python-telegram-bot/telegram/ext/_application.py

1762 lines
75 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# A library that provides a Python interface to the Telegram Bot API
# Copyright (C) 2015-2023
# Leandro Toledo de Souza <devs@python-telegram-bot.org>
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU Lesser Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU Lesser Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser Public License
# along with this program. If not, see [http://www.gnu.org/licenses/].
"""This module contains the Application class."""
import asyncio
import contextlib
import inspect
import itertools
import platform
import signal
import sys
from collections import defaultdict
from copy import deepcopy
from pathlib import Path
from types import MappingProxyType, TracebackType
from typing import (
TYPE_CHECKING,
Any,
AsyncContextManager,
Awaitable,
Callable,
Coroutine,
DefaultDict,
Dict,
Generator,
Generic,
List,
Mapping,
NoReturn,
Optional,
Sequence,
Set,
Tuple,
Type,
TypeVar,
Union,
)
from telegram._update import Update
from telegram._utils.defaultvalue import DEFAULT_NONE, DEFAULT_TRUE, DefaultValue
from telegram._utils.logging import get_logger
from telegram._utils.repr import build_repr_with_selected_attrs
from telegram._utils.types import SCT, DVType, ODVInput
from telegram._utils.warnings import warn
from telegram.error import TelegramError
from telegram.ext._basehandler import BaseHandler
from telegram.ext._basepersistence import BasePersistence
from telegram.ext._contexttypes import ContextTypes
from telegram.ext._extbot import ExtBot
from telegram.ext._updater import Updater
from telegram.ext._utils.stack import was_called_by
from telegram.ext._utils.trackingdict import TrackingDict
from telegram.ext._utils.types import BD, BT, CCT, CD, JQ, RT, UD, ConversationKey, HandlerCallback
from telegram.warnings import PTBDeprecationWarning
if TYPE_CHECKING:
from telegram import Message
from telegram.ext import ConversationHandler, JobQueue
from telegram.ext._applicationbuilder import InitApplicationBuilder
from telegram.ext._baseupdateprocessor import BaseUpdateProcessor
from telegram.ext._jobqueue import Job
DEFAULT_GROUP: int = 0
_AppType = TypeVar("_AppType", bound="Application") # pylint: disable=invalid-name
_STOP_SIGNAL = object()
_DEFAULT_0 = DefaultValue(0)
# Since python 3.12, the coroutine passed to create_task should not be an (async) generator. Remove
# this check when we drop support for python 3.11.
if sys.version_info >= (3, 12):
_CoroType = Awaitable[RT]
else:
_CoroType = Union[Generator["asyncio.Future[object]", None, RT], Awaitable[RT]]
_ErrorCoroType = Optional[_CoroType[RT]]
_LOGGER = get_logger(__name__)
class ApplicationHandlerStop(Exception):
"""
Raise this in a handler or an error handler to prevent execution of any other handler (even in
different groups).
In order to use this exception in a :class:`telegram.ext.ConversationHandler`, pass the
optional :paramref:`state` parameter instead of returning the next state:
.. code-block:: python
async def conversation_callback(update, context):
...
raise ApplicationHandlerStop(next_state)
Note:
Has no effect, if the handler or error handler is run in a non-blocking way.
Args:
state (:obj:`object`, optional): The next state of the conversation.
Attributes:
state (:obj:`object`): Optional. The next state of the conversation.
"""
__slots__ = ("state",)
def __init__(self, state: Optional[object] = None) -> None:
super().__init__()
self.state: Optional[object] = state
class Application(Generic[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ], AsyncContextManager["Application"]):
"""This class dispatches all kinds of updates to its registered handlers, and is the entry
point to a PTB application.
Tip:
This class may not be initialized directly. Use :class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationBuilder`
or :meth:`builder` (for convenience).
Instances of this class can be used as asyncio context managers, where
.. code:: python
async with application:
# code
is roughly equivalent to
.. code:: python
try:
await application.initialize()
# code
finally:
await application.shutdown()
Examples:
:any:`Echo Bot <examples.echobot>`
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Your First Bot <Extensions---Your-first-Bot>`,
:wiki:`Architecture Overview <Architecture>`
.. versionchanged:: 20.0
* Initialization is now done through the :class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationBuilder`.
* Removed the attribute ``groups``.
Attributes:
bot (:class:`telegram.Bot`): The bot object that should be passed to the handlers.
update_queue (:class:`asyncio.Queue`): The synchronized queue that will contain the
updates.
updater (:class:`telegram.ext.Updater`): Optional. The updater used by this application.
chat_data (:obj:`types.MappingProxyType`): A dictionary handlers can use to store data for
the chat. For each integer chat id, the corresponding value of this mapping is
available as :attr:`telegram.ext.CallbackContext.chat_data` in handler callbacks for
updates from that chat.
.. versionchanged:: 20.0
:attr:`chat_data` is now read-only. Note that the values of the mapping are still
mutable, i.e. editing ``context.chat_data`` within a handler callback is possible
(and encouraged), but editing the mapping ``application.chat_data`` itself is not.
.. tip::
* Manually modifying :attr:`chat_data` is almost never needed and unadvisable.
* Entries are never deleted automatically from this mapping. If you want to delete
the data associated with a specific chat, e.g. if the bot got removed from that
chat, please use :meth:`drop_chat_data`.
user_data (:obj:`types.MappingProxyType`): A dictionary handlers can use to store data for
the user. For each integer user id, the corresponding value of this mapping is
available as :attr:`telegram.ext.CallbackContext.user_data` in handler callbacks for
updates from that user.
.. versionchanged:: 20.0
:attr:`user_data` is now read-only. Note that the values of the mapping are still
mutable, i.e. editing ``context.user_data`` within a handler callback is possible
(and encouraged), but editing the mapping ``application.user_data`` itself is not.
.. tip::
* Manually modifying :attr:`user_data` is almost never needed and unadvisable.
* Entries are never deleted automatically from this mapping. If you want to delete
the data associated with a specific user, e.g. if that user blocked the bot,
please use :meth:`drop_user_data`.
bot_data (:obj:`dict`): A dictionary handlers can use to store data for the bot.
persistence (:class:`telegram.ext.BasePersistence`): The persistence class to
store data that should be persistent over restarts.
handlers (Dict[:obj:`int`, List[:class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`]]): A dictionary mapping
each handler group to the list of handlers registered to that group.
.. seealso::
:meth:`add_handler`, :meth:`add_handlers`.
error_handlers (Dict[:term:`coroutine function`, :obj:`bool`]): A dictionary where the keys
are error handlers and the values indicate whether they are to be run blocking.
.. seealso::
:meth:`add_error_handler`
context_types (:class:`telegram.ext.ContextTypes`): Specifies the types used by this
dispatcher for the ``context`` argument of handler and job callbacks.
post_init (:term:`coroutine function`): Optional. A callback that will be executed by
:meth:`Application.run_polling` and :meth:`Application.run_webhook` after initializing
the application via :meth:`initialize`.
post_shutdown (:term:`coroutine function`): Optional. A callback that will be executed by
:meth:`Application.run_polling` and :meth:`Application.run_webhook` after shutting down
the application via :meth:`shutdown`.
post_stop (:term:`coroutine function`): Optional. A callback that will be executed by
:meth:`Application.run_polling` and :meth:`Application.run_webhook` after stopping
the application via :meth:`stop`.
