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tests: stabilize test-eol-update on Windows...
tests: stabilize test-eol-update on Windows These appeared in the recent eol fix series. I'm not sure about the identity mismatch warning- it seems like a general timing issue, because it happened on the first run but not when run with `--loop`. The buildbot also flagged this. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7112

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ref_sharing.rs
464 lines | 14.5 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// ref_sharing.rs
//
// Copyright 2019 Raphaël Gomès <rgomes@octobus.net>
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
// deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
// rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
// sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
// FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
// IN THE SOFTWARE.
//! Macros for use in the `hg-cpython` bridge library.
use crate::exceptions::AlreadyBorrowed;
use cpython::{PyClone, PyObject, PyResult, Python};
use std::cell::{Cell, Ref, RefCell, RefMut};
/// Manages the shared state between Python and Rust
#[derive(Debug, Default)]
pub struct PySharedState {
leak_count: Cell<usize>,
mutably_borrowed: Cell<bool>,
}
// &PySharedState can be Send because any access to inner cells is
// synchronized by the GIL.
unsafe impl Sync for PySharedState {}
impl PySharedState {
pub fn borrow_mut<'a, T>(
&'a self,
py: Python<'a>,
pyrefmut: RefMut<'a, T>,
) -> PyResult<PyRefMut<'a, T>> {
if self.mutably_borrowed.get() {
return Err(AlreadyBorrowed::new(
py,
"Cannot borrow mutably while there exists another \
mutable reference in a Python object",
));
}
match self.leak_count.get() {
0 => {
self.mutably_borrowed.replace(true);
Ok(PyRefMut::new(py, pyrefmut, self))
}
// TODO
// For now, this works differently than Python references
// in the case of iterators.
// Python does not complain when the data an iterator
// points to is modified if the iterator is never used
// afterwards.
// Here, we are stricter than this by refusing to give a
// mutable reference if it is already borrowed.
// While the additional safety might be argued for, it
// breaks valid programming patterns in Python and we need
// to fix this issue down the line.
_ => Err(AlreadyBorrowed::new(
py,
"Cannot borrow mutably while there are \
immutable references in Python objects",
)),
}
}
/// Return a reference to the wrapped data and its state with an
/// artificial static lifetime.
/// We need to be protected by the GIL for thread-safety.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// This is highly unsafe since the lifetime of the given data can be
/// extended. Do not call this function directly.
pub unsafe fn leak_immutable<T>(
&self,
py: Python,
data: &PySharedRefCell<T>,
) -> PyResult<(&'static T, &'static PySharedState)> {
if self.mutably_borrowed.get() {
return Err(AlreadyBorrowed::new(
py,
"Cannot borrow immutably while there is a \
mutable reference in Python objects",
));
}
// TODO: it's weird that self is data.py_shared_state. Maybe we
// can move stuff to PySharedRefCell?
let ptr = data.as_ptr();
let state_ptr: *const PySharedState = &data.py_shared_state;
self.leak_count.replace(self.leak_count.get() + 1);
Ok((&*ptr, &*state_ptr))
}
/// # Safety
///
/// It's unsafe to update the reference count without knowing the
/// reference is deleted. Do not call this function directly.
pub unsafe fn decrease_leak_count(&self, _py: Python, mutable: bool) {
if mutable {
assert_eq!(self.leak_count.get(), 0);
assert!(self.mutably_borrowed.get());
self.mutably_borrowed.replace(false);
} else {
let count = self.leak_count.get();
assert!(count > 0);
self.leak_count.replace(count - 1);
}
}
}
/// `RefCell` wrapper to be safely used in conjunction with `PySharedState`.
///
/// Only immutable operation is allowed through this interface.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct PySharedRefCell<T> {
inner: RefCell<T>,
py_shared_state: PySharedState,
}
impl<T> PySharedRefCell<T> {
pub fn new(value: T) -> PySharedRefCell<T> {
Self {
inner: RefCell::new(value),
py_shared_state: PySharedState::default(),
}
}
pub fn borrow(&self) -> Ref<T> {
// py_shared_state isn't involved since
// - inner.borrow() would fail if self is mutably borrowed,
// - and inner.borrow_mut() would fail while self is borrowed.
self.inner.borrow()
}
pub fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut T {
self.inner.as_ptr()
}
// TODO: maybe this should be named as try_borrow_mut(), and use
// inner.try_borrow_mut(). The current implementation panics if
// self.inner has been borrowed, but returns error if py_shared_state
// refuses to borrow.
