Python 3 Custom Check Migration

Only Agent v7+ supports running Python 3 custom checks by default. Upgrade to the latest Agent version to run your Python 3 custom checks natively. Or enable the Python 3 runtime for your Agent v6.14+ if you would like to test your custom checks migration without upgrading your Agent.

Overview

This guide provides information and best practices on migrating checks between Python 2 and 3. Use Datadog’s Custom Check Compatibility tool to see whether your custom checks are compatible with Python 3 or need to be migrated.

To provide flexibility in allowing code to run multiple on versions of the Agent, this guide focuses on retaining backwards compatibility.

Editors and tools

Pylint

Pylint contains functions to help you verify that your custom checks are compatible with Python 3.

Installation

Start by installing with pip on Python 2:

$ python2 -m pip install pylint

Replace python2 in the above command if the path to your Python 2 interpreter is different.

Usage

Run the pylint command to verify that your custom check or integration runs on Python 3. Replace CHECK with a valid path to a Python module or package folder:

$ python2 -m pylint -sn --py3k CHECK

For example:

$ python2 -m pylint -sn --py3k ~/dev/my-check.py
************* Module my-check
E:  4, 4: print statement used (print-statement)
W:  7,22: Calling a dict.iter*() method (dict-iter-method)
W:  9, 8: division w/o __future__ statement (old-division)

After addressing the incompatibilities, the same command returns nothing:

$ python2 -m pylint -sn --py3k ~/dev/my-check.py
$ 

While pylint catches any issue that could prevent the Python 3 interpreter from running code at all, it cannot check for logical validity. After code changes are made, make sure to run the check and validate the output.

2to3

2to3 converts Python 2 code to Python 3 code. If you have a custom check that is named foo.py, run 2to3:

$ 2to3 foo.py

Running 2to3 prints a diff against the original source file. For more details about 2to3, see the official 2to3 documentation .

Editors

Most modern IDEs and editors provide advanced linting automatically. Make sure that they are pointed to a Python 3 executable, so that when you open a legacy Python 2 only file, any linting errors or warnings show up on the side as a colorful tick in PyCharm or as a clickable box on the bottom in Visual Studio Code.

Python migration

Package imports

To standardize Datadog package namespacing, with Python3, all resources live under the base subpackage. For example:

from datadog_checks.checks import AgentCheck

becomes

from datadog_checks.base.checks import AgentCheck

Six

Six is a Python 2/3 compatibility library intended to allow developers to ship Python code that works in both Python 2 and Python3. Some of the examples below make use of six to make legacy Python 2 code compatible with Python 3.

Dictionary methods

In Python 3, the dict.iterkeys(), dict.iteritems() and dict.itervalues() methods are not available.

Python 2Python 2 and 3
for key in mydict.iterkeys():
   ...
for key in mydict:
   ...
for key, value in mydict.iteritems():
   ...
from six import iteritems

for key, value in iteritems(mydict):
   ...
for value in mydict.itervalues():
   ...
from six import itervalues

for value in itervalues(mydict):
   ...

Also, in Python 3, the dict.keys(), dict.items(), dict.values() methods return iterators. Therefore, if the dictionary needs to be modified during iteration, make a copy first. To retrieve a dictionary’s keys/items/values as a list:

Python 2Python 2 and 3
mykeylist = mydict.keys()mykeylist = list(mydict)
myitemlist = mydict.items()myitemlist = list(mydict.items())
myvaluelist = mydict.values()myvaluelist = list(mydict.values()

The dict.has_key() method is deprecated in Python 2 and is removed in Python 3. Use the in operator instead.

Python 2Python 2 and 3
mydict.has_key('foo') //deprecatedfoo in mydict

Standard library changes

Python 3 features a reorganized standard library, where several modules and functions were renamed or moved. Importing moved modules through six.moves works on both Python versions.

Python 2Python 3Python 2 and 3
import HTMLParserimport html.parserfrom six.moves import html_parser

Consult the Six documentation for the list of renamed modules. Note: The urllib, urllib2, and urlparse modules have been heavily reorganized.

Unicode

Python 2 treats Unicode text and binary-encoded data the same, and tries to automatically convert between bytes and strings. This works as long as all characters are ASCII, but leads to unexpected behavior when it encounters non-ASCII characters.

typeliteralPython 2Python 3
bytesb’…'binarybinary
str‘…’binarytext
unicodeu’…'texttext

Text data is Unicode code points; you must encode with .encode(encoding) for storage or transmission. Binary data is encoded code points represented as a sequence of bytes that must be decoded with .decode(encoding) back to text. When reading text from a file, the open function from the io package is handy because the data read is already decoded into Unicode:

from io import open

f = open('textfile.txt', encoding='utf-8')
contents = f.read()  # contents will be decoded to unicode using 'utf-8'; these are not bytes!

Consult Ned Batchelder’s Pragmatic Unicode for further details.

Print

In Python 3, print is explicitly treated as a function; to turn print into a function regardless of the Python version, put from __future__ import print_function at the top of any file using the old print statement and add parentheses to perform the function call.

Python 2Python 2 and 3
print "foo"from __future__ import print_function

print("foo")

Integer division

In Python 2, the / operator performs floor division on integers.

Python 2

>> 5/2
2

In Python 3, the / operator performs float division. The // operator performs floor division.

Python 3

>> 5/2
2.5
>> 5//2
2

To replicate the same behavior of Python 3 regardless of the Python version, put from __future__ import division at the top of any file that uses division and use // for flooring division results.

Rounding

In Python 2 the standard library round method uses the Round Half Up Strategy while Python 3 uses the Round To Even strategy.

Python 2

>> round(2.5)
3
>> round(3.5)
4

Python 3

>> round(2.5)
2
>> round(3.5)
4

Datadog provides a utility function, round_value, in datadog_checks_base to allow the replication of the Python 2 behavior in both Python 2 and 3.

Exceptions

Python 3 features different syntax for except and raise.

Python 2Python 2 and 3
try:
   ...
except Exception, variable:
   ...
try:
   ...
except Exception as variable:
   ...
raise Exception, argsraise Exception(args)

Relative imports

In Python 3, relative imports must be made explicit, using the dot (.) syntax.

Suppose your package is structured like this:

mypackage/
	__init__.py
	math.py
	foo.py

Suppose also that math.py contains a function called gcd—which contains subtleties distinct from the standard library math module’s gcd function—and you want to use the gcd function from your local package, not the one from the standard library.

In Python 2, if you are inside a package, this package’s own modules take precedence before global modules. Using from math import gcd imports the gcd from mypackage/math.py.

In Python 3, import forms not starting with . are interpreted as absolute imports. Using from math import gcd imports the gcd from the standard library.

Python 2Python 2 and 3
from math import gcdfrom .math import gcd

Or, for extra readability:

Python 2Python 2 and 3
from math import gcdfrom mypackage.math import gcd

Iterators

Several functions in Python 2 that return lists return iterators in Python 3. These include map, filter, and zip.

The simplest fix to retain Python 2 behavior is to wrap these functions with a call to list:

Python 2Python 2 and 3
map(myfunction, myiterable)list(map(myfunction, myiterable))
filter(myfunction, myiterable)list(filter(myfunction, myiterable))
zip(myiterable1, myiterable2)list(zip(myiterable1, myiterable2))

The xrange function is removed in Python 3; instead, the range function returns an iterable range object. Import range with from six.moves import range.

Use the built-in next function instead of calling the next method. For instance, rewrite iterator.next() as next(iterator).

Further Reading

Additional helpful documentation, links, and articles:

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