Alongside FastAPI & Co.#

Many web frameworks take control over the main function, which can make it tricky to figure out where to create the Client and how to share this connection.

With FastAPI (0.93+) and Starlette you can use lifespan context managers to safely set up a global client instance. This is a minimal working example of FastAPI side by side with an aiomqtt listener task and message publication on GET /:

import asyncio
import aiomqtt
import contextlib
import fastapi


async def listen(client):
    async for message in client.messages:
        print(message.payload)


client = None


@contextlib.asynccontextmanager
async def lifespan(app):
    global client
    async with aiomqtt.Client("test.mosquitto.org") as c:
        # Make client globally available
        client = c
        # Listen for MQTT messages in (unawaited) asyncio task
        await client.subscribe("humidity/#")
        loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
        task = loop.create_task(listen(client))
        yield
        # Cancel the task
        task.cancel()
        # Wait for the task to be cancelled
        try:
            await task
        except asyncio.CancelledError:
            pass


app = fastapi.FastAPI(lifespan=lifespan)


@app.get("/")
async def publish():
    await client.publish("humidity/outside", 0.38)

Note

This is a combination of some concepts addressed in more detail in other sections: The connection is shared between the listener task and the routes, as explained in Sharing the connection. We don’t immediately await the listener task in order to avoid blocking other code, as explained in Listening without blocking.

Tip

With Starlette you can yield the initialized client to the lifespan’s state instead of using global variables.