From c3b9f8c4582882cd1f768b0727eca75475bb4f94 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: James Taylor Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2018 23:40:30 -0700 Subject: track embedded python distribution --- python/gevent/pool.py | 759 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 759 insertions(+) create mode 100644 python/gevent/pool.py (limited to 'python/gevent/pool.py') diff --git a/python/gevent/pool.py b/python/gevent/pool.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d0c5cbb --- /dev/null +++ b/python/gevent/pool.py @@ -0,0 +1,759 @@ +# Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Denis Bilenko. See LICENSE for details. +""" +Managing greenlets in a group. + +The :class:`Group` class in this module abstracts a group of running +greenlets. When a greenlet dies, it's automatically removed from the +group. All running greenlets in a group can be waited on with +:meth:`Group.join`, or all running greenlets can be killed with +:meth:`Group.kill`. + +The :class:`Pool` class, which is a subclass of :class:`Group`, +provides a way to limit concurrency: its :meth:`spawn ` +method blocks if the number of greenlets in the pool has already +reached the limit, until there is a free slot. +""" + +from bisect import insort_right +try: + from itertools import izip +except ImportError: + # Python 3 + izip = zip + +from gevent.hub import GreenletExit, getcurrent, kill as _kill +from gevent.greenlet import joinall, Greenlet +from gevent.timeout import Timeout +from gevent.event import Event +from gevent.lock import Semaphore, DummySemaphore + +__all__ = ['Group', 'Pool'] + + +class IMapUnordered(Greenlet): + """ + At iterator of map results. + """ + + _zipped = False + + def __init__(self, func, iterable, spawn=None, maxsize=None, _zipped=False): + """ + An iterator that. + + :keyword int maxsize: If given and not-None, specifies the maximum number of + finished results that will be allowed to accumulated awaiting the reader; + more than that number of results will cause map function greenlets to begin + to block. This is most useful is there is a great disparity in the speed of + the mapping code and the consumer and the results consume a great deal of resources. + Using a bound is more computationally expensive than not using a bound. + + .. versionchanged:: 1.1b3 + Added the *maxsize* parameter. + """ + from gevent.queue import Queue + Greenlet.__init__(self) + if spawn is not None: + self.spawn = spawn + if _zipped: + self._zipped = _zipped + self.func = func + self.iterable = iterable + self.queue = Queue() + if maxsize: + # Bounding the queue is not enough if we want to keep from + # accumulating objects; the result value will be around as + # the greenlet's result, blocked on self.queue.put(), and + # we'll go on to spawn another greenlet, which in turn can + # create the result. So we need a semaphore to prevent a + # greenlet from exiting while the queue is full so that we + # don't spawn the next greenlet (assuming that self.spawn + # is of course bounded). (Alternatively we could have the + # greenlet itself do the insert into the pool, but that + # takes some rework). + # + # Given the use of a semaphore at this level, sizing the queue becomes + # redundant, and that lets us avoid having to use self.link() instead + # of self.rawlink() to avoid having blocking methods called in the + # hub greenlet. + factory = Semaphore + else: + factory = DummySemaphore + self._result_semaphore = factory(maxsize) + + self.count = 0 + self.finished = False + # If the queue size is unbounded, then we want to call all + # the links (_on_finish and _on_result) directly in the hub greenlet + # for efficiency. However, if the queue is bounded, we can't do that if + # the queue might block (because if there's no waiter the hub can switch to, + # the queue simply raises Full). Therefore, in that case, we use + # the safer, somewhat-slower (because it spawns a greenlet) link() methods. + # This means that _on_finish and _on_result can be called and interleaved in any order + # if the call to self.queue.put() blocks.. + # Note that right now we're not bounding the queue, instead using a semaphore. + self.rawlink(self._on_finish) + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def next(self): + self._result_semaphore.release() + value = self._inext() + if isinstance(value, Failure): + raise value.exc + return value + __next__ = next + + def _inext(self): + return self.queue.get() + + def _ispawn(self, func, item): + self._result_semaphore.acquire() + self.count += 1 + g = self.spawn(func, item) if not self._zipped else self.spawn(func, *item) + g.rawlink(self._on_result) + return g + + def _run(self): # pylint:disable=method-hidden + try: + func = self.func + for item in self.iterable: + self._ispawn(func, item) + finally: + self.__dict__.pop('spawn', None) + self.__dict__.pop('func', None) + self.