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Shut down kernels in parallel...
Shut down kernels in parallel When stopping the notebook server, it currently sends a shutdown request to each kernel and then waits for the process to finish. This can be slow if you have several kernels running. This makes it issues all the shutdown requests before waiting on the processes, so shutdown happens in parallel. KernelManager (and MultiKernelManager) gain three new public API methods to allow this: * request_shutdown (promoted from a private method) * wait_shutdown (refactored out of shutdown_kernel) * cleanup (refactored out of shutdown_kernel)

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test_backgroundjobs.py
89 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ IPython / lib / tests / test_backgroundjobs.py
"""Tests for pylab tools module.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2011, the IPython Development Team.
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
from __future__ import print_function
# Stdlib imports
import time
# Third-party imports
import nose.tools as nt
# Our own imports
from IPython.lib import backgroundjobs as bg
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals and constants
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
t_short = 0.0001 # very short interval to wait on jobs
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Local utilities
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def sleeper(interval=t_short, *a, **kw):
args = dict(interval=interval,
other_args=a,
kw_args=kw)
time.sleep(interval)
return args
def crasher(interval=t_short, *a, **kw):
time.sleep(interval)
raise Exception("Dead job with interval %s" % interval)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes and functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def test_result():
"""Test job submission and result retrieval"""
jobs = bg.BackgroundJobManager()
j = jobs.new(sleeper)
j.join()
nt.assert_equal(j.result['interval'], t_short)
def test_flush():
"""Test job control"""
jobs = bg.BackgroundJobManager()
j = jobs.new(sleeper)
j.join()
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.completed), 1)
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.dead), 0)
jobs.flush()
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.completed), 0)
def test_dead():
"""Test control of dead jobs"""
jobs = bg.BackgroundJobManager()
j = jobs.new(crasher)
j.join()
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.completed), 0)
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.dead), 1)
jobs.flush()
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.dead), 0)
def test_longer():
"""Test control of longer-running jobs"""
jobs = bg.BackgroundJobManager()
# Sleep for long enough for the following two checks to still report the
# job as running, but not so long that it makes the test suite noticeably
# slower.
j = jobs.new(sleeper, 0.1)
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.running), 1)
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.completed), 0)
j.join()
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.running), 0)
nt.assert_equal(len(jobs.completed), 1)