mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
Issue #25593: Change semantics of EventLoop.stop(). (Merge 3.5->3.6)
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13d9b86d46
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@ -29,7 +29,16 @@ Run an event loop
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.. method:: BaseEventLoop.run_forever()
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Run until :meth:`stop` is called.
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Run until :meth:`stop` is called. If :meth:`stop` is called before
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:meth:`run_forever()` is called, this polls the I/O selector once
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with a timeout of zero, runs all callbacks scheduled in response to
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I/O events (and those that were already scheduled), and then exits.
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If :meth:`stop` is called while :meth:`run_forever` is running,
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this will run the current batch of callbacks and then exit. Note
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that callbacks scheduled by callbacks will not run in that case;
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they will run the next time :meth:`run_forever` is called.
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.. versionchanged:: 3.5.1
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.. method:: BaseEventLoop.run_until_complete(future)
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@ -48,10 +57,10 @@ Run an event loop
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Stop running the event loop.
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Every callback scheduled before :meth:`stop` is called will run.
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Callbacks scheduled after :meth:`stop` is called will not run.
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However, those callbacks will run if :meth:`run_forever` is called
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again later.
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This causes :meth:`run_forever` to exit at the next suitable
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opportunity (see there for more details).
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.. versionchanged:: 3.5.1
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.. method:: BaseEventLoop.is_closed()
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@ -61,7 +70,8 @@ Run an event loop
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.. method:: BaseEventLoop.close()
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Close the event loop. The loop must not be running.
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Close the event loop. The loop must not be running. Pending
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callbacks will be lost.
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This clears the queues and shuts down the executor, but does not wait for
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the executor to finish.
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@ -494,7 +494,7 @@ data and wait until the connection is closed::
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def connection_lost(self, exc):
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print('The server closed the connection')
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print('Stop the event lop')
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print('Stop the event loop')
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self.loop.stop()
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loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
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@ -70,10 +70,6 @@ def _format_pipe(fd):
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return repr(fd)
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class _StopError(BaseException):
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"""Raised to stop the event loop."""
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def _check_resolved_address(sock, address):
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# Ensure that the address is already resolved to avoid the trap of hanging
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# the entire event loop when the address requires doing a DNS lookup.
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@ -118,9 +114,6 @@ def _check_resolved_address(sock, address):
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"got host %r: %s"
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% (host, err))
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def _raise_stop_error(*args):
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raise _StopError
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def _run_until_complete_cb(fut):
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exc = fut._exception
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@ -129,7 +122,7 @@ def _run_until_complete_cb(fut):
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# Issue #22429: run_forever() already finished, no need to
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# stop it.
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return
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_raise_stop_error()
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fut._loop.stop()
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class Server(events.AbstractServer):
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@ -184,6 +177,7 @@ class BaseEventLoop(events.AbstractEventLoop):
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def __init__(self):
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self._timer_cancelled_count = 0
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self._closed = False
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self._stopping = False
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self._ready = collections.deque()
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self._scheduled = []
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self._default_executor = None
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@ -298,11 +292,11 @@ class BaseEventLoop(events.AbstractEventLoop):
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self._thread_id = threading.get_ident()
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try:
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while True:
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try:
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self._run_once()
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except _StopError:
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self._run_once()
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if self._stopping:
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break
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finally:
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self._stopping = False
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self._thread_id = None
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self._set_coroutine_wrapper(False)
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@ -345,11 +339,10 @@ class BaseEventLoop(events.AbstractEventLoop):
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def stop(self):
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"""Stop running the event loop.
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Every callback scheduled before stop() is called will run. Callbacks
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scheduled after stop() is called will not run. However, those callbacks
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will run if run_forever is called again later.
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Every callback already scheduled will still run. This simply informs
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run_forever to stop looping after a complete iteration.
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"""
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self.call_soon(_raise_stop_error)
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self._stopping = True
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def close(self):
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"""Close the event loop.
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@ -1194,7 +1187,7 @@ class BaseEventLoop(events.AbstractEventLoop):
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handle._scheduled = False
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timeout = None
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if self._ready:
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if self._ready or self._stopping:
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timeout = 0
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elif self._scheduled:
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# Compute the desired timeout.
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@ -71,12 +71,13 @@ def run_until(loop, pred, timeout=30):
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def run_once(loop):
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"""loop.stop() schedules _raise_stop_error()
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and run_forever() runs until _raise_stop_error() callback.
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this wont work if test waits for some IO events, because
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_raise_stop_error() runs before any of io events callbacks.
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"""Legacy API to run once through the event loop.
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This is the recommended pattern for test code. It will poll the
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selector once and run all callbacks scheduled in response to I/O
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events.
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"""
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loop.stop()
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loop.call_soon(loop.stop)
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loop.run_forever()
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@ -757,6 +757,59 @@ class BaseEventLoopTests(test_utils.TestCase):
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pass
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self.assertTrue(func.called)
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def test_single_selecter_event_callback_after_stopping(self):
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# Python issue #25593: A stopped event loop may cause event callbacks
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# to run more than once.
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event_sentinel = object()
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callcount = 0
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doer = None
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def proc_events(event_list):
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nonlocal doer
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if event_sentinel in event_list:
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doer = self.loop.call_soon(do_event)
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def do_event():
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nonlocal callcount
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callcount += 1
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self.loop.call_soon(clear_selector)
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def clear_selector():
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doer.cancel()
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self.loop._selector.select.return_value = ()
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self.loop._process_events = proc_events
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self.loop._selector.select.return_value = (event_sentinel,)
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for i in range(1, 3):
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with self.subTest('Loop %d/2' % i):
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self.loop.call_soon(self.loop.stop)
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self.loop.run_forever()
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self.assertEqual(callcount, 1)
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def test_run_once(self):
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# Simple test for test_utils.run_once(). It may seem strange
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# to have a test for this (the function isn't even used!) but
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# it's a de-factor standard API for library tests. This tests
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# the idiom: loop.call_soon(loop.stop); loop.run_forever().
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count = 0
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def callback():
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nonlocal count
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count += 1
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self.loop._process_events = mock.Mock()
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self.loop.call_soon(callback)
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test_utils.run_once(self.loop)
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self.assertEqual(count, 1)
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def test_run_forever_pre_stopped(self):
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# Test that the old idiom for pre-stopping the loop works.
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self.loop._process_events = mock.Mock()
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self.loop.stop()
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self.loop.run_forever()
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self.loop._selector.select.assert_called_once_with(0)
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class MyProto(asyncio.Protocol):
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done = None
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@ -95,6 +95,8 @@ Core and Builtins
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Library
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-------
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- Issue #25593: Change semantics of EventLoop.stop() in asyncio.
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- Issue #6973: When we know a subprocess.Popen process has died, do
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not allow the send_signal(), terminate(), or kill() methods to do
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anything as they could potentially signal a different process.
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