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SickRage/tornado/concurrent.py

330 lines
11 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Copyright 2012 Facebook
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""Utilities for working with threads and ``Futures``.
``Futures`` are a pattern for concurrent programming introduced in
Python 3.2 in the `concurrent.futures` package (this package has also
been backported to older versions of Python and can be installed with
``pip install futures``). Tornado will use `concurrent.futures.Future` if
it is available; otherwise it will use a compatible class defined in this
module.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function, with_statement
import functools
import sys
from tornado.stack_context import ExceptionStackContext, wrap
from tornado.util import raise_exc_info, ArgReplacer
try:
from concurrent import futures
except ImportError:
futures = None
class ReturnValueIgnoredError(Exception):
pass
class Future(object):
"""Placeholder for an asynchronous result.
A ``Future`` encapsulates the result of an asynchronous
operation. In synchronous applications ``Futures`` are used
to wait for the result from a thread or process pool; in
Tornado they are normally used with `.IOLoop.add_future` or by
yielding them in a `.gen.coroutine`.
`tornado.concurrent.Future` is similar to
`concurrent.futures.Future`, but not thread-safe (and therefore
faster for use with single-threaded event loops).
In addition to ``exception`` and ``set_exception``, methods ``exc_info``
and ``set_exc_info`` are supported to capture tracebacks in Python 2.
The traceback is automatically available in Python 3, but in the
Python 2 futures backport this information is discarded.
This functionality was previously available in a separate class
``TracebackFuture``, which is now a deprecated alias for this class.
.. versionchanged:: 4.0
`tornado.concurrent.Future` is always a thread-unsafe ``Future``
with support for the ``exc_info`` methods. Previously it would
be an alias for the thread-safe `concurrent.futures.Future`
if that package was available and fall back to the thread-unsafe
implementation if it was not.
"""
def __init__(self):
self._done = False
self._result = None
self._exception = None
self._exc_info = None
self._callbacks = []
def cancel(self):
"""Cancel the operation, if possible.
Tornado ``Futures`` do not support cancellation, so this method always
returns False.
"""
return False
def cancelled(self):
"""Returns True if the operation has been cancelled.
Tornado ``Futures`` do not support cancellation, so this method
always returns False.
"""
return False
def running(self):
"""Returns True if this operation is currently running."""
return not self._done
def done(self):
"""Returns True if the future has finished running."""
return self._done
def result(self, timeout=None):
"""If the operation succeeded, return its result. If it failed,
re-raise its exception.
"""
if self._result is not None:
return self._result
if self._exc_info is not None:
raise_exc_info(self._exc_info)
elif self._exception is not None:
raise self._exception
self._check_done()
return self._result
def exception(self, timeout=None):
"""If the operation raised an exception, return the `Exception`
object. Otherwise returns None.
"""
if self._exception is not None:
return self._exception
else:
self._check_done()
return None
def add_done_callback(self, fn):
"""Attaches the given callback to the `Future`.
It will be invoked with the `Future` as its argument when the Future
has finished running and its result is available. In Tornado
consider using `.IOLoop.add_future` instead of calling
`add_done_callback` directly.
"""
if self._done:
fn(self)
else:
self._callbacks.append(fn)
def set_result(self, result):
"""Sets the result of a ``Future``.
It is undefined to call any of the ``set`` methods more than once
on the same object.
"""
self._result = result
self._set_done()
def set_exception(self, exception):
"""Sets the exception of a ``Future.``"""
self._exception = exception
self._set_done()
def exc_info(self):
"""Returns a tuple in the same format as `sys.exc_info` or None.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
"""
return self._exc_info
def set_exc_info(self, exc_info):
"""Sets the exception information of a ``Future.``
Preserves tracebacks on Python 2.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
"""
self._exc_info = exc_info
self.set_exception(exc_info[1])
def _check_done(self):
if not self._done:
raise Exception("DummyFuture does not support blocking for results")
def _set_done(self):
self._done = True
for cb in self._callbacks:
# TODO: error handling
cb(self)
self._callbacks = None
TracebackFuture = Future
if futures is None:
FUTURES = Future
else:
FUTURES = (futures.Future, Future)
def is_future(x):
return isinstance(x, FUTURES)
class DummyExecutor(object):
def submit(self, fn, *args, **kwargs):
future = TracebackFuture()
try:
future.set_result(fn(*args, **kwargs))
except Exception:
future.set_exc_info(sys.exc_info())
return future
def shutdown(self, wait=True):
pass
dummy_executor = DummyExecutor()
def run_on_executor(fn):
"""Decorator to run a synchronous method asynchronously on an executor.