.. versionadded:: 20.1
"""
__slots__ = (
"__create_task_tasks",
"__update_fetcher_task",
"__update_persistence_event",
"__update_persistence_lock",
"__update_persistence_task",
# Allowing '__weakref__' creation here since we need it for the JobQueue
# Uncomment if necessary - currently the __weakref__ slot is already created
# in the AsyncContextManager base class
# "__weakref__",
"_chat_data",
"_chat_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence",
"_chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence",
"_conversation_handler_conversations",
"_initialized",
"_job_queue",
"_running",
"_update_processor",
"_user_data",
"_user_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence",
"_user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence",
"bot",
"bot_data",
"chat_data",
"context_types",
"error_handlers",
"handlers",
"persistence",
"post_init",
"post_shutdown",
"post_stop",
"update_queue",
"updater",
"user_data",
)
def __init__(
self: "Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]",
*,
bot: BT,
update_queue: "asyncio.Queue[object]",
updater: Optional[Updater],
job_queue: JQ,
update_processor: "BaseUpdateProcessor",
persistence: Optional[BasePersistence[UD, CD, BD]],
context_types: ContextTypes[CCT, UD, CD, BD],
post_init: Optional[
Callable[["Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]"], Coroutine[Any, Any, None]]
],
post_shutdown: Optional[
Callable[["Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]"], Coroutine[Any, Any, None]]
],
post_stop: Optional[
Callable[["Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]"], Coroutine[Any, Any, None]]
],
):
if not was_called_by(
inspect.currentframe(), Path(__file__).parent.resolve() / "_applicationbuilder.py"
):
warn(
"`Application` instances should be built via the `ApplicationBuilder`.",
stacklevel=2,
)
self.bot: BT = bot
self.update_queue: asyncio.Queue[object] = update_queue
self.context_types: ContextTypes[CCT, UD, CD, BD] = context_types
self.updater: Optional[Updater] = updater
self.handlers: Dict[int, List[BaseHandler[Any, CCT]]] = {}
self.error_handlers: Dict[
HandlerCallback[object, CCT, None], Union[bool, DefaultValue[bool]]
] = {}
self.post_init: Optional[
Callable[[Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]], Coroutine[Any, Any, None]]
] = post_init
self.post_shutdown: Optional[
Callable[[Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]], Coroutine[Any, Any, None]]
] = post_shutdown
self.post_stop: Optional[
Callable[[Application[BT, CCT, UD, CD, BD, JQ]], Coroutine[Any, Any, None]]
] = post_stop
self._update_processor = update_processor
self.bot_data: BD = self.context_types.bot_data()
self._user_data: DefaultDict[int, UD] = defaultdict(self.context_types.user_data)
self._chat_data: DefaultDict[int, CD] = defaultdict(self.context_types.chat_data)
# Read only mapping
self.user_data: Mapping[int, UD] = MappingProxyType(self._user_data)
self.chat_data: Mapping[int, CD] = MappingProxyType(self._chat_data)
self.persistence: Optional[BasePersistence[UD, CD, BD]] = None
if persistence and not isinstance(persistence, BasePersistence):
raise TypeError("persistence must be based on telegram.ext.BasePersistence")
self.persistence = persistence
# Some bookkeeping for persistence logic
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence: Set[int] = set()
self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence: Set[int] = set()
self._chat_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence: Set[int] = set()
self._user_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence: Set[int] = set()
# This attribute will hold references to the conversation dicts of all conversation
# handlers so that we can extract the changed states during `update_persistence`
self._conversation_handler_conversations: Dict[
str, TrackingDict[ConversationKey, object]
] = {}
# A number of low-level helpers for the internal logic
self._initialized = False
self._running = False
self._job_queue: JQ = job_queue
self.__update_fetcher_task: Optional[asyncio.Task] = None
self.__update_persistence_task: Optional[asyncio.Task] = None
self.__update_persistence_event = asyncio.Event()
self.__update_persistence_lock = asyncio.Lock()
self.__create_task_tasks: Set[asyncio.Task] = set() # Used for awaiting tasks upon exit
def __repr__(self) -> str:
"""Give a string representation of the application in the form ``Application[bot=...]``.
As this class doesn't implement :meth:`object.__str__`, the default implementation
will be used, which is equivalent to :meth:`__repr__`.
Returns:
:obj:`str`
"""
return build_repr_with_selected_attrs(self, bot=self.bot)
def _check_initialized(self) -> None:
if not self._initialized:
raise RuntimeError(
"This Application was not initialized via `Application.initialize`!"
)
@property
def running(self) -> bool:
""":obj:`bool`: Indicates if this application is running.
.. seealso::
:meth:`start`, :meth:`stop`
"""
return self._running
@property
def concurrent_updates(self) -> int:
""":obj:`int`: The number of concurrent updates that will be processed in parallel. A
value of ``0`` indicates updates are *not* being processed concurrently.
.. versionchanged:: 20.4
This is now just a shortcut to :attr:`update_processor.max_concurrent_updates
<telegram.ext.BaseUpdateProcessor.max_concurrent_updates>`.
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Concurrency`
"""
return self._update_processor.max_concurrent_updates
@property
def job_queue(self) -> Optional["JobQueue[CCT]"]:
"""
:class:`telegram.ext.JobQueue`: The :class:`JobQueue` used by the
:class:`telegram.ext.Application`.
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Job Queue <Extensions---JobQueue>`
"""
if self._job_queue is None:
warn(
"No `JobQueue` set up. To use `JobQueue`, you must install PTB via "
'`pip install "python-telegram-bot[job-queue]"`.',
stacklevel=2,
)
return self._job_queue
@property
def update_processor(self) -> "BaseUpdateProcessor":
""":class:`telegram.ext.BaseUpdateProcessor`: The update processor used by this
application.
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Concurrency`
.. versionadded:: 20.4
"""
return self._update_processor
async def initialize(self) -> None:
"""Initializes the Application by initializing:
* The :attr:`bot`, by calling :meth:`telegram.Bot.initialize`.
* The :attr:`updater`, by calling :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.initialize`.
* The :attr:`persistence`, by loading persistent conversations and data.
* The :attr:`update_processor` by calling
:meth:`telegram.ext.BaseUpdateProcessor.initialize`.
Does *not* call :attr:`post_init` - that is only done by :meth:`run_polling` and
:meth:`run_webhook`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`shutdown`
"""
if self._initialized:
_LOGGER.debug("This Application is already initialized.")
return
await self.bot.initialize()
await self._update_processor.initialize()
if self.updater:
await self.updater.initialize()
if not self.persistence:
self._initialized = True
return
await self._initialize_persistence()
# Unfortunately due to circular imports this has to be here
# pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel
from telegram.ext._conversationhandler import ConversationHandler
# Initialize the persistent conversation handlers with the stored states
for handler in itertools.chain.from_iterable(self.handlers.values()):
if isinstance(handler, ConversationHandler) and handler.persistent and handler.name:
await self._add_ch_to_persistence(handler)
self._initialized = True
async def _add_ch_to_persistence(self, handler: "ConversationHandler") -> None:
self._conversation_handler_conversations.update(
await handler._initialize_persistence(self) # pylint: disable=protected-access
)
async def shutdown(self) -> None:
"""Shuts down the Application by shutting down:
* :attr:`bot` by calling :meth:`telegram.Bot.shutdown`
* :attr:`updater` by calling :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.shutdown`
* :attr:`persistence` by calling :meth:`update_persistence` and
:meth:`BasePersistence.flush`
* :attr:`update_processor` by calling :meth:`telegram.ext.BaseUpdateProcessor.shutdown`
Does *not* call :attr:`post_shutdown` - that is only done by :meth:`run_polling` and
:meth:`run_webhook`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`initialize`
Raises:
:exc:`RuntimeError`: If the application is still :attr:`running`.
