##// END OF EJS Templates
tests: make check-py3-compat.py actually load the specified files correctly...
tests: make check-py3-compat.py actually load the specified files correctly For most uses, this change is essentially a no-op, as this script is generally only run by test-check-py3-compat.t, which will already put `$TESTDIR/..` in `$PYTHONPATH`. When running outside of tests, however, `$PYTHONPATH` is likely not set, causing check-py3-compat.py to parse the file from the repo, but then import the installed version, and raise any errors about the installed version, not the one currently in the repo. Additionally, this helps users (like me) who have a strange set up where their home directory (and thus their hg repos) happen to be in a subdirectory of sys.prefix (which is /usr on my system). Since the '.' entry added to sys.path takes precedence over the absolute path of `$TESTDIR/..` in `$PYTHONPATH`, the path to the modules that it imports (and that show up in any stack trace) are *relative*, meaning that we don't detect them as starting with `sys.prefix`. Sample non-test invocation, and the difference this change makes (the path for 'error at <path>:<line>' is correct now):: Before: ``` $ python3 contrib/check-py3-compat.py mercurial/win*.py mercurial/win32.py: error importing: <ValueError> _type_ 'v' not supported (error at check-py3-compat.py:65) mercurial/windows.py: error importing: <ModuleNotFoundError> No module named 'msvcrt' (error at check-py3-compat.py:65) ``` After: ``` $ python3 contrib/check-py3-compat.py mercurial/win*.py mercurial/win32.py: error importing: <ValueError> _type_ 'v' not supported (error at win32.py:11) mercurial/windows.py: error importing: <ModuleNotFoundError> No module named 'msvcrt' (error at windows.py:12) ``` Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8814

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_base.py
669 lines | 23.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
Gregory Szorc
thirdparty: vendor futures 3.2.0...
r37641 # Copyright 2009 Brian Quinlan. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
Gregory Szorc
futures: switch to absolute and relative imports...
r37644 from __future__ import absolute_import
Gregory Szorc
thirdparty: vendor futures 3.2.0...
r37641 import collections
import logging
import threading
import itertools
import time
import types
__author__ = 'Brian Quinlan (brian@sweetapp.com)'
FIRST_COMPLETED = 'FIRST_COMPLETED'
FIRST_EXCEPTION = 'FIRST_EXCEPTION'
ALL_COMPLETED = 'ALL_COMPLETED'
_AS_COMPLETED = '_AS_COMPLETED'
# Possible future states (for internal use by the futures package).
PENDING = 'PENDING'
RUNNING = 'RUNNING'
# The future was cancelled by the user...
CANCELLED = 'CANCELLED'
# ...and _Waiter.add_cancelled() was called by a worker.
CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED = 'CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED'
FINISHED = 'FINISHED'
_FUTURE_STATES = [
PENDING,
RUNNING,
CANCELLED,
CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED,
FINISHED
]
_STATE_TO_DESCRIPTION_MAP = {
PENDING: "pending",
RUNNING: "running",
CANCELLED: "cancelled",
CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED: "cancelled",
FINISHED: "finished"
}
# Logger for internal use by the futures package.
LOGGER = logging.getLogger("concurrent.futures")
class Error(Exception):
"""Base class for all future-related exceptions."""
pass
class CancelledError(Error):
"""The Future was cancelled."""
pass
class TimeoutError(Error):
"""The operation exceeded the given deadline."""
pass
class _Waiter(object):
"""Provides the event that wait() and as_completed() block on."""
def __init__(self):
self.event = threading.Event()
self.finished_futures = []
def add_result(self, future):
self.finished_futures.append(future)
def add_exception(self, future):
self.finished_futures.append(future)
def add_cancelled(self, future):
self.finished_futures.append(future)
class _AsCompletedWaiter(_Waiter):
"""Used by as_completed()."""