pub fn borrow_mut<'a>(
&'a self,
py: Python<'a>,
) -> PyResult<PyRefMut<'a, T>> {
self.py_shared_state.borrow_mut(py, self.inner.borrow_mut())
}
}
/// Sharable data member of type `T` borrowed from the `PyObject`.
pub struct PySharedRef<'a, T> {
py: Python<'a>,
owner: &'a PyObject,
data: &'a PySharedRefCell<T>,
}
impl<'a, T> PySharedRef<'a, T> {
/// # Safety
///
/// The `data` must be owned by the `owner`. Otherwise, the leak count
/// would get wrong.
pub unsafe fn new(
py: Python<'a>,
owner: &'a PyObject,
data: &'a PySharedRefCell<T>,
) -> Self {
Self { py, owner, data }
}
pub fn borrow(&self) -> Ref<T> {
self.data.borrow()
}
pub fn borrow_mut(&self) -> PyResult<PyRefMut<'a, T>> {
self.data.borrow_mut(self.py)
}
/// Returns a leaked reference and its management object.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// It's up to you to make sure that the management object lives
/// longer than the leaked reference. Otherwise, you'll get a
/// dangling reference.
pub unsafe fn leak_immutable(
&self,
) -> PyResult<(PyLeakedRef, &'static T)> {
let (static_ref, static_state_ref) = self
.data
.py_shared_state
.leak_immutable(self.py, self.data)?;
let leak_handle =
PyLeakedRef::new(self.py, self.owner, static_state_ref);
Ok((leak_handle, static_ref))
}
}
/// Holds a mutable reference to data shared between Python and Rust.
pub struct PyRefMut<'a, T> {
inner: RefMut<'a, T>,
py_shared_state: &'a PySharedState,
}
impl<'a, T> PyRefMut<'a, T> {
// Must be constructed by PySharedState after checking its leak_count.
// Otherwise, drop() would incorrectly update the state.
fn new(
_py: Python<'a>,
inner: RefMut<'a, T>,
py_shared_state: &'a PySharedState,
) -> Self {
Self {
inner,
py_shared_state,
}
}
}
impl<'a, T> std::ops::Deref for PyRefMut<'a, T> {
type Target = RefMut<'a, T>;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
&self.inner
}
}
impl<'a, T> std::ops::DerefMut for PyRefMut<'a, T> {
fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target {
&mut self.inner
}
}
impl<'a, T> Drop for PyRefMut<'a, T> {
fn drop(&mut self) {
let gil = Python::acquire_gil();
let py = gil.python();
unsafe {
self.py_shared_state.decrease_leak_count(py, true);
}
}
}
/// Allows a `py_class!` generated struct to share references to one of its
/// data members with Python.
///
/// # Warning
///
/// TODO allow Python container types: for now, integration with the garbage
/// collector does not extend to Rust structs holding references to Python
/// objects. Should the need surface, `__traverse__` and `__clear__` will
/// need to be written as per the `rust-cpython` docs on GC integration.
///
/// # Parameters
///
/// * `$name` is the same identifier used in for `py_class!` macro call.
/// * `$inner_struct` is the identifier of the underlying Rust struct
/// * `$data_member` is the identifier of the data member of `$inner_struct`
/// that will be shared.
/// * `$shared_accessor` is the function name to be generated, which allows
/// safe access to the data member.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// `$data_member` must persist while the `$name` object is alive. In other
/// words, it must be an accessor to a data field of the Python object.
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```
/// struct MyStruct {
/// inner: Vec<u32>;
/// }
///
/// py_class!(pub class MyType |py| {
/// data inner: PySharedRefCell<MyStruct>;
/// });
///
/// py_shared_ref!(MyType, MyStruct, inner, inner_shared);
/// ```
macro_rules! py_shared_ref {
(
$name: ident,
$inner_struct: ident,
$data_member: ident,
$shared_accessor: ident
) => {
impl $name {
/// Returns a safe reference to the shared `$data_member`.