"""
if self.running:
raise RuntimeError("This Application is still running!")
if not self._initialized:
_LOGGER.debug("This Application is already shut down. Returning.")
return
await self.bot.shutdown()
await self._update_processor.shutdown()
if self.updater:
await self.updater.shutdown()
if self.persistence:
_LOGGER.debug("Updating & flushing persistence before shutdown")
await self.update_persistence()
await self.persistence.flush()
_LOGGER.debug("Updated and flushed persistence")
self._initialized = False
async def __aenter__(self: _AppType) -> _AppType: # noqa: PYI019
"""Simple context manager which initializes the App."""
try:
await self.initialize()
return self
except Exception as exc:
await self.shutdown()
raise exc
async def __aexit__(
self,
exc_type: Optional[Type[BaseException]],
exc_val: Optional[BaseException],
exc_tb: Optional[TracebackType],
) -> None:
"""Shutdown the App from the context manager."""
# Make sure not to return `True` so that exceptions are not suppressed
# https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html?#object.__aexit__
await self.shutdown()
async def _initialize_persistence(self) -> None:
"""This method basically just loads all the data by awaiting the BP methods"""
if not self.persistence:
return
if self.persistence.store_data.user_data:
self._user_data.update(await self.persistence.get_user_data())
if self.persistence.store_data.chat_data:
self._chat_data.update(await self.persistence.get_chat_data())
if self.persistence.store_data.bot_data:
self.bot_data = await self.persistence.get_bot_data()
if not isinstance(self.bot_data, self.context_types.bot_data):
raise ValueError(
f"bot_data must be of type {self.context_types.bot_data.__name__}"
)
# Mypy doesn't know that persistence.set_bot (see above) already checks that
# self.bot is an instance of ExtBot if callback_data should be stored ...
if self.persistence.store_data.callback_data and (
self.bot.callback_data_cache is not None # type: ignore[attr-defined]
):
persistent_data = await self.persistence.get_callback_data()
if persistent_data is not None:
if not isinstance(persistent_data, tuple) or len(persistent_data) != 2:
raise ValueError("callback_data must be a tuple of length 2")
self.bot.callback_data_cache.load_persistence_data( # type: ignore[attr-defined]
persistent_data
)
@staticmethod
def builder() -> "InitApplicationBuilder":
"""Convenience method. Returns a new :class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationBuilder`.
.. versionadded:: 20.0
"""
# Unfortunately this needs to be here due to cyclical imports
from telegram.ext import ApplicationBuilder # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel
return ApplicationBuilder()
async def start(self) -> None:
"""Starts
* a background task that fetches updates from :attr:`update_queue` and processes them via
:meth:`process_update`.
* :attr:`job_queue`, if set.
* a background task that calls :meth:`update_persistence` in regular intervals, if
:attr:`persistence` is set.
Note:
This does *not* start fetching updates from Telegram. To fetch updates, you need to
either start :attr:`updater` manually or use one of :meth:`run_polling` or
:meth:`run_webhook`.
Tip:
When using a custom logic for startup and shutdown of the application, eventual
cancellation of pending tasks should happen only `after` :meth:`stop` has been called
in order to ensure that the tasks mentioned above are not cancelled prematurely.
.. seealso::
:meth:`stop`
Raises:
:exc:`RuntimeError`: If the application is already running or was not initialized.
"""
if self.running:
raise RuntimeError("This Application is already running!")
self._check_initialized()
self._running = True
self.__update_persistence_event.clear()
try:
if self.persistence:
self.__update_persistence_task = asyncio.create_task(
self._persistence_updater(),
name=f"Application:{self.bot.id}:persistence_updater",
)
_LOGGER.debug("Loop for updating persistence started")
if self._job_queue:
await self._job_queue.start() # type: ignore[union-attr]
_LOGGER.debug("JobQueue started")
self.__update_fetcher_task = asyncio.create_task(
self._update_fetcher(), name=f"Application:{self.bot.id}:update_fetcher"
)
_LOGGER.info("Application started")
except Exception as exc:
self._running = False
raise exc
async def stop(self) -> None:
"""Stops the process after processing any pending updates or tasks created by
:meth:`create_task`. Also stops :attr:`job_queue`, if set.
Finally, calls :meth:`update_persistence` and :meth:`BasePersistence.flush` on
:attr:`persistence`, if set.
Warning:
Once this method is called, no more updates will be fetched from :attr:`update_queue`,
even if it's not empty.
.. seealso::
:meth:`start`
Note:
* This does *not* stop :attr:`updater`. You need to either manually call
:meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.stop` or use one of :meth:`run_polling` or
:meth:`run_webhook`.
* Does *not* call :attr:`post_stop` - that is only done by
:meth:`run_polling` and :meth:`run_webhook`.
Raises:
:exc:`RuntimeError`: If the application is not running.
"""
if not self.running:
raise RuntimeError("This Application is not running!")
self._running = False
_LOGGER.info("Application is stopping. This might take a moment.")
# Stop listening for new updates and handle all pending ones
await self.update_queue.put(_STOP_SIGNAL)
_LOGGER.debug("Waiting for update_queue to join")
await self.update_queue.join()
if self.__update_fetcher_task:
await self.__update_fetcher_task
_LOGGER.debug("Application stopped fetching of updates.")
if self._job_queue:
_LOGGER.debug("Waiting for running jobs to finish")
await self._job_queue.stop(wait=True) # type: ignore[union-attr]
_LOGGER.debug("JobQueue stopped")
_LOGGER.debug("Waiting for `create_task` calls to be processed")
await asyncio.gather(*self.__create_task_tasks, return_exceptions=True)
# Make sure that this is the *last* step of stopping the application!
if self.persistence and self.__update_persistence_task:
_LOGGER.debug("Waiting for persistence loop to finish")
self.__update_persistence_event.set()
await self.__update_persistence_task
self.__update_persistence_event.clear()
_LOGGER.info("Application.stop() complete")
def stop_running(self) -> None:
"""This method can be used to stop the execution of :meth:`run_polling` or
:meth:`run_webhook` from within a handler, job or error callback. This allows a graceful
shutdown of the application, i.e. the methods listed in :attr:`run_polling` and
:attr:`run_webhook` will still be executed.
Note:
If the application is not running, this method does nothing.
.. versionadded:: 20.5
"""
if self.running:
# This works because `__run` is using `loop.run_forever()`. If that changes, this
# method needs to be adapted.
asyncio.get_running_loop().stop()
else:
_LOGGER.debug("Application is not running, stop_running() does nothing.")
def run_polling(
self,
poll_interval: float = 0.0,
timeout: int = 10,
bootstrap_retries: int = -1,
read_timeout: float = 2,
write_timeout: ODVInput[float] = DEFAULT_NONE,
connect_timeout: ODVInput[float] = DEFAULT_NONE,
pool_timeout: ODVInput[float] = DEFAULT_NONE,
allowed_updates: Optional[List[str]] = None,
drop_pending_updates: Optional[bool] = None,
close_loop: bool = True,
stop_signals: ODVInput[Sequence[int]] = DEFAULT_NONE,
) -> None:
"""Convenience method that takes care of initializing and starting the app,
polling updates from Telegram using :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.start_polling` and
a graceful shutdown of the app on exit.