def __init__(self):
super(_AsCompletedWaiter, self).__init__()
self.lock = threading.Lock()
def add_result(self, future):
with self.lock:
super(_AsCompletedWaiter, self).add_result(future)
self.event.set()
def add_exception(self, future):
with self.lock:
super(_AsCompletedWaiter, self).add_exception(future)
self.event.set()
def add_cancelled(self, future):
with self.lock:
super(_AsCompletedWaiter, self).add_cancelled(future)
self.event.set()
class _FirstCompletedWaiter(_Waiter):
"""Used by wait(return_when=FIRST_COMPLETED)."""
def add_result(self, future):
super(_FirstCompletedWaiter, self).add_result(future)
self.event.set()
def add_exception(self, future):
super(_FirstCompletedWaiter, self).add_exception(future)
self.event.set()
def add_cancelled(self, future):
super(_FirstCompletedWaiter, self).add_cancelled(future)
self.event.set()
class _AllCompletedWaiter(_Waiter):
"""Used by wait(return_when=FIRST_EXCEPTION and ALL_COMPLETED)."""
def __init__(self, num_pending_calls, stop_on_exception):
self.num_pending_calls = num_pending_calls
self.stop_on_exception = stop_on_exception
self.lock = threading.Lock()
super(_AllCompletedWaiter, self).__init__()
def _decrement_pending_calls(self):
with self.lock:
self.num_pending_calls -= 1
if not self.num_pending_calls:
self.event.set()
def add_result(self, future):
super(_AllCompletedWaiter, self).add_result(future)
self._decrement_pending_calls()
def add_exception(self, future):
super(_AllCompletedWaiter, self).add_exception(future)
if self.stop_on_exception:
self.event.set()
else:
self._decrement_pending_calls()
def add_cancelled(self, future):
super(_AllCompletedWaiter, self).add_cancelled(future)
self._decrement_pending_calls()
class _AcquireFutures(object):
"""A context manager that does an ordered acquire of Future conditions."""
def __init__(self, futures):
self.futures = sorted(futures, key=id)
def __enter__(self):
for future in self.futures:
future._condition.acquire()
def __exit__(self, *args):
for future in self.futures:
future._condition.release()
def _create_and_install_waiters(fs, return_when):
if return_when == _AS_COMPLETED:
waiter = _AsCompletedWaiter()
elif return_when == FIRST_COMPLETED:
waiter = _FirstCompletedWaiter()
else:
pending_count = sum(
f._state not in [CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED, FINISHED] for f in fs)
if return_when == FIRST_EXCEPTION:
waiter = _AllCompletedWaiter(pending_count, stop_on_exception=True)
elif return_when == ALL_COMPLETED:
waiter = _AllCompletedWaiter(pending_count, stop_on_exception=False)
else:
raise ValueError("Invalid return condition: %r" % return_when)
for f in fs:
f._waiters.append(waiter)
return waiter
def _yield_finished_futures(fs, waiter, ref_collect):
"""
Iterate on the list *fs*, yielding finished futures one by one in
reverse order.
Before yielding a future, *waiter* is removed from its waiters
and the future is removed from each set in the collection of sets
*ref_collect*.
The aim of this function is to avoid keeping stale references after
the future is yielded and before the iterator resumes.
"""
while fs:
f = fs[-1]
for futures_set in ref_collect:
futures_set.remove(f)
with f._condition:
f._waiters.remove(waiter)
del f
# Careful not to keep a reference to the popped value
yield fs.pop()
def as_completed(fs, timeout=None):
"""An iterator over the given futures that yields each as it completes.
Args:
fs: The sequence of Futures (possibly created by different Executors) to
iterate over.
timeout: The maximum number of seconds to wait. If None, then there
is no limit on the wait time.
Returns:
An iterator that yields the given Futures as they complete (finished or
cancelled). If any given Futures are duplicated, they will be returned
once.
Raises:
TimeoutError: If the entire result iterator could not be generated
before the given timeout.
