wildcard
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keyword arguments (``**kwargs``); all signal handlers must take these arguments.
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We'll look at senders :ref:`a bit later <connecting-to-specific-signals>`, but
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right now look at the ``**kwargs`` argument. All signals send keyword
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arguments, and may change those keyword arguments at any time. In the case of
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:data:`~django.core.signals.request_finished`, it's documented as sending no
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arguments, which means we might be tempted to write our signal handling as
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``my_callback(sender)``.
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This would be wrong -- in fact, Django will throw an error if you do so. That's
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because at any point arguments could get added to the signal and your receiver
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must be able to handle those new arguments.
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Receivers may also be asynchronous functions, with the same signature but
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declared using ``async def``::
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async def my_callback(sender, **kwargs):
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await asyncio.sleep(5)
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print("Request finished!")
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Signals can be sent either synchronously or asynchronously, and receivers will
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automatically be adapted to the correct call-style. See :ref:`sending signals
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<sending-signals>` for more information.
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.. _connecting-receiver-functions:
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Connecting receiver functions
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-----------------------------
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There are two ways you can connect a receiver to a signal. You can take the
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manual connect route::
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from django.core.signals import request_finished
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request_finished.connect(my_callback)
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Alternatively, you can use a :func:`receiver` decorator:
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.. function:: receiver(signal, **kwargs)
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:param signal: A signal or a list of signals to connect a function to.
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:param kwargs: Wildcard keyword arguments to pass to a
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:ref:`function <receiver-functions>`.
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Here's how you connect with the decorator::
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from django.core.signals import request_finished
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from django.dispatch import receiver
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@receiver(request_finished)
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def my_callback(sender, **kwargs):
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print("Request finished!")
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Now, our ``my_callback`` function will be called each time a request finishes.
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.. admonition:: Where should this code live?
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Strictly speaking, signal handling and registration code can live anywhere
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you like, although it's recommended to avoid the application's root module
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and its ``models`` module to minimize side-effects of importing code.
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In practice, signal handlers are usually defined in a ``signals``
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submodule of the application they relate to. Signal receivers are
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connected in the :meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready` method of your
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application :ref:`configuration class <configuring-applications-ref>`. If
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you're using the :func:`receiver` decorator, import the ``signals``
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submodule inside :meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready`, this will implicitly
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connect signal handlers::
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from django.apps import AppConfig
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from django.core.signals import request_finished
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class MyAppConfig(AppConfig):
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...
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def ready(self):
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# Implicitly connect signal handlers decorated with @receiver.
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from . import signals
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# Explicitly connect a signal handler.
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request_finished.connect(signals.my_callback)
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.. note::
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The :meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready` method may be executed more than
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once during testing, so you may want to :ref:`guard your signals from
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duplication <preventing-duplicate-signals>`, especially if you're planning
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to send them within tests.
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.. _connecting-to-specific-signals:
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Connecting to signals sent by specific senders
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----------------------------------------------
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Some signals get sent many times, but you'll only be interested in receiving a
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certain subset of those signals. For example, consider the
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:data:`django.db.models.signals.pre_save` signal sent before a model gets saved.
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Most of the time, you don't need to know when *any* model gets saved -- just
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when one *specific* model is saved.
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In these cases, you can register to receive signals sent only by particular
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senders. In the case of :data:`django.db.models.signals.pre_save`, the sender
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will be the model class being saved, so you can indicate that you only want
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signals sent by some model::
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from django.db.models.signals import pre_save
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from django.dispatch import receiver
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from myapp.models import MyModel
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@receiver(pre_save, sender=MyModel)
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def my_handler(sender, **kwargs): ...
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The ``my_handler`` function will only be called when an instance of ``MyModel``
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is saved.
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Different signals use different objects as their senders; you'll need to consult
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the :doc:`built-in signal documentation </ref/signals>` for details of each
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particular signal.
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.. _preventing-duplicate-signals:
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Preventing duplicate signals
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----------------------------
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In some circumstances, the code connecting receivers to signals may run
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multiple times. This can cause your receiver function to be registered more
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than once, and thus called as many times for a signal event. For example, the
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:meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready` method may be executed more than once
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during testing. More generally, this occurs everywhere your project imports the
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module where you define the signals, because signal registration runs as many
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times as it is imported.