__dict__.pop('iterable', None) + + def _on_result(self, greenlet): + # This method can either be called in the hub greenlet (if the + # queue is unbounded) or its own greenlet. If it's called in + # its own greenlet, the calls to put() may block and switch + # greenlets, which in turn could mutate our state. So any + # state on this object that we need to look at, notably + # self.count, we need to capture or mutate *before* we put. + # (Note that right now we're not bounding the queue, but we may + # choose to do so in the future so this implementation will be left in case.) + self.count -= 1 + count = self.count + finished = self.finished + ready = self.ready() + put_finished = False + + if ready and count <= 0 and not finished: + finished = self.finished = True + put_finished = True + + if greenlet.successful(): + self.queue.put(self._iqueue_value_for_success(greenlet)) + else: + self.queue.put(self._iqueue_value_for_failure(greenlet)) + + if put_finished: + self.queue.put(self._iqueue_value_for_finished()) + + def _on_finish(self, _self): + if self.finished: + return + + if not self.successful(): + self.finished = True + self.queue.put(self._iqueue_value_for_self_failure()) + return + + if self.count <= 0: + self.finished = True + self.queue.put(self._iqueue_value_for_finished()) + + def _iqueue_value_for_success(self, greenlet): + return greenlet.value + + def _iqueue_value_for_failure(self, greenlet): + return Failure(greenlet.exception, getattr(greenlet, '_raise_exception')) + + def _iqueue_value_for_finished(self): + return Failure(StopIteration) + + def _iqueue_value_for_self_failure(self): + return Failure(self.exception, self._raise_exception) + + +class IMap(IMapUnordered): + # A specialization of IMapUnordered that returns items + # in the order in which they were generated, not + # the order in which they finish. + # We do this by storing tuples (order, value) in the queue + # not just value. + + def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): + self.waiting = [] # QQQ maybe deque will work faster there? + self.index = 0 + self.maxindex = -1 + IMapUnordered.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) + + def _inext(self): + while True: + if self.waiting and self.waiting[0][0] <= self.index: + _, value = self.waiting.pop(0) + else: + index, value = self.queue.get() + if index > self.index: + insort_right(self.waiting, (index, value)) + continue + self.index += 1 + return value + + def _ispawn(self, func, item): + g = IMapUnordered._ispawn(self, func, item) + self.maxindex += 1 + g.index = self.maxindex + return g + + def _iqueue_value_for_success(self, greenlet): + return (greenlet.index, IMapUnordered._iqueue_value_for_success(self, greenlet)) + + def _iqueue_value_for_failure(self, greenlet): + return (greenlet.index, IMapUnordered._iqueue_value_for_failure(self, greenlet)) + + def _iqueue_value_for_finished(self): + self.maxindex += 1 + return (self.maxindex, IMapUnordered._iqueue_value_for_finished(self)) + + def _iqueue_value_for_self_failure(self): + self.maxindex += 1 + return (self.maxindex, IMapUnordered._iqueue_value_for_self_failure(self)) + + +class GroupMappingMixin(object): + # Internal, non-public API class. + # Provides mixin methods for implementing mapping pools. Subclasses must define: + + # - self.spawn(func, *args, **kwargs): a function that runs `func` with `args` + # and `awargs`, potentially asynchronously. Return a value with a `get` method that + # blocks until the results of func are available, and a `link` method. + + # - self._apply_immediately(): should the function passed to apply be called immediately, + # synchronously? + + # - self._apply_async_use_greenlet(): Should apply_async directly call + # Greenlet.spawn(), bypassing self.spawn? Return true when self.spawn would block + + # - self._apply_async_cb_spawn(callback, result): Run the given callback function, possiblly + # asynchronously, possibly synchronously. + + def apply_cb(self, func, args=None, kwds=None, callback=None): + """ + :meth:`apply` the given *func(\\*args, \\*\\*kwds)*, and, if a *callback* is given, run it with the + results of *func* (unless an exception was raised.) + + The *callback* may be called synchronously or asynchronously. If called + asynchronously, it will not be tracked by this group. (:class:`Group` and :class:`Pool` + call it asynchronously in a new greenlet; :class:`~gevent.threadpool.ThreadPool` calls + it synchronously in the current greenlet.) + """ + result = self.apply(func, args, kwds) + if callback is not None: + self._apply_async_cb_spawn(callback, result) + return result + + def apply_async(self, func, args=None, kwds=None, callback=None): + """ + A variant of the :meth:`apply` method which returns a :class:`~.Greenlet` object. + + When the returned greenlet gets to run, it *will* call :meth:`apply`, + passing in *func*, *args* and *kwds*. + + If *callback* is specified, then it should be a callable which + accepts a single argument. When the result becomes ready + callback is applied to it (unless the call failed). + + This method will never block, even if this group is full (that is, + even if :meth:`spawn` would block, this method will not). + + .. caution:: The