- 3.0.0-rc1 (latest)
- 2.19.0
- 2.17.0
- 2.16.0
- 2.15.0
- 2.14.0
- 2.13.0
- 2.12.0
- 2.11.0
- 2.10.0
- 2.9.0
- 2.8.0
- 2.7.0
- 2.6.0
- 2.5.0
- 2.4.0
- 2.3.0
- 2.2.1
- 2.1.0
- 2.0.0
- 1.44.0
- 1.43.0
- 1.42.3
- 1.41.1
- 1.40.0
- 1.39.0
- 1.38.0
- 1.37.1
- 1.36.2
- 1.35.1
- 1.34.0
- 1.33.0
- 1.32.0
- 1.31.2
- 1.30.0
- 1.29.0
- 1.28.1
- 1.27.0
- 1.26.0
- 1.25.0
- 1.24.1
- 1.23.0
- 1.22.0
- 1.21.0
- 1.20.0
- 1.19.0
- 1.18.0
- 1.17.0
Configuring Timeouts and Retries
When using object methods which invoke Google Cloud Storage API methods, you have several options for how the library handles timeouts and how it retries transient errors.
Configuring Timeouts
For a number of reasons, methods which invoke API methods may take longer than expected or desired. By default, such methods are applied a default timeout of 60.0 seconds.
The python-storage client uses the timeout mechanics of the underlying
requests
HTTP library. The connect timeout is the number of seconds
to establish a connection to the server. The read timeout is the number
of seconds the client will wait for the server to send a response.
In most cases, this is the maximum wait time before the server sends
the first byte. Please refer to the requests documentation for details.
You may also choose to configure explicit timeouts in your code, using one of three forms:
- You can specify a single value for the timeout. The timeout value will be applied to both the connect and the read timeouts. E.g.:
bucket = client.get_bucket(BUCKET_NAME, timeout=300.0) # five minutes
- You can also pass a two-tuple,
(connect_timeout, read_timeout)
, if you would like to set the values separately. E.g.:
bucket = client.get_bucket(BUCKET_NAME, timeout=(3, 10))
- You can also pass
None
as the timeout value: in this case, the library will block indefinitely for a response. E.g.:
bucket = client.get_bucket(BUCKET_NAME, timeout=None)
NOTE: Depending on the retry strategy, a request may be repeated several times using the same timeout each time.
See also:
Configuring Retries
NOTE: For more background on retries, see also the GCS Retry Strategies Document
Methods which invoke API methods may fail for a number of reasons, some of which represent “transient” conditions, and thus can be retried automatically. The library tries to provide a sensible default retry policy for each method, base on its semantics:
For API requests which are always idempotent, the library uses its
DEFAULT_RETRY
policy, which retries any API request which returns a “transient” error.For API requests which are idempotent only if the blob has the same “generation”, the library uses its
DEFAULT_RETRY_IF_GENERATION_SPECIFIED
policy, which retries API requests which returns a “transient” error, but only if the original request includes ageneration
orifGenerationMatch
header.For API requests which are idempotent only if the bucket or blob has the same “metageneration”, the library uses its
DEFAULT_RETRY_IF_METAGENERATION_SPECIFIED
policy, which retries API requests which returns a “transient” error, but only if the original request includes anifMetagenerationMatch
header.For API requests which are idempotent only if the bucket or blob has the same “etag”, the library uses its
DEFAULT_RETRY_IF_ETAG_IN_JSON
policy, which retries API requests which returns a “transient” error, but only if the original request includes anETAG
in its payload.For those API requests which are never idempotent, the library passes
retry=None
by default, suppressing any retries.
Rather than using one of the default policies, you may choose to configure an explicit policy in your code.
- You can pass
None
as a retry policy to disable retries. E.g.:
bucket = client.get_bucket(BUCKET_NAME, retry=None)
- You can modify the default retry behavior and create a copy of
DEFAULT_RETRY
by calling it with awith_XXX
method. E.g.:
from google.cloud.storage.retry import DEFAULT_RETRY
# Customize retry with a deadline of 500 seconds (default=120 seconds).
modified_retry = DEFAULT_RETRY.with_deadline(500.0)
# Customize retry with an initial wait time of 1.5 (default=1.0).
# Customize retry with a wait time multiplier per iteration of 1.2 (default=2.0).
# Customize retry with a maximum wait time of 45.0 (default=60.0).
modified_retry = modified_retry.with_delay(initial=1.5, multiplier=1.2, maximum=45.0)
- You can pass an instance of
google.api_core.retry.Retry
to enable retries; the passed object will define retriable response codes and errors, as well as configuring backoff and retry interval options. E.g.:
from google.api_core import exceptions
from google.api_core.retry import Retry
_MY_RETRIABLE_TYPES = [
exceptions.TooManyRequests, # 429
exceptions.InternalServerError, # 500
exceptions.BadGateway, # 502
exceptions.ServiceUnavailable, # 503
]
def is_retryable(exc):
return isinstance(exc, _MY_RETRIABLE_TYPES)
my_retry_policy = Retry(predicate=is_retryable)
bucket = client.get_bucket(BUCKET_NAME, retry=my_retry_policy)
- You can pass an instance of
google.cloud.storage.retry.ConditionalRetryPolicy
, which wraps aRetryPolicy
, activating it only if certain conditions are met. This class exists to provide safe defaults for RPC calls that are not technically safe to retry normally (due to potential data duplication or other side-effects) but become safe to retry if a condition such as if_metageneration_match is set. E.g.:
from google.api_core.retry import Retry
from google.cloud.storage.retry import ConditionalRetryPolicy
from google.cloud.storage.retry import is_etag_in_data
def is_retryable(exc):
... # as above
my_retry_policy = Retry(predicate=is_retryable)
my_cond_policy = ConditionalRetryPolicy(
my_retry_policy, conditional_predicate=is_etag_in_data, ["query_params"])
bucket = client.get_bucket(BUCKET_NAME, retry=my_cond_policy)