"""
if timeout is not None:
end_time = timeout + time.time()
fs = set(fs)
total_futures = len(fs)
with _AcquireFutures(fs):
finished = set(
f for f in fs
if f._state in [CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED, FINISHED])
pending = fs - finished
waiter = _create_and_install_waiters(fs, _AS_COMPLETED)
finished = list(finished)
try:
for f in _yield_finished_futures(finished, waiter,
ref_collect=(fs,)):
f = [f]
yield f.pop()
while pending:
if timeout is None:
wait_timeout = None
else:
wait_timeout = end_time - time.time()
if wait_timeout < 0:
raise TimeoutError(
'%d (of %d) futures unfinished' % (
len(pending), total_futures))
waiter.event.wait(wait_timeout)
with waiter.lock:
finished = waiter.finished_futures
waiter.finished_futures = []
waiter.event.clear()
# reverse to keep finishing order
finished.reverse()
for f in _yield_finished_futures(finished, waiter,
ref_collect=(fs, pending)):
f = [f]
yield f.pop()
finally:
# Remove waiter from unfinished futures
for f in fs:
with f._condition:
f._waiters.remove(waiter)
DoneAndNotDoneFutures = collections.namedtuple(
'DoneAndNotDoneFutures', 'done not_done')
def wait(fs, timeout=None, return_when=ALL_COMPLETED):
"""Wait for the futures in the given sequence to complete.
Args:
fs: The sequence of Futures (possibly created by different Executors) to
wait upon.
timeout: The maximum number of seconds to wait. If None, then there
is no limit on the wait time.
return_when: Indicates when this function should return. The options
are:
FIRST_COMPLETED - Return when any future finishes or is
cancelled.
FIRST_EXCEPTION - Return when any future finishes by raising an
exception. If no future raises an exception
then it is equivalent to ALL_COMPLETED.
ALL_COMPLETED - Return when all futures finish or are cancelled.
Returns:
A named 2-tuple of sets. The first set, named 'done', contains the
futures that completed (is finished or cancelled) before the wait
completed. The second set, named 'not_done', contains uncompleted
futures.
"""
with _AcquireFutures(fs):
done = set(f for f in fs
if f._state in [CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED, FINISHED])
not_done = set(fs) - done
if (return_when == FIRST_COMPLETED) and done:
return DoneAndNotDoneFutures(done, not_done)
elif (return_when == FIRST_EXCEPTION) and done:
if any(f for f in done
if not f.cancelled() and f.exception() is not None):
return DoneAndNotDoneFutures(done, not_done)
if len(done) == len(fs):
return DoneAndNotDoneFutures(done, not_done)
waiter = _create_and_install_waiters(fs, return_when)
waiter.event.wait(timeout)
for f in fs:
with f._condition:
f._waiters.remove(waiter)
done.update(waiter.finished_futures)
return DoneAndNotDoneFutures(done, set(fs) - done)
class Future(object):
"""Represents the result of an asynchronous computation."""
def __init__(self):
"""Initializes the future. Should not be called by clients."""
self._condition = threading.Condition()
self._state = PENDING
self._result = None
self._exception = None
self._traceback = None
self._waiters = []
self._done_callbacks = []
def _invoke_callbacks(self):
for callback in self._done_callbacks:
try:
callback(self)
except Exception:
LOGGER.exception('exception calling callback for %r', self)
except BaseException:
# Explicitly let all other new-style exceptions through so
# that we can catch all old-style exceptions with a simple
# "except:" clause below.
#
# All old-style exception objects are instances of
# types.InstanceType, but "except types.InstanceType:" does
# not catch old-style exceptions for some reason. Thus, the
# only way to catch all old-style exceptions without catching
# any new-style exceptions is to filter out the new-style
# exceptions, which all derive from BaseException.
raise
except:
