Document asyncio.timeout()

This commit is contained in:
Andrew Svetlov 2016-01-11 14:40:35 +02:00
parent 9d976fa75f
commit f1240169b3
1 changed files with 63 additions and 46 deletions

View File

@ -363,9 +363,10 @@ Task
running in different threads. While a task waits for the completion of a
future, the event loop executes a new task.
The cancellation of a task is different from the cancelation of a future. Calling
:meth:`cancel` will throw a :exc:`~concurrent.futures.CancelledError` to the
wrapped coroutine. :meth:`~Future.cancelled` only returns ``True`` if the
The cancellation of a task is different from the cancelation of a
future. Calling :meth:`cancel` will throw a
:exc:`~concurrent.futures.CancelledError` to the wrapped
coroutine. :meth:`~Future.cancelled` only returns ``True`` if the
wrapped coroutine did not catch the
:exc:`~concurrent.futures.CancelledError` exception, or raised a
:exc:`~concurrent.futures.CancelledError` exception.
@ -417,10 +418,11 @@ Task
Return the list of stack frames for this task's coroutine.
If the coroutine is not done, this returns the stack where it is suspended.
If the coroutine has completed successfully or was cancelled, this
returns an empty list. If the coroutine was terminated by an exception,
this returns the list of traceback frames.
If the coroutine is not done, this returns the stack where it is
suspended. If the coroutine has completed successfully or was
cancelled, this returns an empty list. If the coroutine was
terminated by an exception, this returns the list of traceback
frames.
The frames are always ordered from oldest to newest.
@ -557,6 +559,45 @@ Task functions
Return ``True`` if *func* is a decorated :ref:`coroutine function
<coroutine>`.
.. function:: run_coroutine_threadsafe(coro, loop)
Submit a :ref:`coroutine object <coroutine>` to a given event loop.
Return a :class:`concurrent.futures.Future` to access the result.
This function is meant to be called from a different thread than the one
where the event loop is running. Usage::
# Create a coroutine
coro = asyncio.sleep(1, result=3)
# Submit the coroutine to a given loop
future = asyncio.run_coroutine_threadsafe(coro, loop)
# Wait for the result with an optional timeout argument
assert future.result(timeout) == 3
If an exception is raised in the coroutine, the returned future will be
notified. It can also be used to cancel the task in the event loop::
try:
result = future.result(timeout)
except asyncio.TimeoutError:
print('The coroutine took too long, cancelling the task...')
future.cancel()
except Exception as exc:
print('The coroutine raised an exception: {!r}'.format(exc))
else:
print('The coroutine returned: {!r}'.format(result))
See the :ref:`concurrency and multithreading <asyncio-multithreading>`
section of the documentation.
.. note::
Unlike the functions above, :func:`run_coroutine_threadsafe` requires the
*loop* argument to be passed explicitely.
.. versionadded:: 3.4.4, 3.5.1
.. coroutinefunction:: sleep(delay, result=None, \*, loop=None)
Create a :ref:`coroutine <coroutine>` that completes after a given
@ -595,7 +636,21 @@ Task functions
except CancelledError:
res = None
.. coroutinefunction:: wait(futures, \*, loop=None, timeout=None, return_when=ALL_COMPLETED)
.. function:: timeout(timeout, \*, loop=None)
Return a context manager that cancels a block on *timeout* expiring::
with timeout(1.5):
yield from inner()
1. If ``inner()`` is executed faster than in ``1.5`` seconds
nothing happens.
2. Otherwise ``inner()`` is cancelled internally but
:exc:`asyncio.TimeoutError` is raised outside of
context manager scope.
.. coroutinefunction:: wait(futures, \*, loop=None, timeout=None,\
return_when=ALL_COMPLETED)
Wait for the Futures and coroutine objects given by the sequence *futures*
to complete. Coroutines will be wrapped in Tasks. Returns two sets of
@ -662,41 +717,3 @@ Task functions
If the wait is cancelled, the future *fut* is now also cancelled.
.. function:: run_coroutine_threadsafe(coro, loop)
Submit a :ref:`coroutine object <coroutine>` to a given event loop.
Return a :class:`concurrent.futures.Future` to access the result.
This function is meant to be called from a different thread than the one
where the event loop is running. Usage::
# Create a coroutine
coro = asyncio.sleep(1, result=3)
# Submit the coroutine to a given loop
future = asyncio.run_coroutine_threadsafe(coro, loop)
# Wait for the result with an optional timeout argument
assert future.result(timeout) == 3
If an exception is raised in the coroutine, the returned future will be
notified. It can also be used to cancel the task in the event loop::
try:
result = future.result(timeout)
except asyncio.TimeoutError:
print('The coroutine took too long, cancelling the task...')
future.cancel()
except Exception as exc:
print('The coroutine raised an exception: {!r}'.format(exc))
else:
print('The coroutine returned: {!r}'.format(result))
See the :ref:`concurrency and multithreading <asyncio-multithreading>`
section of the documentation.
.. note::
Unlike the functions above, :func:`run_coroutine_threadsafe` requires the
*loop* argument to be passed explicitely.
.. versionadded:: 3.4.4, 3.5.1