# Copyright (c) 2009-2012 Denis Bilenko. See LICENSE for details. """ Locking primitives. These include semaphores with arbitrary bounds (:class:`Semaphore` and its safer subclass :class:`BoundedSemaphore`) and a semaphore with infinite bounds (:class:`DummySemaphore`), along with a reentrant lock (:class:`RLock`) with the same API as :class:`threading.RLock`. """ from __future__ import absolute_import from __future__ import print_function from gevent.hub import getcurrent from gevent._compat import PURE_PYTHON # This is the one exception to the rule of where to # import Semaphore, obviously from gevent import monkey from gevent._semaphore import Semaphore from gevent._semaphore import BoundedSemaphore __all__ = [ 'Semaphore', 'BoundedSemaphore', 'DummySemaphore', 'RLock', ] # On PyPy, we don't compile the Semaphore class with Cython. Under # Cython, each individual method holds the GIL for its entire # duration, ensuring that no other thread can interrupt us in an # unsafe state (only when we _wait do we call back into Python and # allow switching threads; this is broken down into the # _drop_lock_for_switch_out and _acquire_lock_for_switch_in methods). # Simulate that here through the use of a manual lock. (We use a # separate lock for each semaphore to allow sys.settrace functions to # use locks *other* than the one being traced.) This, of course, must # also hold for PURE_PYTHON mode when no optional C extensions are # used. _allocate_lock, _get_ident = monkey.get_original( ('_thread', 'thread'), ('allocate_lock', 'get_ident') ) def atomic(meth): def m(self, *args): with self._atomic: return meth(self, *args) return m class _GILLock(object): __slots__ = ( '_owned_thread_id', '_gil', '_atomic', '_recursion_depth', ) # Don't allow re-entry to these functions in a single thread, as # can happen if a sys.settrace is used. (XXX: What does that even # mean? Our original implementation that did that has been # replaced by something more robust) # # This is essentially a variant of the (pure-Python) RLock from the # standard library. def __init__(self): self._owned_thread_id = None self._gil = _allocate_lock() self._atomic = _allocate_lock() self._recursion_depth = 0 @atomic def acquire(self): current_tid = _get_ident() if self._owned_thread_id == current_tid: self._recursion_depth += 1 return True # Not owned by this thread. Only one thread will make it through this point. while 1: self._atomic.release() try: self._gil.acquire() finally: self._atomic.acquire() if self._owned_thread_id is None: break self._owned_thread_id = current_tid self._recursion_depth = 1 return True @atomic def release(self): current_tid = _get_ident() if current_tid != self._owned_thread_id: raise RuntimeError("%s: Releasing lock not owned by you. You: 0x%x; Owner: 0x%x" % ( self, current_tid, self._owned_thread_id or 0, )) self._recursion_depth -= 1 if not self._recursion_depth: self._owned_thread_id = None self._gil.release() def __enter__(self): self.acquire() def __exit__(self, t, v, tb): self.release() def locked(self): return self._gil.locked() class _AtomicSemaphoreMixin(object): # Behaves as though the GIL was held for the duration of acquire, wait, # and release, just as if we were in Cython. # # acquire, wait, and release all acquire the lock on entry and release it # on exit. acquire and wait can call _wait, which must release it on entry # and re-acquire it for them on exit. # # Note that this does *NOT*, in-and-of itself, make semaphores safe to use from multiple threads __slots__ = () def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): self._lock_lock = _GILLock() # pylint:disable=assigning-non-slot super(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) def _acquire_lock_for_switch_in(self): self._lock_lock.acquire() def _drop_lock_for_switch_out(self): self._lock_lock.release() def _notify_links(self, arrived_while_waiting): with self._lock_lock: return super(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, self)._notify_links(arrived_while_waiting) def release(self): with self._lock_lock: return super(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, self).release() def acquire(self, blocking=True, timeout=None): with self._lock_lock: return super(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, self).acquire(blocking, timeout) _py3k_acquire = acquire def wait(self, timeout=None): with self._lock_lock: return super(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, self).wait(timeout) class _AtomicSemaphore(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, Semaphore): __doc__ = Semaphore.__doc__ __slots__ = ( '_lock_lock', ) class _AtomicBoundedSemaphore(_AtomicSemaphoreMixin, BoundedSemaphore): __doc__ = BoundedSemaphore.