# Because of the BaseException clause above, this handler only
# executes for old-style exception objects.
LOGGER.exception('exception calling callback for %r', self)
def __repr__(self):
with self._condition:
if self._state == FINISHED:
if self._exception:
return '<%s at %#x state=%s raised %s>' % (
self.__class__.__name__,
id(self),
_STATE_TO_DESCRIPTION_MAP[self._state],
self._exception.__class__.__name__)
else:
return '<%s at %#x state=%s returned %s>' % (
self.__class__.__name__,
id(self),
_STATE_TO_DESCRIPTION_MAP[self._state],
self._result.__class__.__name__)
return '<%s at %#x state=%s>' % (
self.__class__.__name__,
id(self),
_STATE_TO_DESCRIPTION_MAP[self._state])
def cancel(self):
"""Cancel the future if possible.
Returns True if the future was cancelled, False otherwise. A future
cannot be cancelled if it is running or has already completed.
"""
with self._condition:
if self._state in [RUNNING, FINISHED]:
return False
if self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED]:
return True
self._state = CANCELLED
self._condition.notify_all()
self._invoke_callbacks()
return True
def cancelled(self):
"""Return True if the future was cancelled."""
with self._condition:
return self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED]
def running(self):
"""Return True if the future is currently executing."""
with self._condition:
return self._state == RUNNING
def done(self):
"""Return True of the future was cancelled or finished executing."""
with self._condition:
return self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED, FINISHED]
def __get_result(self):
if self._exception:
if isinstance(self._exception, types.InstanceType):
# The exception is an instance of an old-style class, which
# means type(self._exception) returns types.ClassType instead
# of the exception's actual class type.
exception_type = self._exception.__class__
else:
exception_type = type(self._exception)
raise exception_type, self._exception, self._traceback
else:
return self._result
def add_done_callback(self, fn):
"""Attaches a callable that will be called when the future finishes.
Args:
fn: A callable that will be called with this future as its only
argument when the future completes or is cancelled. The callable
will always be called by a thread in the same process in which
it was added. If the future has already completed or been
cancelled then the callable will be called immediately. These
callables are called in the order that they were added.
"""
with self._condition:
if self._state not in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED, FINISHED]:
self._done_callbacks.append(fn)
return
fn(self)
def result(self, timeout=None):
"""Return the result of the call that the future represents.
Args:
timeout: The number of seconds to wait for the result if the future
isn't done. If None, then there is no limit on the wait time.
Returns:
The result of the call that the future represents.
Raises:
CancelledError: If the future was cancelled.
TimeoutError: If the future didn't finish executing before the given
timeout.
Exception: If the call raised then that exception will be raised.
"""
with self._condition:
if self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED]:
raise CancelledError()
elif self._state == FINISHED:
return self.__get_result()
self._condition.wait(timeout)
if self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED]:
raise CancelledError()
elif self._state == FINISHED:
return self.__get_result()
else:
raise TimeoutError()
def exception_info(self, timeout=None):
"""Return a tuple of (exception, traceback) raised by the call that the
future represents.
Args:
timeout: The number of seconds to wait for the exception if the
future isn't done. If None, then there is no limit on the wait
time.
Returns:
The exception raised by the call that the future represents or None
if the call completed without raising.
Raises:
CancelledError: If the future was cancelled.
TimeoutError: If the future didn't finish executing before the given
timeout.
"""
with self._condition:
if self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED]:
raise CancelledError()
elif self._state == FINISHED:
return self._exception, self._traceback
self._condition.wait(timeout)
if self._state in [CANCELLED, CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED]:
raise CancelledError()
elif self._state == FINISHED:
return self._exception, self._traceback
else:
raise TimeoutError()
def exception(self, timeout=None):
"""Return the exception raised by the call that the future represents.
Args:
timeout: The number of seconds to wait for the exception if the
future isn't done. If None, then there is no limit on the wait
time.
Returns:
The exception raised by the call that the future represents or None
if the call completed without raising.