///
/// This function guarantees that `PySharedRef` is created with
/// the valid `self` and `self.$data_member(py)` pair.
fn $shared_accessor<'a>(
&'a self,
py: Python<'a>,
) -> $crate::ref_sharing::PySharedRef<'a, $inner_struct> {
use cpython::PythonObject;
use $crate::ref_sharing::PySharedRef;
let owner = self.as_object();
let data = self.$data_member(py);
unsafe { PySharedRef::new(py, owner, data) }
}
}
};
}
/// Manage immutable references to `PyObject` leaked into Python iterators.
///
/// In truth, this does not represent leaked references themselves;
/// it is instead useful alongside them to manage them.
pub struct PyLeakedRef {
_inner: PyObject,
py_shared_state: &'static PySharedState,
}
impl PyLeakedRef {
/// # Safety
///
/// The `py_shared_state` must be owned by the `inner` Python object.
// Marked as unsafe so client code wouldn't construct PyLeakedRef
// struct by mistake. Its drop() is unsafe.
pub unsafe fn new(
py: Python,
inner: &PyObject,
py_shared_state: &'static PySharedState,
) -> Self {
Self {
_inner: inner.clone_ref(py),
py_shared_state,
}
}
}
impl Drop for PyLeakedRef {
fn drop(&mut self) {
// py_shared_state should be alive since we do have
// a Python reference to the owner object. Taking GIL makes
// sure that the state is only accessed by this thread.
let gil = Python::acquire_gil();
let py = gil.python();
unsafe {
self.py_shared_state.decrease_leak_count(py, false);
}
}
}
/// Defines a `py_class!` that acts as a Python iterator over a Rust iterator.
///
/// TODO: this is a bit awkward to use, and a better (more complicated)
/// procedural macro would simplify the interface a lot.
///
/// # Parameters
///
/// * `$name` is the identifier to give to the resulting Rust struct.
/// * `$leaked` corresponds to `$leaked` in the matching `py_shared_ref!` call.
/// * `$iterator_type` is the type of the Rust iterator.
/// * `$success_func` is a function for processing the Rust `(key, value)`
/// tuple on iteration success, turning it into something Python understands.
/// * `$success_func` is the return type of `$success_func`
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```
/// struct MyStruct {
/// inner: HashMap<Vec<u8>, Vec<u8>>;
/// }
///
/// py_class!(pub class MyType |py| {
/// data inner: PySharedRefCell<MyStruct>;
///
/// def __iter__(&self) -> PyResult<MyTypeItemsIterator> {
/// let (leak_handle, leaked_ref) =
/// unsafe { self.inner_shared(py).leak_immutable()? };
/// MyTypeItemsIterator::from_inner(
/// py,
/// leak_handle,
/// leaked_ref.iter(),
/// )
/// }
/// });
///
/// impl MyType {
/// fn translate_key_value(
/// py: Python,
/// res: (&Vec<u8>, &Vec<u8>),
/// ) -> PyResult<Option<(PyBytes, PyBytes)>> {
/// let (f, entry) = res;
/// Ok(Some((
/// PyBytes::new(py, f),
/// PyBytes::new(py, entry),
/// )))
/// }
/// }
///
/// py_shared_ref!(MyType, MyStruct, inner, MyTypeLeakedRef);
///
/// py_shared_iterator!(
/// MyTypeItemsIterator,
/// PyLeakedRef,
/// HashMap<'static, Vec<u8>, Vec<u8>>,
/// MyType::translate_key_value,
/// Option<(PyBytes, PyBytes)>
/// );
/// ```
macro_rules! py_shared_iterator {
(
$name: ident,
$leaked: ty,
$iterator_type: ty,
$success_func: expr,
$success_type: ty
) => {
py_class!(pub class $name |py| {
data inner: RefCell<Option<$leaked>>;
data it: RefCell<$iterator_type>;
def __next__(&self) -> PyResult<$success_type> {
let mut inner_opt = self.inner(py).borrow_mut();
if inner_opt.is_some() {
match self.it(py).borrow_mut().next() {
None => {
// replace Some(inner) by None, drop $leaked
inner_opt.take();
Ok(None)
}
Some(res) => {
$success_func(py, res)
}
}
} else {
Ok(None)
}
}
def __iter__(&self) -> PyResult<Self> {
Ok(self.clone_ref(py))
}
});
impl $name {
pub fn from_inner(
py: Python,
leaked: $leaked,
it: $iterator_type
) -> PyResult<Self> {
Self::create_instance(
py,
RefCell::new(Some(leaked)),
RefCell::new(it)
)
}
}
};
}