The app will shut down when :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` or :exc:`SystemExit` is raised.
On unix, the app will also shut down on receiving the signals specified by
:paramref:`stop_signals`.
The order of execution by :meth:`run_polling` is roughly as follows:
- :meth:`initialize`
- :meth:`post_init`
- :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.start_polling`
- :meth:`start`
- Run the application until the users stops it
- :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.stop`
- :meth:`stop`
- :meth:`post_stop`
- :meth:`shutdown`
- :meth:`post_shutdown`
.. include:: inclusions/application_run_tip.rst
Args:
poll_interval (:obj:`float`, optional): Time to wait between polling updates from
Telegram in seconds. Default is ``0.0``.
timeout (:obj:`int`, optional): Passed to
:paramref:`telegram.Bot.get_updates.timeout`. Default is ``10`` seconds.
bootstrap_retries (:obj:`int`, optional): Whether the bootstrapping phase of the
:class:`telegram.ext.Updater` will retry on failures on the Telegram server.
* < 0 - retry indefinitely (default)
* 0 - no retries
* > 0 - retry up to X times
read_timeout (:obj:`float`, optional): Value to pass to
:paramref:`telegram.Bot.get_updates.read_timeout`. Defaults to ``2``.
write_timeout (:obj:`float` | :obj:`None`, optional): Value to pass to
:paramref:`telegram.Bot.get_updates.write_timeout`. Defaults to
:attr:`~telegram.request.BaseRequest.DEFAULT_NONE`.
connect_timeout (:obj:`float` | :obj:`None`, optional): Value to pass to
:paramref:`telegram.Bot.get_updates.connect_timeout`. Defaults to
:attr:`~telegram.request.BaseRequest.DEFAULT_NONE`.
pool_timeout (:obj:`float` | :obj:`None`, optional): Value to pass to
:paramref:`telegram.Bot.get_updates.pool_timeout`. Defaults to
:attr:`~telegram.request.BaseRequest.DEFAULT_NONE`.
drop_pending_updates (:obj:`bool`, optional): Whether to clean any pending updates on
Telegram servers before actually starting to poll. Default is :obj:`False`.
allowed_updates (List[:obj:`str`], optional): Passed to
:meth:`telegram.Bot.get_updates`.
close_loop (:obj:`bool`, optional): If :obj:`True`, the current event loop will be
closed upon shutdown. Defaults to :obj:`True`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`asyncio.loop.close`
stop_signals (Sequence[:obj:`int`] | :obj:`None`, optional): Signals that will shut
down the app. Pass :obj:`None` to not use stop signals.
Defaults to :data:`signal.SIGINT`, :data:`signal.SIGTERM` and
:data:`signal.SIGABRT` on non Windows platforms.
Caution:
Not every :class:`asyncio.AbstractEventLoop` implements
:meth:`asyncio.loop.add_signal_handler`. Most notably, the standard event loop
on Windows, :class:`asyncio.ProactorEventLoop`, does not implement this method.
If this method is not available, stop signals can not be set.
Raises:
:exc:`RuntimeError`: If the Application does not have an :class:`telegram.ext.Updater`.
"""
if not self.updater:
raise RuntimeError(
"Application.run_polling is only available if the application has an Updater."
)
def error_callback(exc: TelegramError) -> None:
self.create_task(self.process_error(error=exc, update=None))
return self.__run(
updater_coroutine=self.updater.start_polling(
poll_interval=poll_interval,
timeout=timeout,
bootstrap_retries=bootstrap_retries,
read_timeout=read_timeout,
write_timeout=write_timeout,
connect_timeout=connect_timeout,
pool_timeout=pool_timeout,
allowed_updates=allowed_updates,
drop_pending_updates=drop_pending_updates,
error_callback=error_callback, # if there is an error in fetching updates
),
close_loop=close_loop,
stop_signals=stop_signals,
)
def run_webhook(
self,
listen: str = "127.0.0.1",
port: int = 80,
url_path: str = "",
cert: Optional[Union[str, Path]] = None,
key: Optional[Union[str, Path]] = None,
bootstrap_retries: int = 0,
webhook_url: Optional[str] = None,
allowed_updates: Optional[List[str]] = None,
drop_pending_updates: Optional[bool] = None,
ip_address: Optional[str] = None,
max_connections: int = 40,
close_loop: bool = True,
stop_signals: ODVInput[Sequence[int]] = DEFAULT_NONE,
secret_token: Optional[str] = None,
) -> None:
"""Convenience method that takes care of initializing and starting the app,
listening for updates from Telegram using :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.start_webhook` and
a graceful shutdown of the app on exit.
The app will shut down when :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` or :exc:`SystemExit` is raised.
On unix, the app will also shut down on receiving the signals specified by
:paramref:`stop_signals`.
If :paramref:`cert`
and :paramref:`key` are not provided, the webhook will be started directly on
``http://listen:port/url_path``, so SSL can be handled by another
application. Else, the webhook will be started on
``https://listen:port/url_path``. Also calls :meth:`telegram.Bot.set_webhook` as
required.
The order of execution by :meth:`run_webhook` is roughly as follows:
- :meth:`initialize`
- :meth:`post_init`
- :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.start_webhook`
- :meth:`start`
- Run the application until the users stops it
- :meth:`telegram.ext.Updater.stop`
- :meth:`stop`
- :meth:`post_stop`
- :meth:`shutdown`
- :meth:`post_shutdown`
Important:
If you want to use this method, you must install PTB with the optional requirement
``webhooks``, i.e.
.. code-block:: bash
pip install "python-telegram-bot[webhooks]"
.. include:: inclusions/application_run_tip.rst
.. seealso::
:wiki:`Webhooks`
Args:
listen (:obj:`str`, optional): IP-Address to listen on. Defaults to
`127.0.0.1 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Localhost>`_.
port (:obj:`int`, optional): Port the bot should be listening on. Must be one of
:attr:`telegram.constants.SUPPORTED_WEBHOOK_PORTS` unless the bot is running
behind a proxy. Defaults to ``80``.
url_path (:obj:`str`, optional): Path inside url. Defaults to `` '' ``
cert (:class:`pathlib.Path` | :obj:`str`, optional): Path to the SSL certificate file.
key (:class:`pathlib.Path` | :obj:`str`, optional): Path to the SSL key file.
bootstrap_retries (:obj:`int`, optional): Whether the bootstrapping phase of the
:class:`telegram.ext.Updater` will retry on failures on the Telegram server.
* < 0 - retry indefinitely
* 0 - no retries (default)
* > 0 - retry up to X times
webhook_url (:obj:`str`, optional): Explicitly specify the webhook url. Useful behind
NAT, reverse proxy, etc. Default is derived from :paramref:`listen`,
:paramref:`port`, :paramref:`url_path`, :paramref:`cert`, and :paramref:`key`.
allowed_updates (List[:obj:`str`], optional): Passed to
:meth:`telegram.Bot.set_webhook`.
drop_pending_updates (:obj:`bool`, optional): Whether to clean any pending updates on
Telegram servers before actually starting to poll. Default is :obj:`False`.
ip_address (:obj:`str`, optional): Passed to :meth:`telegram.Bot.set_webhook`.
max_connections (:obj:`int`, optional): Passed to
:meth:`telegram.Bot.set_webhook`. Defaults to ``40``.
close_loop (:obj:`bool`, optional): If :obj:`True`, the current event loop will be
closed upon shutdown. Defaults to :obj:`True`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`asyncio.loop.close`
stop_signals (Sequence[:obj:`int`] | :obj:`None`, optional): Signals that will shut
down the app. Pass :obj:`None` to not use stop signals.
