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py3: keep stdout as defined by pycompat in procutil...
py3: keep stdout as defined by pycompat in procutil According to https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#open, it's not possible to use 1 as buffering argument value in binary mode. This is probably why line buffering does not work well in python3. On the other hand, sys.stdout.buffer appears to be line-buffered already on python3. So by not replacing it, there should be no behavior change. This fixes buffering issue in "hg email" (confirmation prompt shown before information to be confirmed).

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thread.py
162 lines | 5.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Copyright 2009 Brian Quinlan. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
"""Implements ThreadPoolExecutor."""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import atexit
from . import _base
import itertools
import Queue as queue
import threading
import weakref
import sys
try:
from multiprocessing import cpu_count
except ImportError:
# some platforms don't have multiprocessing
def cpu_count():
return None
__author__ = 'Brian Quinlan (brian@sweetapp.com)'
# Workers are created as daemon threads. This is done to allow the interpreter
# to exit when there are still idle threads in a ThreadPoolExecutor's thread
# pool (i.e. shutdown() was not called). However, allowing workers to die with
# the interpreter has two undesirable properties:
# - The workers would still be running during interpretor shutdown,
# meaning that they would fail in unpredictable ways.
# - The workers could be killed while evaluating a work item, which could
# be bad if the callable being evaluated has external side-effects e.g.
# writing to a file.
#
# To work around this problem, an exit handler is installed which tells the
# workers to exit when their work queues are empty and then waits until the
# threads finish.
_threads_queues = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
_shutdown = False
def _python_exit():
global _shutdown
_shutdown = True
items = list(_threads_queues.items()) if _threads_queues else ()
for t, q in items:
q.put(None)
for t, q in items:
t.join(sys.maxint)
atexit.register(_python_exit)
class _WorkItem(object):
def __init__(self, future, fn, args, kwargs):
self.future = future
self.fn = fn
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
def run(self):
if not self.future.set_running_or_notify_cancel():
return
try:
result = self.fn(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
except:
e, tb = sys.exc_info()[1:]
self.future.set_exception_info(e, tb)
else:
self.future.set_result(result)
def _worker(executor_reference, work_queue):
try:
while True:
work_item = work_queue.get(block=True)
if work_item is not None:
work_item.run()
# Delete references to object. See issue16284
del work_item
continue
executor = executor_reference()
# Exit if:
# - The interpreter is shutting down OR
# - The executor that owns the worker has been collected OR
# - The executor that owns the worker has been shutdown.
if _shutdown or executor is None or executor._shutdown:
# Notice other workers
work_queue.put(None)
return
del executor
except:
_base.LOGGER.critical('Exception in worker', exc_info=True)
class ThreadPoolExecutor(_base.Executor):
# Used to assign unique thread names when thread_name_prefix is not supplied.
_counter = itertools.count().next
def __init__(self, max_workers=None, thread_name_prefix=''):
"""Initializes a new ThreadPoolExecutor instance.
Args:
max_workers: The maximum number of threads that can be used to
execute the given calls.
thread_name_prefix: An optional name prefix to give our threads.
"""
if max_workers is None:
# Use this number because ThreadPoolExecutor is often
# used to overlap I/O instead of CPU work.
max_workers = (cpu_count() or 1) * 5
if max_workers <= 0:
raise ValueError("max_workers must be greater than 0")
self._max_workers = max_workers
self._work_queue = queue.Queue()
self._threads = set()
self._shutdown = False
self._shutdown_lock = threading.Lock()
self._thread_name_prefix = (thread_name_prefix or
("ThreadPoolExecutor-%d" % self._counter()))
def submit(self, fn, *args, **kwargs):
with self._shutdown_lock:
if self._shutdown:
raise RuntimeError('cannot schedule new futures after shutdown')
f = _base.Future()
w = _WorkItem(f, fn, args, kwargs)
self._work_queue.put(w)
self._adjust_thread_count()
return f
submit.__doc__ = _base.Executor.submit.__doc__
def _adjust_thread_count(self):
# When the executor gets lost, the weakref callback will wake up
# the worker threads.
def weakref_cb(_, q=self._work_queue):
q.put(None)
# TODO(bquinlan): Should avoid creating new threads if there are more
# idle threads than items in the work queue.
num_threads = len(self._threads)
if num_threads < self._max_workers:
thread_name = '%s_%d' % (self._thread_name_prefix or self,
num_threads)
t = threading.Thread(name=thread_name, target=_worker,
args=(weakref.ref(self, weakref_cb),
self._work_queue))
t.daemon = True
t.start()
self._threads.add(t)
_threads_queues[t] = self._work_queue
def shutdown(self, wait=True):
with self._shutdown_lock:
self._shutdown = True
self._work_queue.put(None)
if wait:
for t in self._threads:
t.join(sys.maxint)
shutdown.__doc__ = _base.Executor.shutdown.__doc__