returned greenlet may or may not be tracked + as part of this group, so :meth:`joining ` this group is + not a reliable way to wait for the results to be available or + for the returned greenlet to run; instead, join the returned + greenlet. + + .. tip:: Because :class:`~.ThreadPool` objects do not track greenlets, the returned + greenlet will never be a part of it. To reduce overhead and improve performance, + :class:`Group` and :class:`Pool` may choose to track the returned + greenlet. These are implementation details that may change. + """ + if args is None: + args = () + if kwds is None: + kwds = {} + if self._apply_async_use_greenlet(): + # cannot call self.spawn() directly because it will block + # XXX: This is always the case for ThreadPool, but for Group/Pool + # of greenlets, this is only the case when they are full...hence + # the weasely language about "may or may not be tracked". Should we make + # Group/Pool always return true as well so it's never tracked by any + # implementation? That would simplify that logic, but could increase + # the total number of greenlets in the system and add a layer of + # overhead for the simple cases when the pool isn't full. + return Greenlet.spawn(self.apply_cb, func, args, kwds, callback) + + greenlet = self.spawn(func, *args, **kwds) + if callback is not None: + greenlet.link(pass_value(callback)) + return greenlet + + def apply(self, func, args=None, kwds=None): + """ + Rough quivalent of the :func:`apply()` builtin function blocking until + the result is ready and returning it. + + The ``func`` will *usually*, but not *always*, be run in a way + that allows the current greenlet to switch out (for example, + in a new greenlet or thread, depending on implementation). But + if the current greenlet or thread is already one that was + spawned by this pool, the pool may choose to immediately run + the `func` synchronously. + + Any exception ``func`` raises will be propagated to the caller of ``apply`` (that is, + this method will raise the exception that ``func`` raised). + """ + if args is None: + args = () + if kwds is None: + kwds = {} + if self._apply_immediately(): + return func(*args, **kwds) + return self.spawn(func, *args, **kwds).get() + + def map(self, func, iterable): + """Return a list made by applying the *func* to each element of + the iterable. + + .. seealso:: :meth:`imap` + """ + return list(self.imap(func, iterable)) + + def map_cb(self, func, iterable, callback=None): + result = self.map(func, iterable) + if callback is not None: + callback(result) + return result + + def map_async(self, func, iterable, callback=None): + """ + A variant of the map() method which returns a Greenlet object that is executing + the map function. + + If callback is specified then it should be a callable which accepts a + single argument. + """ + return Greenlet.spawn(self.map_cb, func, iterable, callback) + + def __imap(self, cls, func, *iterables, **kwargs): + # Python 2 doesn't support the syntax that lets us mix varargs and + # a named kwarg, so we have to unpack manually + maxsize = kwargs.pop('maxsize', None) + if kwargs: + raise TypeError("Unsupported keyword arguments") + return cls.spawn(func, izip(*iterables), spawn=self.spawn, + _zipped=True, maxsize=maxsize) + + def imap(self, func, *iterables, **kwargs): + """ + imap(func, *iterables, maxsize=None) -> iterable + + An equivalent of :func:`itertools.imap`, operating in parallel. + The *func* is applied to each element yielded from each + iterable in *iterables* in turn, collecting the result. + + If this object has a bound on the number of active greenlets it can + contain (such as :class:`Pool`), then at most that number of tasks will operate + in parallel. + + :keyword int maxsize: If given and not-None, specifies the maximum number of + finished results that will be allowed to accumulate awaiting the reader; + more than that number of results will cause map function greenlets to begin + to block. This is most useful if there is a great disparity in the speed of + the mapping code and the consumer and the results consume a great deal of resources. + + .. note:: This is separate from any bound on the number of active parallel + tasks, though they may have some interaction (for example, limiting the + number of parallel tasks to the smallest bound). + + .. note:: Using a bound is slightly more computationally expensive than not using a bound. + + .. tip:: The :meth:`imap_unordered` method makes much better + use of this parameter. Some additional, unspecified, + number of objects may be required to be kept in memory + to maintain order by this function. + + :return: An iterable object. + + .. versionchanged:: 1.1b3 + Added the *maxsize* keyword parameter. + .. versionchanged:: 1.1a1 + Accept multiple *iterables* to iterate in parallel. + """ + return self.