Defaults to :data:`signal.SIGINT`, :data:`signal.SIGTERM` and
:data:`signal.SIGABRT`.
Caution:
Not every :class:`asyncio.AbstractEventLoop` implements
:meth:`asyncio.loop.add_signal_handler`. Most notably, the standard event loop
on Windows, :class:`asyncio.ProactorEventLoop`, does not implement this method.
If this method is not available, stop signals can not be set.
secret_token (:obj:`str`, optional): Secret token to ensure webhook requests originate
from Telegram. See :paramref:`telegram.Bot.set_webhook.secret_token` for more
details.
When added, the web server started by this call will expect the token to be set in
the ``X-Telegram-Bot-Api-Secret-Token`` header of an incoming request and will
raise a :class:`http.HTTPStatus.FORBIDDEN <http.HTTPStatus>` error if either the
header isn't set or it is set to a wrong token.
.. versionadded:: 20.0
"""
if not self.updater:
raise RuntimeError(
"Application.run_webhook is only available if the application has an Updater."
)
return self.__run(
updater_coroutine=self.updater.start_webhook(
listen=listen,
port=port,
url_path=url_path,
cert=cert,
key=key,
bootstrap_retries=bootstrap_retries,
drop_pending_updates=drop_pending_updates,
webhook_url=webhook_url,
allowed_updates=allowed_updates,
ip_address=ip_address,
max_connections=max_connections,
secret_token=secret_token,
),
close_loop=close_loop,
stop_signals=stop_signals,
)
@staticmethod
def _raise_system_exit() -> NoReturn:
raise SystemExit
def __run(
self,
updater_coroutine: Coroutine,
stop_signals: ODVInput[Sequence[int]],
close_loop: bool = True,
) -> None:
# Calling get_event_loop() should still be okay even in py3.10+ as long as there is a
# running event loop or we are in the main thread, which are the intended use cases.
# See the docs of get_event_loop() and get_running_loop() for more info
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
if stop_signals is DEFAULT_NONE and platform.system() != "Windows":
stop_signals = (signal.SIGINT, signal.SIGTERM, signal.SIGABRT)
try:
if not isinstance(stop_signals, DefaultValue):
for sig in stop_signals or []:
loop.add_signal_handler(sig, self._raise_system_exit)
except NotImplementedError as exc:
warn(
f"Could not add signal handlers for the stop signals {stop_signals} due to "
f"exception `{exc!r}`. If your event loop does not implement `add_signal_handler`,"
f" please pass `stop_signals=None`.",
stacklevel=3,
)
try:
loop.run_until_complete(self.initialize())
if self.post_init:
loop.run_until_complete(self.post_init(self))
loop.run_until_complete(updater_coroutine) # one of updater.start_webhook/polling
loop.run_until_complete(self.start())
loop.run_forever()
except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
_LOGGER.debug("Application received stop signal. Shutting down.")
except Exception as exc:
# In case the coroutine wasn't awaited, we don't need to bother the user with a warning
updater_coroutine.close()
raise exc
finally:
# We arrive here either by catching the exceptions above or if the loop gets stopped
try:
# Mypy doesn't know that we already check if updater is None
if self.updater.running: # type: ignore[union-attr]
loop.run_until_complete(self.updater.stop()) # type: ignore[union-attr]
if self.running:
loop.run_until_complete(self.stop())
if self.post_stop:
loop.run_until_complete(self.post_stop(self))
loop.run_until_complete(self.shutdown())
if self.post_shutdown:
loop.run_until_complete(self.post_shutdown(self))
finally:
if close_loop:
loop.close()
def create_task(
self,
coroutine: _CoroType[RT],
update: Optional[object] = None,
*,
name: Optional[str] = None,
) -> "asyncio.Task[RT]":
"""Thin wrapper around :func:`asyncio.create_task` that handles exceptions raised by
the :paramref:`coroutine` with :meth:`process_error`.
Note:
* If :paramref:`coroutine` raises an exception, it will be set on the task created by
this method even though it's handled by :meth:`process_error`.
* If the application is currently running, tasks created by this method will be
awaited with :meth:`stop`.
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Concurrency`
Args:
coroutine (:term:`awaitable`): The awaitable to run as task.
.. versionchanged:: 20.2
Accepts :class:`asyncio.Future` and generator-based coroutine functions.
.. deprecated:: 20.4
Since Python 3.12, generator-based coroutine functions are no longer accepted.
update (:obj:`object`, optional): If set, will be passed to :meth:`process_error`
as additional information for the error handlers. Moreover, the corresponding
:attr:`chat_data` and :attr:`user_data` entries will be updated in the next run of
:meth:`update_persistence` after the :paramref:`coroutine` is finished.
Keyword Args:
name (:obj:`str`, optional): The name of the task.
.. versionadded:: 20.4
Returns:
:class:`asyncio.Task`: The created task.
"""
return self.__create_task(coroutine=coroutine, update=update, name=name)
def __create_task(
self,
coroutine: _CoroType[RT],
update: Optional[object] = None,
is_error_handler: bool = False,
name: Optional[str] = None,
) -> "asyncio.Task[RT]":
# Unfortunately, we can't know if `coroutine` runs one of the error handler functions
# but by passing `is_error_handler=True` from `process_error`, we can make sure that we
# get at most one recursion of the user calls `create_task` manually with an error handler
# function
task: asyncio.Task[RT] = asyncio.create_task(
self.__create_task_callback(
coroutine=coroutine, update=update, is_error_handler=is_error_handler
),
name=name,
)
if self.running:
self.__create_task_tasks.add(task)
task.add_done_callback(self.__create_task_done_callback)
else:
warn(
"Tasks created via `Application.create_task` while the application is not "
"running won't be automatically awaited!",
stacklevel=3,
)
return task
def __create_task_done_callback(self, task: asyncio.Task) -> None:
self.__create_task_tasks.discard(task) # Discard from our set since we are done with it
# We just retrieve the eventual exception so that asyncio doesn't complain in case
# it's not retrieved somewhere else
with contextlib.suppress(asyncio.CancelledError, asyncio.InvalidStateError):
task.exception()
async def __create_task_callback(
self,
coroutine: _CoroType[RT],
update: Optional[object] = None,
is_error_handler: bool = False,
) -> RT:
try:
# Generator-based coroutines are not supported in Python 3.12+
if sys.version_info < (3, 12) and isinstance(coroutine, Generator):
warn(
"Generator-based coroutines are deprecated in create_task and will not work"
" in Python 3.12+",
category=PTBDeprecationWarning,
)
return await asyncio.create_task(coroutine)
# If user uses generator in python 3.12+, Exception will happen and we cannot do
# anything about it. (hence the type ignore if mypy is run on python 3.12-)
return await coroutine # type: ignore
except Exception as exception:
if isinstance(exception, ApplicationHandlerStop):
warn(
"ApplicationHandlerStop is not supported with handlers "
"running non-blocking.",
stacklevel=1,
)
# Avoid infinite recursion of error handlers.
elif is_error_handler:
_LOGGER.exception(
"An error was raised and an uncaught error was raised while "
"handling the error with an error_handler.",
exc_info=exception,
)
else:
