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Kirill Smelkov
gevent
Commits
15ebc207
Commit
15ebc207
authored
Feb 05, 2018
by
Jason Madden
Browse files
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Add the module gevent.time as a drop-in replacement for time.
Cleanups for timeout.py docs.
parent
2f3d720e
Changes
11
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11 changed files
with
184 additions
and
86 deletions
+184
-86
CHANGES.rst
CHANGES.rst
+4
-0
doc/conf.py
doc/conf.py
+1
-22
doc/gevent.rst
doc/gevent.rst
+1
-0
doc/reference.rst
doc/reference.rst
+1
-0
src/gevent/_util.py
src/gevent/_util.py
+10
-9
src/gevent/monkey.py
src/gevent/monkey.py
+1
-3
src/gevent/signal.py
src/gevent/signal.py
+1
-1
src/gevent/subprocess.py
src/gevent/subprocess.py
+7
-2
src/gevent/time.py
src/gevent/time.py
+27
-0
src/gevent/timeout.py
src/gevent/timeout.py
+116
-38
src/greentest/test__all__.py
src/greentest/test__all__.py
+15
-11
No files found.
CHANGES.rst
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -39,6 +39,10 @@
``AttributeError``, now it once again raises the correct
``socket.error``. Reported in :issue:`1089` by André Cimander.
- Add the module :mod:`gevent.time` that can be imported instead of
:mod:`time`, much like :mod:`gevent.socket` can be imported instead
of :mod:`socket`.
1.3a1 (2018-01-27)
==================
...
...
doc/conf.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -40,6 +40,7 @@ extlinks = {'issue': ('https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/%s',
'pull request #'
)}
autodoc_default_flags
=
[
'members'
,
'show-inheritance'
]
autodoc_member_order
=
'bysource'
autoclass_content
=
'both'
# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory.
...
...
@@ -226,25 +227,3 @@ del gevent.Greenlet.throw
for
item
in
gevent
.
socket
.
__all__
[:]:
if
getattr
(
gevent
.
socket
,
item
)
is
getattr
(
socket
,
item
,
None
):
gevent
.
socket
.
__all__
.
remove
(
item
)
# order the methods in the class documentation the same way they are ordered in the source code
from
sphinx.ext
import
autodoc
from
sphinx.ext.autodoc
import
ClassDocumenter
class
MyClassDocumenter
(
ClassDocumenter
):
def
get_object_members
(
self
,
want_all
):
members_check_module
,
members
=
super
(
MyClassDocumenter
,
self
).
get_object_members
(
want_all
)
def
key
((
name
,
obj
)):
try
:
return
obj
.
im_func
.
func_code
.
co_firstlineno
except
AttributeError
:
return
0
members
.
sort
(
key
=
key
)
return
members_check_module
,
members
autodoc
.
ClassDocumenter
=
MyClassDocumenter
doc/gevent.rst
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -188,5 +188,6 @@ Timeouts
.. autoclass:: Timeout
:members:
:undoc-members:
:special-members: __enter__, __exit__
.. autofunction:: with_timeout
doc/reference.rst
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -21,5 +21,6 @@ API reference
gevent.thread
gevent.threading
gevent.threadpool
gevent.time
gevent.util
lowlevel
src/gevent/_util.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -29,21 +29,22 @@ def copy_globals(source,
dunder_names_to_keep
=
(
'__implements__'
,
'__all__'
,
'__imports__'
),
cleanup_globs
=
True
):
"""
Copy attributes defined in `
source.__dict__` to the dictionary in globs
(which should be the caller's globals()
).
Copy attributes defined in `
`source.__dict__`` to the dictionary
in globs (which should be the caller's :func:`globals`
).
Names that start with `
__
` are ignored (unless they are in
Names that start with `
`__`
` are ignored (unless they are in
*dunder_names_to_keep*). Anything found in *names_to_ignore* is
also ignored.
If *only_names* is given, only those attributes will be considered.
In this case, *ignore_missing_names* says whether or not to raise an AttributeError
if one of those names can't be found.
If *only_names* is given, only those attributes will be
considered. In this case, *ignore_missing_names* says whether or
not to raise an :exc:`AttributeError` if one of those names can't
be found.
If
cleanup_globs has a true value, then common things imported but not used
at runtime are removed, including this function.
If
*cleanup_globs* has a true value, then common things imported but
not used
at runtime are removed, including this function.
Returns a list of the names copied
Returns a list of the names copied
; this should be assigned to ``__imports__``.
"""
if
only_names
:
if
ignore_missing_names
:
...