The decorated method may be called with a ``callback`` keyword
argument and returns a future.
This decorator should be used only on methods of objects with attributes
``executor`` and ``io_loop``.
"""
@functools.wraps(fn)
def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
callback = kwargs.pop("callback", None)
future = self.executor.submit(fn, self, *args, **kwargs)
if callback:
self.io_loop.add_future(future,
lambda future: callback(future.result()))
return future
return wrapper
_NO_RESULT = object()
def return_future(f):
"""Decorator to make a function that returns via callback return a
`Future`.
The wrapped function should take a ``callback`` keyword argument
and invoke it with one argument when it has finished. To signal failure,
the function can simply raise an exception (which will be
captured by the `.StackContext` and passed along to the ``Future``).
From the caller's perspective, the callback argument is optional.
If one is given, it will be invoked when the function is complete
with `Future.result()` as an argument. If the function fails, the
callback will not be run and an exception will be raised into the
surrounding `.StackContext`.
If no callback is given, the caller should use the ``Future`` to
wait for the function to complete (perhaps by yielding it in a
`.gen.engine` function, or passing it to `.IOLoop.add_future`).
Usage::
@return_future
def future_func(arg1, arg2, callback):
# Do stuff (possibly asynchronous)
callback(result)
@gen.engine
def caller(callback):
yield future_func(arg1, arg2)
callback()
Note that ``@return_future`` and ``@gen.engine`` can be applied to the
same function, provided ``@return_future`` appears first. However,
consider using ``@gen.coroutine`` instead of this combination.
"""
replacer = ArgReplacer(f, 'callback')
@functools.wraps(f)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
future = TracebackFuture()
callback, args, kwargs = replacer.replace(
lambda value=_NO_RESULT: future.set_result(value),
args, kwargs)
def handle_error(typ, value, tb):
future.set_exc_info((typ, value, tb))
return True
exc_info = None
with ExceptionStackContext(handle_error):
try:
result = f(*args, **kwargs)
if result is not None:
raise ReturnValueIgnoredError(
"@return_future should not be used with functions "
"that return values")
except:
exc_info = sys.exc_info()
raise
if exc_info is not None:
# If the initial synchronous part of f() raised an exception,
# go ahead and raise it to the caller directly without waiting
# for them to inspect the Future.
raise_exc_info(exc_info)
# If the caller passed in a callback, schedule it to be called
# when the future resolves. It is important that this happens
# just before we return the future, or else we risk confusing
# stack contexts with multiple exceptions (one here with the
# immediate exception, and again when the future resolves and
# the callback triggers its exception by calling future.result()).
if callback is not None:
def run_callback(future):
result = future.result()
if result is _NO_RESULT:
callback()
else:
callback(future.result())
future.add_done_callback(wrap(run_callback))
return future
return wrapper
def chain_future(a, b):
"""Chain two futures together so that when one completes, so does the other.
The result (success or failure) of ``a`` will be copied to ``b``, unless
``b`` has already been completed or cancelled by the time ``a`` finishes.
"""
def copy(future):
assert future is a
if b.done():
return
if (isinstance(a, TracebackFuture) and isinstance(b, TracebackFuture)
and a.exc_info() is not None):
b.set_exc_info(a.exc_info())
elif a.exception() is not None:
b.set_exception(a.exception())
else:
b.set_result(a.result())
a.add_done_callback(copy)