# If we arrive here, an exception happened in the task and was neither
# ApplicationHandlerStop nor raised by an error handler.
# So we can and must handle it
await self.process_error(update=update, error=exception, coroutine=coroutine)
# Raise exception so that it can be set on the task and retrieved by task.exception()
raise exception
finally:
self._mark_for_persistence_update(update=update)
async def _update_fetcher(self) -> None:
# Continuously fetch updates from the queue. Exit only once the signal object is found.
while True:
try:
update = await self.update_queue.get()
if update is _STOP_SIGNAL:
_LOGGER.debug("Dropping pending updates")
while not self.update_queue.empty():
self.update_queue.task_done()
# For the _STOP_SIGNAL
self.update_queue.task_done()
return
_LOGGER.debug("Processing update %s", update)
if self._update_processor.max_concurrent_updates > 1:
# We don't await the below because it has to be run concurrently
self.create_task(
self.__process_update_wrapper(update),
update=update,
name=f"Application:{self.bot.id}:process_concurrent_update",
)
else:
await self.__process_update_wrapper(update)
except asyncio.CancelledError:
# This may happen if the application is manually run via application.start() and
# then a KeyboardInterrupt is sent. We must prevent this loop to die since
# application.stop() will wait for it's clean shutdown.
_LOGGER.warning(
"Fetching updates got a asyncio.CancelledError. Ignoring as this task may only"
"be closed via `Application.stop`."
)
async def __process_update_wrapper(self, update: object) -> None:
await self._update_processor.process_update(update, self.process_update(update))
self.update_queue.task_done()
async def process_update(self, update: object) -> None:
"""Processes a single update and marks the update to be updated by the persistence later.
Exceptions raised by handler callbacks will be processed by :meth:`process_error`.
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Concurrency`
.. versionchanged:: 20.0
Persistence is now updated in an interval set by
:attr:`telegram.ext.BasePersistence.update_interval`.
Args:
update (:class:`telegram.Update` | :obj:`object` | \
:class:`telegram.error.TelegramError`): The update to process.
Raises:
:exc:`RuntimeError`: If the application was not initialized.
"""
# Processing updates before initialize() is a problem e.g. if persistence is used
self._check_initialized()
context = None
any_blocking = False # Flag which is set to True if any handler specifies block=True
for handlers in self.handlers.values():
try:
for handler in handlers:
check = handler.check_update(update) # Should the handler handle this update?
if not (check is None or check is False): # if yes,
if not context: # build a context if not already built
context = self.context_types.context.from_update(update, self)
await context.refresh_data()
coroutine: Coroutine = handler.handle_update(update, self, check, context)
if not handler.block or ( # if handler is running with block=False,
handler.block is DEFAULT_TRUE
and isinstance(self.bot, ExtBot)
and self.bot.defaults
and not self.bot.defaults.block
):
self.create_task(
coroutine,
update=update,
name=f"Application:{self.bot.id}:process_update_non_blocking"
f":{handler}",
)
else:
any_blocking = True
await coroutine
break # Only a max of 1 handler per group is handled
# Stop processing with any other handler.
except ApplicationHandlerStop:
_LOGGER.debug("Stopping further handlers due to ApplicationHandlerStop")
break
# Dispatch any error.
except Exception as exc:
if await self.process_error(update=update, error=exc):
_LOGGER.debug("Error handler stopped further handlers.")
break
if any_blocking:
# Only need to mark the update for persistence if there was at least one
# blocking handler - the non-blocking handlers mark the update again when finished
# (in __create_task_callback)
self._mark_for_persistence_update(update=update)
def add_handler(self, handler: BaseHandler[Any, CCT], group: int = DEFAULT_GROUP) -> None:
"""Register a handler.
TL;DR: Order and priority counts. 0 or 1 handlers per group will be used. End handling of
update with :class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationHandlerStop`.
A handler must be an instance of a subclass of :class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`. All
handlers
are organized in groups with a numeric value. The default group is 0. All groups will be
evaluated for handling an update, but only 0 or 1 handler per group will be used. If
:class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationHandlerStop` is raised from one of the handlers, no further
handlers (regardless of the group) will be called.
The priority/order of handlers is determined as follows:
* Priority of the group (lower group number == higher priority)
* The first handler in a group which can handle an update (see
:attr:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler.check_update`) will be used. Other handlers from the
group will not be used. The order in which handlers were added to the group defines the
priority.
Warning:
Adding persistent :class:`telegram.ext.ConversationHandler` after the application has
been initialized is discouraged. This is because the persisted conversation states need
to be loaded into memory while the application is already processing updates, which
might lead to race conditions and undesired behavior. In particular, current
conversation states may be overridden by the loaded data.
Args:
handler (:class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`): A BaseHandler instance.
group (:obj:`int`, optional): The group identifier. Default is ``0``.
"""
# Unfortunately due to circular imports this has to be here
# pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel
from telegram.ext._conversationhandler import ConversationHandler
if not isinstance(handler, BaseHandler):
raise TypeError(f"handler is not an instance of {BaseHandler.__name__}")
if not isinstance(group, int):
raise TypeError("group is not int")
if isinstance(handler, ConversationHandler) and handler.persistent and handler.name:
if not self.persistence:
raise ValueError(
f"ConversationHandler {handler.name} "
f"can not be persistent if application has no persistence"
)
if self._initialized:
self.create_task(
self._add_ch_to_persistence(handler),
name=f"Application:{self.bot.id}:add_handler:conversation_handler_after_init",
)
warn(
"A persistent `ConversationHandler` was passed to `add_handler`, "
"after `Application.initialize` was called. This is discouraged."
"See the docs of `Application.add_handler` for details.",
stacklevel=2,
)
if group not in self.handlers:
self.handlers[group] = []
self.handlers = dict(sorted(self.handlers.items())) # lower -> higher groups
self.handlers[group].append(handler)
def add_handlers(
self,
handlers: Union[
Union[List[BaseHandler[Any, CCT]], Tuple[BaseHandler[Any, CCT]]],
Dict[int, Union[List[BaseHandler[Any, CCT]], Tuple[BaseHandler[Any, CCT]]]],
],
group: Union[int, DefaultValue[int]] = _DEFAULT_0,
) -> None:
"""Registers multiple handlers at once. The order of the handlers in the passed
sequence(s) matters. See :meth:`add_handler` for details.
.. versionadded:: 20.0
Args:
handlers (List[:class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`] | \
Dict[int, List[:class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`]]): \
Specify a sequence of handlers *or* a dictionary where the keys are groups and
values are handlers.
group (:obj:`int`, optional): Specify which group the sequence of :paramref:`handlers`
should be added to. Defaults to ``0``.
Example::
app.add_handlers(handlers={
-1: [MessageHandler(...)],
1: [CallbackQueryHandler(...), CommandHandler(...)]