...
src/gevent/monkey.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -250,9 +250,7 @@ def patch_os():
def
patch_time
():
"""Replace :func:`time.sleep` with :func:`gevent.sleep`."""
from
gevent.hub
import
sleep
import
time
patch_item
(
time
,
'sleep'
,
sleep
)
patch_module
(
'time'
)
def
_patch_existing_locks
(
threading
):
...
...
src/gevent/signal.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ _signal_getsignal = _signal.getsignal
def
getsignal
(
signalnum
):
"""
Exactly the same as :func:`signal.signal` except where
Exactly the same as :func:`signal.
get
signal` except where
:const:`signal.SIGCHLD` is concerned.
For :const:`signal.SIGCHLD`, this cooperates with :func:`signal`
...
...
src/gevent/subprocess.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -359,12 +359,17 @@ if 'TimeoutExpired' not in globals():
.. versionadded:: 1.2a1
"""
def
__init__
(
self
,
cmd
,
timeout
,
output
=
None
):
_Timeout
.
__init__
(
self
,
timeout
,
_use_timer
=
Fals
e
)
_Timeout
.
__init__
(
self
,
Non
e
)
self
.
cmd
=
cmd
self
.
timeout
=
timeout
self
.
seconds
=
timeout
self
.
output
=
output
@
property
def
timeout
(
self
):
return
self
.
seconds
def
__str__
(
self
):
return
(
"Command '%s' timed out after %s seconds"
%
(
self
.
cmd
,
self
.
timeout
))
...
...
src/gevent/time.py
0 → 100644
View file @
15ebc207
# Copyright (c) 2018 gevent. See LICENSE for details.
"""
The standard library :mod:`time` module, but :func:`sleep` is
gevent-aware.
.. versionadded:: 1.3a2
"""
from
__future__
import
absolute_import
__implements__
=
[
'sleep'
,
]
__all__
=
__implements__
import
time
as
__time__
from
gevent._util
import
copy_globals
__imports__
=
copy_globals
(
__time__
,
globals
(),
names_to_ignore
=
__implements__
)
from
gevent.hub
import
sleep
sleep
=
sleep
# pylint
src/gevent/timeout.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -17,8 +17,10 @@ from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function, division
from
gevent._compat
import
string_types
from
gevent.hub
import
getcurrent
,
_NONE
,
get_hub
__all__
=
[
'Timeout'
,
'with_timeout'
]
__all__
=
[
'Timeout'
,
'with_timeout'
,
]
class
_FakeTimer
(
object
):
...
...
@@ -26,8 +28,22 @@ class _FakeTimer(object):
# without allocating any native resources. This is useful for timeouts
# that will never expire.
# Also partially mimics the API of Timeout itself for use in _start_new_or_dummy
pending
=
False
active
=
False
# This object is used as a singleton, so it should be
# immutable.
__slots__
=
()
@
property
def
pending
(
self
):
return
False
active
=
pending
@
property
def
seconds
(
self
):
return
None
timer
=
exception
=
seconds
def
start
(
self
,
*
args
,
**
kwargs
):
# pylint:disable=unused-argument
...
...
@@ -51,23 +67,30 @@ _FakeTimer = _FakeTimer()
class
Timeout
(
BaseException
):
"""
Raise *exception* in the current greenlet after given time period::
Timeout(seconds=None, exception=None, ref=True, priority=-1)
Raise *exception* in the current greenlet after *seconds*
have elapsed::
timeout = Timeout(seconds, exception)
timeout.start()
try:
... # exception will be raised here, after *seconds* passed since start() call
finally:
timeout.c
ancel
()
timeout.c
lose
()
.. note:: If the code that the timeout was protecting finishes
executing before the timeout elapses, be sure to ``cancel`` the
timeout so it is not unexpectedly raised in the future. Even if
it is raised, it is a best practice to cancel it. This
``try/finally`` construct or a ``with`` statement is a
recommended pattern.
.. note::
When *exception* is omitted or ``None``, the :class:`Timeout` instance itself is raised:
If the code that the timeout was protecting finishes
executing before the timeout elapses, be sure to ``close`` the
timeout so it is not unexpectedly raised in the future. Even if it
is raised, it is a best practice to close it. This ``try/finally``
construct or a ``with`` statement is a recommended pattern. (If
the timeout object will be started again, use ``cancel`` instead
of ``close``; this is rare.)
When *exception* is omitted or ``None``, the ``Timeout`` instance
itself is raised::
>>> import gevent
>>> gevent.Timeout(0.1).start()
...
...
@@ -76,14 +99,41 @@ class Timeout(BaseException):
...