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If this behavior is problematic (such as when using signals to
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send an email whenever a model is saved), pass a unique identifier as
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the ``dispatch_uid`` argument to identify your receiver function. This
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identifier will usually be a string, although any hashable object will
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suffice. The end result is that your receiver function will only be
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bound to the signal once for each unique ``dispatch_uid`` value::
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from django.core.signals import request_finished
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request_finished.connect(my_callback, dispatch_uid="my_unique_identifier")
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.. _defining-and-sending-signals:
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Defining and sending signals
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============================
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Your applications can take advantage of the signal infrastructure and provide
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its own signals.
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.. admonition:: When to use custom signals
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Signals are implicit function calls which make debugging harder. If the
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sender and receiver of your custom signal are both within your project,
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you're better off using an explicit function call.
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Defining signals
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----------------
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.. class:: Signal()
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All signals are :class:`django.dispatch.Signal` instances.
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For example::
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import django.dispatch
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pizza_done = django.dispatch.Signal()
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This declares a ``pizza_done`` signal.
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.. _sending-signals:
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Sending signals
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---------------
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There are two ways to send signals synchronously in Django.
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.. method:: Signal.send(sender, **kwargs)
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.. method:: Signal.send_robust(sender, **kwargs)
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Signals may also be sent asynchronously.
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.. method:: Signal.asend(sender, **kwargs)
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.. method:: Signal.asend_robust(sender, **kwargs)
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To send a signal, call either :meth:`Signal.send`, :meth:`Signal.send_robust`,
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:meth:`await Signal.asend()<Signal.asend>`, or
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:meth:`await Signal.asend_robust() <Signal.asend_robust>`. You must provide the
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``sender`` argument (which is a class most of the time) and may provide as many
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other keyword arguments as you like.
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For example, here's how sending our ``pizza_done`` signal might look::
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class PizzaStore:
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...
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def send_pizza(self, toppings, size):
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pizza_done.send(sender=self.__class__, toppings=toppings, size=size)
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...
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All four methods return a list of tuple pairs ``[(receiver, response), ...]``,
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representing the list of called receiver functions and their response values.
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``send()`` differs from ``send_robust()`` in how exceptions raised by receiver
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functions are handled. ``send()`` does *not* catch any exceptions raised by
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receivers; it simply allows errors to propagate. Thus not all receivers may
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be notified of a signal in the face of an error.
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``send_robust()`` catches all errors derived from Python's ``Exception`` class,
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and ensures all receivers are notified of the signal. If an error occurs, the
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error instance is returned in the tuple pair for the receiver that raised the error.
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The tracebacks are present on the ``__traceback__`` attribute of the errors
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returned when calling ``send_robust()``.
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``asend()`` is similar to ``send()``, but it is a coroutine that must be
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awaited::
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async def asend_pizza(self, toppings, size):
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await pizza_done.asend(sender=self.__class__, toppings=toppings, size=size)
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...
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Whether synchronous or asynchronous, receivers will be correctly adapted to
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whether ``send()`` or ``asend()`` is used. Synchronous receivers will be
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called using :func:`~.sync_to_async` when invoked via ``asend()``. Asynchronous
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receivers will be called using :func:`~.async_to_sync` when invoked via
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``sync()``. Similar to the :ref:`case for middleware <async_performance>`,
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there is a small performance cost to adapting receivers in this way. Note that
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in order to reduce the number of sync/async calling-style switches within a
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``send()`` or ``asend()`` call, the receivers are grouped by whether or not
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they are async before being called. This means that an asynchronous receiver
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registered before a synchronous receiver may be executed after the synchronous
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receiver. In addition, async receivers are executed concurrently using
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``asyncio.gather()``.
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All built-in signals, except those in the async request-response cycle, are
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dispatched using :meth:`Signal.send`.
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Disconnecting signals
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=====================
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.. method:: Signal.disconnect(receiver=None, sender=None, dispatch_uid=None)
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To disconnect a receiver from a signal, call :meth:`Signal.disconnect`. The
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arguments are as described in :meth:`.Signal.connect`. The method returns
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``True`` if a receiver was disconnected and ``False`` if not. When ``sender``
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is passed as a lazy reference to ``<app label>.<model>``, this method always
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returns ``None``.
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The ``receiver`` argument indicates the registered receiver to disconnect. It
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may be ``None`` if ``dispatch_uid`` is used to identify the receiver.
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