}
"""
if isinstance(handlers, dict) and not isinstance(group, DefaultValue):
raise ValueError("The `group` argument can only be used with a sequence of handlers.")
if isinstance(handlers, dict):
for handler_group, grp_handlers in handlers.items():
if not isinstance(grp_handlers, (list, tuple)):
raise ValueError(f"Handlers for group {handler_group} must be a list or tuple")
for handler in grp_handlers:
self.add_handler(handler, handler_group)
elif isinstance(handlers, (list, tuple)):
for handler in handlers:
self.add_handler(handler, DefaultValue.get_value(group))
else:
raise ValueError(
"The `handlers` argument must be a sequence of handlers or a "
"dictionary where the keys are groups and values are sequences of handlers."
)
def remove_handler(self, handler: BaseHandler[Any, CCT], group: int = DEFAULT_GROUP) -> None:
"""Remove a handler from the specified group.
Args:
handler (:class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`): A :class:`telegram.ext.BaseHandler`
instance.
group (:obj:`object`, optional): The group identifier. Default is ``0``.
"""
if handler in self.handlers[group]:
self.handlers[group].remove(handler)
if not self.handlers[group]:
del self.handlers[group]
def drop_chat_data(self, chat_id: int) -> None:
"""Drops the corresponding entry from the :attr:`chat_data`. Will also be deleted from
the persistence on the next run of :meth:`update_persistence`, if applicable.
Warning:
When using :attr:`concurrent_updates` or the :attr:`job_queue`,
:meth:`process_update` or :meth:`telegram.ext.Job.run` may re-create this entry due to
the asynchronous nature of these features. Please make sure that your program can
avoid or handle such situations.
.. versionadded:: 20.0
Args:
chat_id (:obj:`int`): The chat id to delete. The entry will be deleted even if it is
not empty.
"""
self._chat_data.pop(chat_id, None) # type: ignore[arg-type]
self._chat_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence.add(chat_id)
def drop_user_data(self, user_id: int) -> None:
"""Drops the corresponding entry from the :attr:`user_data`. Will also be deleted from
the persistence on the next run of :meth:`update_persistence`, if applicable.
Warning:
When using :attr:`concurrent_updates` or the :attr:`job_queue`,
:meth:`process_update` or :meth:`telegram.ext.Job.run` may re-create this entry due to
the asynchronous nature of these features. Please make sure that your program can
avoid or handle such situations.
.. versionadded:: 20.0
Args:
user_id (:obj:`int`): The user id to delete. The entry will be deleted even if it is
not empty.
"""
self._user_data.pop(user_id, None) # type: ignore[arg-type]
self._user_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence.add(user_id)
def migrate_chat_data(
self,
message: Optional["Message"] = None,
old_chat_id: Optional[int] = None,
new_chat_id: Optional[int] = None,
) -> None:
"""Moves the contents of :attr:`chat_data` at key :paramref:`old_chat_id` to the key
:paramref:`new_chat_id`. Also marks the entries to be updated accordingly in the next run
of :meth:`update_persistence`.
Warning:
* Any data stored in :attr:`chat_data` at key :paramref:`new_chat_id` will be
overridden
* The key :paramref:`old_chat_id` of :attr:`chat_data` will be deleted
* This does not update the :attr:`~telegram.ext.Job.chat_id` attribute of any scheduled
:class:`telegram.ext.Job`.
When using :attr:`concurrent_updates` or the :attr:`job_queue`,
:meth:`process_update` or :meth:`telegram.ext.Job.run` may re-create the old entry due
to the asynchronous nature of these features. Please make sure that your program can
avoid or handle such situations.
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Storing Bot, User and Chat Related Data\
<Storing-bot%2C-user-and-chat-related-data>`
Args:
message (:class:`telegram.Message`, optional): A message with either
:attr:`~telegram.Message.migrate_from_chat_id` or
:attr:`~telegram.Message.migrate_to_chat_id`.
Mutually exclusive with passing :paramref:`old_chat_id` and
:paramref:`new_chat_id`.
.. seealso::
:attr:`telegram.ext.filters.StatusUpdate.MIGRATE`
old_chat_id (:obj:`int`, optional): The old chat ID.
Mutually exclusive with passing :paramref:`message`
new_chat_id (:obj:`int`, optional): The new chat ID.
Mutually exclusive with passing :paramref:`message`
Raises:
ValueError: Raised if the input is invalid.
"""
if message and (old_chat_id or new_chat_id):
raise ValueError("Message and chat_id pair are mutually exclusive")
if not any((message, old_chat_id, new_chat_id)):
raise ValueError("chat_id pair or message must be passed")
if message:
if message.migrate_from_chat_id is None and message.migrate_to_chat_id is None:
raise ValueError(
"Invalid message instance. The message must have either "
"`Message.migrate_from_chat_id` or `Message.migrate_to_chat_id`."
)
old_chat_id = message.migrate_from_chat_id or message.chat.id
new_chat_id = message.migrate_to_chat_id or message.chat.id
elif not (isinstance(old_chat_id, int) and isinstance(new_chat_id, int)):
raise ValueError("old_chat_id and new_chat_id must be integers")
self._chat_data[new_chat_id] = self._chat_data[old_chat_id]
self.drop_chat_data(old_chat_id)
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(new_chat_id)
# old_chat_id is marked for deletion by drop_chat_data above
def _mark_for_persistence_update(
self, *, update: Optional[object] = None, job: Optional["Job"] = None
) -> None:
if isinstance(update, Update):
if update.effective_chat:
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(update.effective_chat.id)
if update.effective_user:
self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(update.effective_user.id)
if job:
if job.chat_id:
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(job.chat_id)
if job.user_id:
self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(job.user_id)
def mark_data_for_update_persistence(
self, chat_ids: Optional[SCT[int]] = None, user_ids: Optional[SCT[int]] = None
) -> None:
"""Mark entries of :attr:`chat_data` and :attr:`user_data` to be updated on the next
run of :meth:`update_persistence`.
Tip:
Use this method sparingly. If you have to use this method, it likely means that you
access and modify ``context.application.chat/user_data[some_id]`` within a callback.
Note that for data which should be available globally in all handler callbacks
independent of the chat/user, it is recommended to use :attr:`bot_data` instead.
.. versionadded:: 20.3
Args:
chat_ids (:obj:`int` | Collection[:obj:`int`], optional): Chat IDs to mark.
user_ids (:obj:`int` | Collection[:obj:`int`], optional): User IDs to mark.
"""
if chat_ids:
if isinstance(chat_ids, int):
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(chat_ids)
else:
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.update(chat_ids)
if user_ids:
if isinstance(user_ids, int):
self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.add(user_ids)
else:
self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence.update(user_ids)
async def _persistence_updater(self) -> None:
# Update the persistence in regular intervals. Exit only when the stop event has been set
while not self.__update_persistence_event.is_set():
if not self.persistence:
return
# asyncio synchronization primitives don't accept a timeout argument, it is recommended
# to use wait_for instead
try:
await asyncio.wait_for(
self.__update_persistence_event.wait(),
timeout=self.persistence.update_interval,
)
return
except asyncio.TimeoutError:
pass
# putting this *after* the wait_for so we don't immediately update on startup as
# that would make little sense
await self.update_persistence()
async def update_persistence(self) -> None:
"""Updates :attr:`user_data`, :attr:`chat_data`, :attr:`bot_data` in :attr:`persistence`
along with :attr:`~telegram.ext.ExtBot.callback_data_cache` and the conversation states of
any persistent :class:`~telegram.ext.ConversationHandler` registered for this application.