Timeout: 0.1 seconds
To simplify starting and canceling timeouts, the ``with`` statement can be used::
If the *seconds* argument is not given or is ``None`` (e.g.,
``Timeout()``), then the timeout will never expire and never raise
*exception*. This is convenient for creating functions which take
an optional timeout parameter of their own. (Note that this is **not**
the same thing as a *seconds* value of ``0``.)
::
def function(args, timeout=None):
"A function with an optional timeout."
timer = Timeout(timeout)
with timer:
...
.. caution::
A *seconds* value less than ``0.0`` (e.g., ``-1``) is poorly defined. In the future,
support for negative values is likely to do the same thing as a value
of ``None`` or ``0``
A *seconds* value of ``0`` requests that the event loop spin and poll for I/O;
it will immediately expire as soon as control returns to the event loop.
.. rubric:: Use As A Context Manager
To simplify starting and canceling timeouts, the ``with``
statement can be used::
with gevent.Timeout(seconds, exception) as timeout:
pass # ... code block ...
This is equivalent to the try/finally block above with one additional feature:
if *exception* is the literal ``False``, the timeout is still raised, but the context manager
suppresses it, so the code outside the with-block won't see it.
This is equivalent to the try/finally block above with one
additional feature: if *exception* is the literal ``False``, the
timeout is still raised, but the context manager suppresses it, so
the code outside the with-block won't see it.
This is handy for adding a timeout to the functions that don't
support a *timeout* parameter themselves::
...
...
@@ -96,9 +146,14 @@ class Timeout(BaseException):
else:
... # a line was read within 5 seconds
.. caution:: If ``readline()`` above catches and doesn't re-raise :class:`BaseException`
(for example, with a bare ``except:``), then your timeout will fail to function and control
won't be returned to you when you expect.
.. caution::
If ``readline()`` above catches and doesn't re-raise
:exc:`BaseException` (for example, with a bare ``except:``), then
your timeout will fail to function and control won't be returned
to you when you expect.
.. rubric:: Catching Timeouts
When catching timeouts, keep in mind that the one you catch may
not be the one you have set (a calling function may have set its
...
...
@@ -112,41 +167,49 @@ class Timeout(BaseException):
except Timeout as t:
if t is not timeout:
raise # not my timeout
finally:
timeout.close()
If the *seconds* argument is not given or is ``None`` (e.g.,
``Timeout()``), then the timeout will never expire and never raise
*exception*. This is convenient for creating functions which take
an optional timeout parameter of their own. (Note that this is not the same thing
as a *seconds* value of 0.)
.. caution::
A *seconds* value less than 0.0 (e.g., -1) is poorly defined. In the future,
support for negative values is likely to do the same thing as a value
of ``None``.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1b2
If *seconds* is not given or is ``None``, no longer allocate a libev
timer that will never be started.
If *seconds* is not given or is ``None``, no longer allocate a
native timer object that will never be started.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
Add warning about negative *seconds* values.
.. versionchanged:: 1.3a1
Timeout objects now have a :meth:`close`
method that must be called when the timeout will no longer be
used to properly clean up native resources.
The ``with`` statement does this automatically.
"""
# We inherit a __dict__ from BaseException, so __slots__ actually
# makes us larger.
def
__init__
(
self
,
seconds
=
None
,
exception
=
None
,
ref
=
True
,
priority
=-
1
,
_
use_timer
=
True
,
_
one_shot
=
False
):
_one_shot
=
False
):
BaseException
.
__init__
(
self
)
self
.
seconds
=
seconds
self
.
exception
=
exception
self
.
_one_shot
=
_one_shot
if
seconds
is
None
or
not
_use_timer
:
if
seconds
is
None
:
# Avoid going through the timer codepath if no timeout is
# desired; this avoids some CFFI interactions on PyPy that can lead to a
# RuntimeError if this implementation is used during an `import` statement. See
# https://bitbucket.org/pypy/pypy/issues/2089/crash-in-pypy-260-linux64-with-gevent-11b1
# and https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/618.
# Plus, in general, it should be more efficient
self
.
timer
=
_FakeTimer
else
:
# XXX: A zero second timer could cause libuv to block the loop.
# XXX: A timer <= 0 could cause libuv to block the loop; we catch
# that case in libuv/loop.py
self
.
timer
=
get_hub
().
loop
.
timer
(
seconds
or
0.0
,
ref
=
ref
,
priority
=
priority
)
def
start
(
self
):
...
...
@@ -207,18 +270,29 @@ class Timeout(BaseException):
@
property
def
pending
(
self
):
"""
Return
True if the timeout is scheduled to be raised."""