__imap(IMap, func, *iterables, **kwargs) + + def imap_unordered(self, func, *iterables, **kwargs): + """ + imap_unordered(func, *iterables, maxsize=None) -> iterable + + The same as :meth:`imap` except that the ordering of the results + from the returned iterator should be considered in arbitrary + order. + + This is lighter weight than :meth:`imap` and should be preferred if order + doesn't matter. + + .. seealso:: :meth:`imap` for more details. + """ + return self.__imap(IMapUnordered, func, *iterables, **kwargs) + + +class Group(GroupMappingMixin): + """ + Maintain a group of greenlets that are still running, without + limiting their number. + + Links to each item and removes it upon notification. + + Groups can be iterated to discover what greenlets they are tracking, + they can be tested to see if they contain a greenlet, and they know the + number (len) of greenlets they are tracking. If they are not tracking any + greenlets, they are False in a boolean context. + """ + + #: The type of Greenlet object we will :meth:`spawn`. This can be changed + #: on an instance or in a subclass. + greenlet_class = Greenlet + + def __init__(self, *args): + assert len(args) <= 1, args + self.greenlets = set(*args) + if args: + for greenlet in args[0]: + greenlet.rawlink(self._discard) + # each item we kill we place in dying, to avoid killing the same greenlet twice + self.dying = set() + self._empty_event = Event() + self._empty_event.set() + + def __repr__(self): + return '<%s at 0x%x %s>' % (self.__class__.__name__, id(self), self.greenlets) + + def __len__(self): + """ + Answer how many greenlets we are tracking. Note that if we are empty, + we are False in a boolean context. + """ + return len(self.greenlets) + + def __contains__(self, item): + """ + Answer if we are tracking the given greenlet. + """ + return item in self.greenlets + + def __iter__(self): + """ + Iterate across all the greenlets we are tracking, in no particular order. + """ + return iter(self.greenlets) + + def add(self, greenlet): + """ + Begin tracking the greenlet. + + If this group is :meth:`full`, then this method may block + until it is possible to track the greenlet. + """ + try: + rawlink = greenlet.rawlink + except AttributeError: + pass # non-Greenlet greenlet, like MAIN + else: + rawlink(self._discard) + self.greenlets.add(greenlet) + self._empty_event.clear() + + def _discard(self, greenlet): + self.greenlets.discard(greenlet) + self.dying.discard(greenlet) + if not self.greenlets: + self._empty_event.set() + + def discard(self, greenlet): + """ + Stop tracking the greenlet. + """ + self._discard(greenlet) + try: + unlink = greenlet.unlink + except AttributeError: + pass # non-Greenlet greenlet, like MAIN + else: + unlink(self._discard) + + def start(self, greenlet): + """ + Start the un-started *greenlet* and add it to the collection of greenlets + this group is monitoring. + """ + self.add(greenlet) + greenlet.start() + + def spawn(self, *args, **kwargs): + """ + Begin a new greenlet with the given arguments (which are passed + to the greenlet constructor) and add it to the collection of greenlets + this group is monitoring. + + :return: The newly started greenlet. + """ + greenlet = self.greenlet_class(*args, **kwargs) + self.start(greenlet) + return greenlet + +# def close(self): +# """Prevents any more tasks from being submitted to the pool""" +# self.add = RaiseException("This %s has been closed" % self.__class__.__name__) + + def join(self, timeout=None, raise_error=False): + """ + Wait for this group to become empty *at least once*. + + If there are no greenlets in the group, returns immediately. + + .. note:: By the time the waiting code (the caller of this + method) regains control, a greenlet may have been added to + this group, and so this object may no longer be empty. (That + is, ``group.join(); assert len(group) == 0`` is not + guaranteed to hold.) This method only guarantees that the group + reached a ``len`` of 0 at some point. + + :keyword bool raise_error: If True (*not* the default), if any + greenlet that finished while the join was in progress raised + an exception, that exception will be raised to the caller of + this method. If multiple greenlets raised exceptions, which + one gets re-raised is not determined. Only greenlets currently + in the group when this method is called are guaranteed to + be checked for exceptions. + + :return bool: A value indicating whether this group became empty. + If the timeout is specified and the group did not become empty + during that timeout, then this will be a false value. Otherwise + it will be a true value. + + .