Raises:
CancelledError: If the future was cancelled.
TimeoutError: If the future didn't finish executing before the given
timeout.
"""
return self.exception_info(timeout)[0]
# The following methods should only be used by Executors and in tests.
def set_running_or_notify_cancel(self):
"""Mark the future as running or process any cancel notifications.
Should only be used by Executor implementations and unit tests.
If the future has been cancelled (cancel() was called and returned
True) then any threads waiting on the future completing (though calls
to as_completed() or wait()) are notified and False is returned.
If the future was not cancelled then it is put in the running state
(future calls to running() will return True) and True is returned.
This method should be called by Executor implementations before
executing the work associated with this future. If this method returns
False then the work should not be executed.
Returns:
False if the Future was cancelled, True otherwise.
Raises:
RuntimeError: if this method was already called or if set_result()
or set_exception() was called.
"""
with self._condition:
if self._state == CANCELLED:
self._state = CANCELLED_AND_NOTIFIED
for waiter in self._waiters:
waiter.add_cancelled(self)
# self._condition.notify_all() is not necessary because
# self.cancel() triggers a notification.
return False
elif self._state == PENDING:
self._state = RUNNING
return True
else:
LOGGER.critical('Future %s in unexpected state: %s',
id(self),
self._state)
raise RuntimeError('Future in unexpected state')
def set_result(self, result):
"""Sets the return value of work associated with the future.
Should only be used by Executor implementations and unit tests.
"""
with self._condition:
self._result = result
self._state = FINISHED
for waiter in self._waiters:
waiter.add_result(self)
self._condition.notify_all()
self._invoke_callbacks()
def set_exception_info(self, exception, traceback):
"""Sets the result of the future as being the given exception
and traceback.
Should only be used by Executor implementations and unit tests.
"""
with self._condition:
self._exception = exception
self._traceback = traceback
self._state = FINISHED
for waiter in self._waiters:
waiter.add_exception(self)
self._condition.notify_all()
self._invoke_callbacks()
def set_exception(self, exception):
"""Sets the result of the future as being the given exception.
Should only be used by Executor implementations and unit tests.
"""
self.set_exception_info(exception, None)
class Executor(object):
"""This is an abstract base class for concrete asynchronous executors."""
def submit(self, fn, *args, **kwargs):
"""Submits a callable to be executed with the given arguments.
Schedules the callable to be executed as fn(*args, **kwargs) and returns
a Future instance representing the execution of the callable.
Returns:
A Future representing the given call.
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
def map(self, fn, *iterables, **kwargs):
"""Returns an iterator equivalent to map(fn, iter).
Args:
fn: A callable that will take as many arguments as there are
passed iterables.
timeout: The maximum number of seconds to wait. If None, then there
is no limit on the wait time.
Returns:
An iterator equivalent to: map(func, *iterables) but the calls may
be evaluated out-of-order.
Raises:
TimeoutError: If the entire result iterator could not be generated
before the given timeout.
Exception: If fn(*args) raises for any values.
"""
timeout = kwargs.get('timeout')
if timeout is not None:
end_time = timeout + time.time()
fs = [self.submit(fn, *args) for args in itertools.izip(*iterables)]
# Yield must be hidden in closure so that the futures are submitted
# before the first iterator value is required.
def result_iterator():
try:
# reverse to keep finishing order
fs.reverse()
while fs:
# Careful not to keep a reference to the popped future
if timeout is None:
yield fs.pop().result()
else:
yield fs.pop().result(end_time - time.time())
finally:
for future in fs:
future.cancel()
return result_iterator()
def shutdown(self, wait=True):
"""Clean-up the resources associated with the Executor.
It is safe to call this method several times. Otherwise, no other
methods can be called after this one.
Args:
wait: If True then shutdown will not return until all running
futures have finished executing and the resources used by the
executor have been reclaimed.
"""
pass
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
self.shutdown(wait=True)
return False