From 3d57e14df7ba5f14a634295caf3b2e60da50bfe2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: James Taylor Date: Fri, 6 Sep 2019 16:31:13 -0700 Subject: Remove windows python distribution from repo and add requirements.txt --- python/gevent/_interfaces.py | 220 ------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 220 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 python/gevent/_interfaces.py (limited to 'python/gevent/_interfaces.py') diff --git a/python/gevent/_interfaces.py b/python/gevent/_interfaces.py deleted file mode 100644 index 099a6e2..0000000 --- a/python/gevent/_interfaces.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,220 +0,0 @@ -# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- -# Copyright (c) 2018 gevent contributors. See LICENSE for details. -""" -Interfaces gevent uses that don't belong any one place. - -This is not a public module, these interfaces are not -currently exposed to the public, they mostly exist for -documentation and testing purposes. - -.. versionadded:: 1.3b2 - -""" -from __future__ import absolute_import -from __future__ import division -from __future__ import print_function - - -from gevent._util import Interface -from gevent._util import Attribute - -# pylint:disable=no-method-argument, unused-argument, no-self-argument - -__all__ = [ - 'ILoop', - 'IWatcher', -] - -class ILoop(Interface): - """ - The common interface expected for all event loops. - - .. caution:: - This is an internal, low-level interface. It may change - between minor versions of gevent. - - .. rubric:: Watchers - - The methods that create event loop watchers are `io`, `timer`, - `signal`, `idle`, `prepare`, `check`, `fork`, `async_`, `child`, - `stat`. These all return various types of :class:`IWatcher`. - - All of those methods have one or two common arguments. *ref* is a - boolean saying whether the event loop is allowed to exit even if - this watcher is still started. *priority* is event loop specific. - """ - - default = Attribute("Boolean indicating whether this is the default loop") - - def run(nowait=False, once=False): - """ - Run the event loop. - - This is usually called automatically by the hub greenlet, but - in special cases (when the hub is *not* running) you can use - this to control how the event loop runs (for example, to integrate - it with another event loop). - """ - - def now(): - """ - now() -> float - - Return the loop's notion of the current time. - - This may not necessarily be related to :func:`time.time` (it - may have a different starting point), but it must be expressed - in fractional seconds (the same *units* used by :func:`time.time`). - """ - - def update_now(): - """ - Update the loop's notion of the current time. - - .. versionadded:: 1.3 - In the past, this available as ``update``. This is still available as - an alias but will be removed in the future. - """ - - def destroy(): - """ - Clean up resources used by this loop. - - If you create loops - (especially loops that are not the default) you *should* call - this method when you are done with the loop. - - .. caution:: - - As an implementation note, the libev C loop implementation has a - finalizer (``__del__``) that destroys the object, but the libuv - and libev CFFI implementations do not. The C implementation may change. - - """ - - def io(fd, events, ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create and return a new IO watcher for the given *fd*. - - *events* is a bitmask specifying which events to watch - for. 1 means read, and 2 means write. - """ - - def timer(after, repeat=0.0, ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create and return a timer watcher that will fire after *after* seconds. - - If *repeat* is given, the timer will continue to fire every *repeat* seconds. - """ - - def signal(signum, ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create and return a signal watcher for the signal *signum*, - one of the constants defined in :mod:`signal`. - - This is platform and event loop specific. - """ - - def idle(ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create and return a watcher that fires when the event loop is idle. - """ - - def prepare(ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create and return a watcher that fires before the event loop - polls for IO. - - .. caution:: This method is not supported by libuv. - """ - - def check(ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create and return a watcher that fires after the event loop - polls for IO. - """ - - def fork(ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create a watcher that fires when the process forks. - - Availability: POSIX - """ - - def async_(ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create a watcher that fires when triggered, possibly - from another thread. - - .. versionchanged:: 1.3 - This was previously just named ``async``; for compatibility - with Python 3.7 where ``async`` is a keyword it was renamed. - On older versions of Python the old name is still around, but - it will be removed in the future. - """ - - def child(pid, trace=0, ref=True): - """ - Create a watcher that fires for events on the child with process ID *pid*. - - This is platform specific. - """ - - def stat(path, interval=0.0, ref=True, priority=None): - """ - Create a watcher that monitors the filesystem item at *path*. - - If the operating system doesn't support event notifications - from the filesystem, poll for changes every *interval* seconds. - """ - - def run_callback(func, *args): - """ - Run the *func* passing it *args* at the next opportune moment. - - This is a way of handing control to the event loop and deferring - an action. - """ - -class IWatcher(Interface): - """ - An event loop watcher. - - These objects call their *callback* function when the event - loop detects the event has happened. - - .. important:: You *must* call :meth:`close` when you are - done with this object to avoid leaking native resources. - """ - - def start(callback, *args, **kwargs): - """ - Have the event loop begin watching for this event. - - When the event is detected, *callback* will be called with - *args*. - - .. caution:: - - Not all watchers accept ``**kwargs``, - and some watchers define special meanings for certain keyword args. - """ - - def stop(): - """ - Have the event loop stop watching this event. - - In the future you may call :meth:`start` to begin watching - again. - """ - - def close(): - """ - Dispose of any native resources associated with the watcher. - - If we were active, stop. - - Attempting to operate on this object after calling close is - undefined. You should dispose of any references you have to it - after calling this method. - """ -- cgit v1.2.3