"""True if the timeout is scheduled to be raised."""
return
self
.
timer
.
pending
or
self
.
timer
.
active
def
cancel
(
self
):
"""If the timeout is pending, cancel it. Otherwise, do nothing."""
"""
If the timeout is pending, cancel it. Otherwise, do nothing.
The timeout object can be :meth:`started <start>` again. If
you will not start the timeout again, you should use
:meth:`close` instead.
"""
self
.
timer
.
stop
()
if
self
.
_one_shot
:
self
.
close
()
def
close
(
self
):
"""
Close the timeout and free resources. The timer cannot be started again
after this method has been used.
"""
self
.
timer
.
stop
()
self
.
timer
.
close
()
self
.
timer
=
_FakeTimer
def
__repr__
(
self
):
classname
=
type
(
self
).
__name__
...
...
@@ -251,6 +325,9 @@ class Timeout(BaseException):
return
'%s second%s: %s'
%
(
self
.
seconds
,
suffix
,
self
.
exception
)
def
__enter__
(
self
):
"""
Start and return the timer. If the timer is already started, just return it.
"""
if
not
self
.
pending
:
self
.
start
()
return
self
...
...
@@ -258,6 +335,7 @@ class Timeout(BaseException):
def
__exit__
(
self
,
typ
,
value
,
tb
):
"""
Stop the timer.
.. versionchanged:: 1.3a1
The underlying native timer is also stopped. This object cannot be
used again.
...
...
src/greentest/test__all__.py
View file @
15ebc207
...
...
@@ -19,6 +19,7 @@ MAPPING = {
'gevent.threading'
:
'threading'
,
'gevent.builtins'
:
'builtins'
if
six
.
PY3
else
'__builtin__'
,
'gevent.signal'
:
'signal'
,
'gevent.time'
:
'time'
,
}
...
...
@@ -43,13 +44,16 @@ COULD_BE_MISSING = {
'subprocess'
:
[
'_posixsubprocess'
],
}
NO_ALL
=
[
'gevent.threading'
,
NO_ALL
=
[
'gevent.threading'
,
'gevent._util'
,
'gevent._compat'
,
'gevent._socketcommon'
,
'gevent._fileobjectcommon'
,
'gevent._fileobjectposix'
,
'gevent._fileobjectcommon'
,
'gevent._fileobjectposix'
,
'gevent._tblib'
,
'gevent._corecffi'
]
'gevent._corecffi'
,
]
# A list of modules that may contain things that aren't actually, technically,
# extensions, but that need to be in __extensions__ anyway due to the way,
...
...
@@ -71,7 +75,7 @@ class Test(unittest.TestCase):
def
check_all
(
self
):
"Check that __all__ is present and does not contain invalid entries"
if
not
hasattr
(
self
.
module
,
'__all__'
):
assert
self
.
modname
in
NO_ALL
self
.
assertIn
(
self
.
modname
,
NO_ALL
)
return
names
=
{}
six
.
exec_
(
"from %s import *"
%
self
.
modname
,
names
)
...
...
@@ -89,7 +93,7 @@ class Test(unittest.TestCase):
raise
AssertionError
(
'%r has __implements__ but no stdlib counterpart'
%
self
.
modname
)
def
set_stdlib_all
(
self
):
assert
self
.
stdlib_module
is
not
None
self
.
assertIsNotNone
(
self
.
stdlib_module
)
self
.
stdlib_has_all
=
True
self
.
stdlib_all
=
getattr
(
self
.
stdlib_module
,
'__all__'
,
None
)
if
self
.
stdlib_all
is
None
:
...
...
@@ -115,7 +119,7 @@ class Test(unittest.TestCase):
item
=
getattr
(
self
.
module
,
name
)
try
:
stdlib_item
=
getattr
(
self
.
stdlib_module
,
name
)
assert
item
is
not
stdlib_item
,
(
name
,
item
,
stdlib_item
)
self
.
assertIsNot
(
item
,
stdlib_item
)
except
AttributeError
:
if
name
not
in
COULD_BE_MISSING
.
get
(
self
.
stdlib_name
,
[]):
raise
...
...
@@ -125,7 +129,7 @@ class Test(unittest.TestCase):
for
name
in
self
.
__imports__
:
item
=
getattr
(
self
.
module
,
name
)
stdlib_item
=
getattr
(
self
.
stdlib_module
,
name
)
assert
item
is
stdlib_item
,
(
name
,
item
,
stdlib_item
)
self
.
assertIs
(
item
,
stdlib_item
)
def
check_extensions_actually_extend
(
self
):
"""Check that the module actually defines new entries in __extensions__"""
...
...
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