__doc__ __slots__ = ( '_lock_lock', ) def release(self): # pylint:disable=useless-super-delegation # This method is duplicated here so that it can get # properly documented. return super(_AtomicBoundedSemaphore, self).release() def _fixup_docstrings(): for c in _AtomicSemaphore, _AtomicBoundedSemaphore: b = c.__mro__[2] assert b.__name__.endswith('Semaphore') and 'Atomic' not in b.__name__ assert c.__doc__ == b.__doc__ for m in 'acquire', 'release', 'wait': c_meth = getattr(c, m) b_meth = getattr(b, m) c_meth.__doc__ = b_meth.__doc__ _fixup_docstrings() del _fixup_docstrings if PURE_PYTHON: Semaphore = _AtomicSemaphore Semaphore.__name__ = 'Semaphore' BoundedSemaphore = _AtomicBoundedSemaphore BoundedSemaphore.__name__ = 'BoundedSemaphore' class DummySemaphore(object): """ DummySemaphore(value=None) -> DummySemaphore An object with the same API as :class:`Semaphore`, initialized with "infinite" initial value. None of its methods ever block. This can be used to parameterize on whether or not to actually guard access to a potentially limited resource. If the resource is actually limited, such as a fixed-size thread pool, use a real :class:`Semaphore`, but if the resource is unbounded, use an instance of this class. In that way none of the supporting code needs to change. Similarly, it can be used to parameterize on whether or not to enforce mutual exclusion to some underlying object. If the underlying object is known to be thread-safe itself mutual exclusion is not needed and a ``DummySemaphore`` can be used, but if that's not true, use a real ``Semaphore``. """ # Internally this is used for exactly the purpose described in the # documentation. gevent.pool.Pool uses it instead of a Semaphore # when the pool size is unlimited, and # gevent.fileobject.FileObjectThread takes a parameter that # determines whether it should lock around IO to the underlying # file object. def __init__(self, value=None): """ .. versionchanged:: 1.1rc3 Accept and ignore a *value* argument for compatibility with Semaphore. """ def __str__(self): return '<%s>' % self.__class__.__name__ def locked(self): """A DummySemaphore is never locked so this always returns False.""" return False def ready(self): """A DummySemaphore is never locked so this always returns True.""" return True def release(self): """Releasing a dummy semaphore does nothing.""" def rawlink(self, callback): # XXX should still work and notify? pass def unlink(self, callback): pass def wait(self, timeout=None): # pylint:disable=unused-argument """Waiting for a DummySemaphore returns immediately.""" return 1 def acquire(self, blocking=True, timeout=None): """ A DummySemaphore can always be acquired immediately so this always returns True and ignores its arguments. .. versionchanged:: 1.1a1 Always return *true*. """ # pylint:disable=unused-argument return True def __enter__(self): pass def __exit__(self, typ, val, tb): pass class RLock(object): """ A mutex that can be acquired more than once by the same greenlet. A mutex can only be locked by one greenlet at a time. A single greenlet can `acquire` the mutex as many times as desired, though. Each call to `acquire` must be paired with a matching call to `release`. It is an error for a greenlet that has not acquired the mutex to release it. Instances are context managers. """ __slots__ = ( '_block', '_owner', '_count', '__weakref__', ) def __init__(self, hub=None): """ .. versionchanged:: 20.5.1 Add the ``hub`` argument. """ self._block = Semaphore(1, hub) self._owner = None self._count = 0 def __repr__(self): return "<%s at 0x%x _block=%s _count=%r _owner=%r)>" % ( self.__class__.__name__, id(self), self._block, self._count, self._owner) def acquire(self, blocking=True, timeout=None): """ Acquire the mutex, blocking if *blocking* is true, for up to *timeout* seconds. .. versionchanged:: 1.5a4 Added the *timeout* parameter. :return: A boolean indicating whether the mutex was acquired. """ me = getcurrent() if self._owner is me: self._count += 1 return 1 rc = self._block.acquire(blocking, timeout) if rc: self._owner = me self._count = 1 return rc def __enter__(self): return self.acquire() def release(self): """ Release the mutex. Only the greenlet that originally acquired the mutex can release it. """ if self._owner is not getcurrent(): raise RuntimeError("cannot release un-acquired lock. Owner: %r Current: %r" % ( self._owner, getcurrent() )) self._count = count = self._count - 1 # pylint:disable=consider-using-augmented-assign if not count: self._owner = None self._block.release() def __exit__(self, typ, value, tb): self.release() # Internal methods used by condition variables def _acquire_restore(self, count_owner): count, owner = count_owner self._block.acquire() self._count = count self._owner = owner def _release_save(self): count = self._count self._count = 0 owner = self._owner self._owner = None self._block.release() return (count, owner) def _is_owned(self): return self._owner is getcurrent()