For :attr:`user_data` and :attr:`chat_data`, only those entries are updated which either
were used or have been manually marked via :meth:`mark_data_for_update_persistence` since
the last run of this method.
Tip:
This method will be called in regular intervals by the application. There is usually
no need to call it manually.
Note:
Any data is deep copied with :func:`copy.deepcopy` before handing it over to the
persistence in order to avoid race conditions, so all persisted data must be copyable.
.. seealso:: :attr:`telegram.ext.BasePersistence.update_interval`,
:meth:`mark_data_for_update_persistence`
"""
async with self.__update_persistence_lock:
await self.__update_persistence()
async def __update_persistence(self) -> None:
if not self.persistence:
return
_LOGGER.debug("Starting next run of updating the persistence.")
coroutines: Set[Coroutine] = set()
# Mypy doesn't know that persistence.set_bot (see above) already checks that
# self.bot is an instance of ExtBot if callback_data should be stored ...
if self.persistence.store_data.callback_data and (
self.bot.callback_data_cache is not None # type: ignore[attr-defined]
):
coroutines.add(
self.persistence.update_callback_data(
deepcopy(
self.bot.callback_data_cache.persistence_data # type: ignore[attr-defined]
)
)
)
if self.persistence.store_data.bot_data:
coroutines.add(self.persistence.update_bot_data(deepcopy(self.bot_data)))
if self.persistence.store_data.chat_data:
update_ids = self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence
self._chat_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence = set()
delete_ids = self._chat_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence
self._chat_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence = set()
# We don't want to update any data that has been deleted!
update_ids -= delete_ids
for chat_id in update_ids:
coroutines.add(
self.persistence.update_chat_data(chat_id, deepcopy(self.chat_data[chat_id]))
)
for chat_id in delete_ids:
coroutines.add(self.persistence.drop_chat_data(chat_id))
if self.persistence.store_data.user_data:
update_ids = self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence
self._user_ids_to_be_updated_in_persistence = set()
delete_ids = self._user_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence
self._user_ids_to_be_deleted_in_persistence = set()
# We don't want to update any data that has been deleted!
update_ids -= delete_ids
for user_id in update_ids:
coroutines.add(
self.persistence.update_user_data(user_id, deepcopy(self.user_data[user_id]))
)
for user_id in delete_ids:
coroutines.add(self.persistence.drop_user_data(user_id))
# Unfortunately due to circular imports this has to be here
# pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel
from telegram.ext._conversationhandler import PendingState
for name, (key, new_state) in itertools.chain.from_iterable(
zip(itertools.repeat(name), states_dict.pop_accessed_write_items())
for name, states_dict in self._conversation_handler_conversations.items()
):
if isinstance(new_state, PendingState):
# If the handler was running non-blocking, we check if the new state is already
# available. Otherwise, we update with the old state, which is the next best
# guess.
# Note that when updating the persistence one last time during self.stop(),
# *all* tasks will be done.
if not new_state.done():
if self.running:
_LOGGER.debug(
"A ConversationHandlers state was not yet resolved. Updating the "
"persistence with the current state. Will check again on next run of "
"Application.update_persistence."
)
else:
_LOGGER.warning(
"A ConversationHandlers state was not yet resolved. Updating the "
"persistence with the current state."
)
result = new_state.old_state
# We need to check again on the next run if the state is done
self._conversation_handler_conversations[name].mark_as_accessed(key)
else:
result = new_state.resolve()
else:
result = new_state
effective_new_state = None if result is TrackingDict.DELETED else result
coroutines.add(
self.persistence.update_conversation(
name=name, key=key, new_state=effective_new_state
)
)
results = await asyncio.gather(*coroutines, return_exceptions=True)
_LOGGER.debug("Finished updating persistence.")
# dispatch any errors
await asyncio.gather(
*(
self.process_error(error=result, update=None)
for result in results
if isinstance(result, Exception)
)
)
def add_error_handler(
self,
callback: HandlerCallback[object, CCT, None],
block: DVType[bool] = DEFAULT_TRUE,
) -> None:
"""Registers an error handler in the Application. This handler will receive every error
which happens in your bot. See the docs of :meth:`process_error` for more details on how
errors are handled.
Note:
Attempts to add the same callback multiple times will be ignored.
Examples:
:any:`Errorhandler Bot <examples.errorhandlerbot>`
.. seealso:: :wiki:`Exceptions, Warnings and Logging <Exceptions%2C-Warnings-and-Logging>`
Args:
callback (:term:`coroutine function`): The callback function for this error handler.
Will be called when an error is raised. Callback signature::
async def callback(update: Optional[object], context: CallbackContext)
The error that happened will be present in
:attr:`telegram.ext.CallbackContext.error`.
block (:obj:`bool`, optional): Determines whether the return value of the callback
should be awaited before processing the next error handler in
:meth:`process_error`. Defaults to :obj:`True`.
"""
if callback in self.error_handlers:
_LOGGER.warning("The callback is already registered as an error handler. Ignoring.")
return
self.error_handlers[callback] = block
def remove_error_handler(self, callback: HandlerCallback[object, CCT, None]) -> None:
"""Removes an error handler.
Args:
callback (:term:`coroutine function`): The error handler to remove.
"""
self.error_handlers.pop(callback, None)
async def process_error(
self,
update: Optional[object],
error: Exception,
job: Optional["Job[CCT]"] = None,
coroutine: _ErrorCoroType[RT] = None,
) -> bool:
"""Processes an error by passing it to all error handlers registered with
:meth:`add_error_handler`. If one of the error handlers raises
:class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationHandlerStop`, the error will not be handled by other error
handlers. Raising :class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationHandlerStop` also stops processing of
the update when this method is called by :meth:`process_update`, i.e. no further handlers
(even in other groups) will handle the update. All other exceptions raised by an error
handler will just be logged.
.. versionchanged:: 20.0
* ``dispatch_error`` was renamed to :meth:`process_error`.
* Exceptions raised by error handlers are now properly logged.
* :class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationHandlerStop` is no longer reraised but converted into
the return value.
Args:
update (:obj:`object` | :class:`telegram.Update`): The update that caused the error.
error (:obj:`Exception`): The error that was raised.
job (:class:`telegram.ext.Job`, optional): The job that caused the error.
.. versionadded:: 20.0
coroutine (:term:`coroutine function`, optional): The coroutine that caused the error.
Returns:
:obj:`bool`: :obj:`True`, if one of the error handlers raised
:class:`telegram.ext.ApplicationHandlerStop`. :obj:`False`, otherwise.
"""
if self.error_handlers:
for (
callback,
block,
) in self.error_handlers.items():
context = self.context_types.context.from_error(
update=update,
error=error,
application=self,
job=job,
coroutine=coroutine,
)
if not block or ( # If error handler has `block=False`, create a Task to run cb
block is DEFAULT_TRUE
and isinstance(self.bot, ExtBot)
and self.bot.defaults
and not self.bot.defaults.block
):
self.__create_task(
callback(update, context),
update=update,
is_error_handler=True,
name=f"Application:{self.bot.id}:process_error:non_blocking",
)
else:
try:
await callback(update, context)
except ApplicationHandlerStop:
return True
except Exception as exc:
_LOGGER.exception(
"An error was raised and an uncaught error was raised while "
"handling the error with an error_handler.",
exc_info=exc,
)
return False
_LOGGER.exception("No error handlers are registered, logging exception.", exc_info=error)
return False