Mercurial > traipse_dev
diff plugins/cherrypy/_cpthreadinglocal.py @ 0:4385a7d0efd1 grumpy-goblin
Deleted and repushed it with the 'grumpy-goblin' branch. I forgot a y
author | sirebral |
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date | Tue, 14 Jul 2009 16:41:58 -0500 |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/plugins/cherrypy/_cpthreadinglocal.py Tue Jul 14 16:41:58 2009 -0500 @@ -0,0 +1,239 @@ +# This is a backport of Python-2.4's threading.local() implementation + +"""Thread-local objects + +(Note that this module provides a Python version of thread + threading.local class. Depending on the version of Python you're + using, there may be a faster one available. You should always import + the local class from threading.) + +Thread-local objects support the management of thread-local data. +If you have data that you want to be local to a thread, simply create +a thread-local object and use its attributes: + + >>> mydata = local() + >>> mydata.number = 42 + >>> mydata.number + 42 + +You can also access the local-object's dictionary: + + >>> mydata.__dict__ + {'number': 42} + >>> mydata.__dict__.setdefault('widgets', []) + [] + >>> mydata.widgets + [] + +What's important about thread-local objects is that their data are +local to a thread. If we access the data in a different thread: + + >>> log = [] + >>> def f(): + ... items = mydata.__dict__.items() + ... items.sort() + ... log.append(items) + ... mydata.number = 11 + ... log.append(mydata.number) + + >>> import threading + >>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f) + >>> thread.start() + >>> thread.join() + >>> log + [[], 11] + +we get different data. Furthermore, changes made in the other thread +don't affect data seen in this thread: + + >>> mydata.number + 42 + +Of course, values you get from a local object, including a __dict__ +attribute, are for whatever thread was current at the time the +attribute was read. For that reason, you generally don't want to save +these values across threads, as they apply only to the thread they +came from. + +You can create custom local objects by subclassing the local class: + + >>> class MyLocal(local): + ... number = 2 + ... initialized = False + ... def __init__(self, **kw): + ... if self.initialized: + ... raise SystemError('__init__ called too many times') + ... self.initialized = True + ... self.__dict__.update(kw) + ... def squared(self): + ... return self.number ** 2 + +This can be useful to support default values, methods and +initialization. Note that if you define an __init__ method, it will be +called each time the local object is used in a separate thread. This +is necessary to initialize each thread's dictionary. + +Now if we create a local object: + + >>> mydata = MyLocal(color='red') + +Now we have a default number: + + >>> mydata.number + 2 + +an initial color: + + >>> mydata.color + 'red' + >>> del mydata.color + +And a method that operates on the data: + + >>> mydata.squared() + 4 + +As before, we can access the data in a separate thread: + + >>> log = [] + >>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f) + >>> thread.start() + >>> thread.join() + >>> log + [[('color', 'red'), ('initialized', True)], 11] + +without affecting this thread's data: + + >>> mydata.number + 2 + >>> mydata.color + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + AttributeError: 'MyLocal' object has no attribute 'color' + +Note that subclasses can define slots, but they are not thread +local. They are shared across threads: + + >>> class MyLocal(local): + ... __slots__ = 'number' + + >>> mydata = MyLocal() + >>> mydata.number = 42 + >>> mydata.color = 'red' + +So, the separate thread: + + >>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f) + >>> thread.start() + >>> thread.join() + +affects what we see: + + >>> mydata.number + 11 + +>>> del mydata +""" + +# Threading import is at end + +class _localbase(object): + __slots__ = '_local__key', '_local__args', '_local__lock' + + def __new__(cls, *args, **kw): + self = object.__new__(cls) + key = '_local__key', 'thread.local.' + str(id(self)) + object.__setattr__(self, '_local__key', key) + object.__setattr__(self, '_local__args', (args, kw)) + object.__setattr__(self, '_local__lock', RLock()) + + if args or kw and (cls.__init__ is object.__init__): + raise TypeError("Initialization arguments are not supported") + + # We need to create the thread dict in anticipation of + # __init__ being called, to make sire we don't cal it + # again ourselves. + dict = object.__getattribute__(self, '__dict__') + currentThread().__dict__[key] = dict + + return self + +def _patch(self): + key = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__key') + d = currentThread().__dict__.get(key) + if d is None: + d = {} + currentThread().__dict__[key] = d + object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d) + + # we have a new instance dict, so call out __init__ if we have + # one + cls = type(self) + if cls.__init__ is not object.__init__: + args, kw = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__args') + cls.__init__(self, *args, **kw) + else: + object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d) + +class local(_localbase): + + def __getattribute__(self, name): + lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock') + lock.acquire() + try: + _patch(self) + return object.__getattribute__(self, name) + finally: + lock.release() + + def __setattr__(self, name, value): + lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock') + lock.acquire() + try: + _patch(self) + return object.__setattr__(self, name, value) + finally: + lock.release() + + def __delattr__(self, name): + lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock') + lock.acquire() + try: + _patch(self) + return object.__delattr__(self, name) + finally: + lock.release() + + + def __del__(): + threading_enumerate = enumerate + __getattribute__ = object.__getattribute__ + + def __del__(self): + key = __getattribute__(self, '_local__key') + + try: + threads = list(threading_enumerate()) + except: + # if enumerate fails, as it seems to do during + # shutdown, we'll skip cleanup under the assumption + # that there is nothing to clean up + return + + for thread in threads: + try: + __dict__ = thread.__dict__ + except AttributeError: + # Thread is dying, rest in peace + continue + + if key in __dict__: + try: + del __dict__[key] + except KeyError: + pass # didn't have anything in this thread + + return __del__ + __del__ = __del__() + +from threading import currentThread, enumerate, RLock