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 + Add the return value. + """ + greenlets = list(self.greenlets) if raise_error else () + result = self._empty_event.wait(timeout=timeout) + + for greenlet in greenlets: + if greenlet.exception is not None: + if hasattr(greenlet, '_raise_exception'): + greenlet._raise_exception() + raise greenlet.exception + + return result + + def kill(self, exception=GreenletExit, block=True, timeout=None): + """ + Kill all greenlets being tracked by this group. + """ + timer = Timeout._start_new_or_dummy(timeout) + try: + while self.greenlets: + for greenlet in list(self.greenlets): + if greenlet in self.dying: + continue + try: + kill = greenlet.kill + except AttributeError: + _kill(greenlet, exception) + else: + kill(exception, block=False) + self.dying.add(greenlet) + if not block: + break + joinall(self.greenlets) + except Timeout as ex: + if ex is not timer: + raise + finally: + timer.cancel() + + def killone(self, greenlet, exception=GreenletExit, block=True, timeout=None): + """ + If the given *greenlet* is running and being tracked by this group, + kill it. + """ + if greenlet not in self.dying and greenlet in self.greenlets: + greenlet.kill(exception, block=False) + self.dying.add(greenlet) + if block: + greenlet.join(timeout) + + def full(self): + """ + Return a value indicating whether this group can track more greenlets. + + In this implementation, because there are no limits on the number of + tracked greenlets, this will always return a ``False`` value. + """ + return False + + def wait_available(self, timeout=None): + """ + Block until it is possible to :meth:`spawn` a new greenlet. + + In this implementation, because there are no limits on the number + of tracked greenlets, this will always return immediately. + """ + pass + + # MappingMixin methods + + def _apply_immediately(self): + # If apply() is called from one of our own + # worker greenlets, don't spawn a new one---if we're full, that + # could deadlock. + return getcurrent() in self + + def _apply_async_cb_spawn(self, callback, result): + Greenlet.spawn(callback, result) + + def _apply_async_use_greenlet(self): + # cannot call self.spawn() because it will block, so + # use a fresh, untracked greenlet that when run will + # (indirectly) call self.spawn() for us. + return self.full() + + +class Failure(object): + __slots__ = ['exc', '_raise_exception'] + + def __init__(self, exc, raise_exception=None): + self.exc = exc + self._raise_exception = raise_exception + + def raise_exc(self): + if self._raise_exception: + self._raise_exception() + else: + raise self.exc + + +class Pool(Group): + + def __init__(self, size=None, greenlet_class=None): + """ + Create a new pool. + + A pool is like a group, but the maximum number of members + is governed by the *size* parameter. + + :keyword int size: If given, this non-negative integer is the + maximum count of active greenlets that will be allowed in + this pool. A few values have special significance: + + * ``None`` (the default) places no limit on the number of + greenlets. This is useful when you need to track, but not limit, + greenlets, as with :class:`gevent.pywsgi.WSGIServer`. A :class:`Group` + may be a more efficient way to achieve the same effect. + * ``0`` creates a pool that can never have any active greenlets. Attempting + to spawn in this pool will block forever. This is only useful + if an application uses :meth:`wait_available` with a timeout and checks + :meth:`free_count` before attempting to spawn. + """ + if size is not None and size < 0: + raise ValueError('size must not be negative: %r' % (size, )) + Group.__init__(self) + self.size = size + if greenlet_class is not None: + self.greenlet_class = greenlet_class + if size is None: + factory = DummySemaphore + else: + factory = Semaphore + self._semaphore = factory(size) + + def wait_available(self, timeout=None): + """ + Wait until it's possible to spawn a greenlet in this pool. + + :param float timeout: If given, only wait the specified number + of seconds. + + .. warning:: If the pool was initialized with a size of 0, this + method will block forever unless a timeout is given. + + :return: A number indicating how many new greenlets can be put into + the pool without blocking. + + .. versionchanged:: 1.1a3 + Added the ``timeout`` parameter. + """ + return self._semaphore.wait(timeout=timeout) + + def full(self): + """ + Return a boolean indicating whether this pool has any room for + members. (True if it does, False if it doesn't.) + """ + return self.free_count() <= 0 + + def free_count(self): + """ + Return a number indicating *approximately* how many more members + can be added to this pool. + """ + if self.size is None: + return 1 + return max(0, self.size - len(self)) + + def add(self, greenlet): + """ + Begin tracking the given greenlet, blocking until space is available. + + .. seealso:: :meth:`Group.add` + """ + self._semaphore.acquire() + try: + Group.add(self, greenlet) + except: + self._semaphore.release() + raise + + def _discard(self, greenlet): + Group._discard(self, greenlet) + self._semaphore.release() + + +class pass_value(object): + __slots__ = ['callback'] + + def __init__(self, callback): + self.callback = callback + + def __call__(self, source): + if source.successful(): + self.callback(source.value) + + def __hash__(self): + return hash(self.callback) + + def __eq__(self, other): + return self.callback == getattr(other, 'callback', other) + + def __str__(self): + return str(self.callback) + + def __repr__(self): + return repr(self.callback) + + def __getattr__(self, item): + assert item != 'callback' + return getattr(self.callback, item) -- cgit v1.2.3