The call to `_untrack_reader` is performed too soon, causing the protocol
to forget about the reader before `connection_lost` can run and feed the
EOF to the reader. See bpo-35065.
The waiting is pretty normal for any asyncio program, logging its time just adds
a noise to logs without any useful information provided.
https://bugs.python.org/issue34849
* Insert the warn in the asyncio.sleep when the loop argument is used
* Insert the warn in the asyncio.wait and asyncio.wait_for when the loop argument is used
* Better format of the code
* Add news file
* change calls for get_event_loop() to calls for get_running_loop()
* Change message to be more clear in News
* Improve the comments in test_tasks
Store a weak reference to stream readerfor breaking strong references
It breaks the strong reference loop between reader and protocol and allows to detect and close the socket if the stream is deleted (garbage collected)
Various asyncio internals expect that the default executor is a
`ThreadPoolExecutor`, so deprecate passing anything else to
`loop.set_default_executor()`.
The cancellation of an overlapped WSARecv() has a race condition
which causes data loss because of the current implementation of
proactor in asyncio.
No longer cancel overlapped WSARecv() in _ProactorReadPipeTransport
to work around the race condition.
Remove the optimized recv_into() implementation to get simple
implementation of pause_reading() using the single _pending_data
attribute.
Move _feed_data_to_bufferred_proto() to protocols.py.
Remove set_protocol() method which became useless.
* Fix AttributeError (not all SSL exceptions have 'errno' attribute)
* Increase default handshake timeout from 10 to 60 seconds
* Make sure start_tls can be cancelled correctly
* Make sure any error in SSLProtocol gets propagated (instead of just being logged)
Future.set_result and Future.set_exception now raise InvalidStateError
if the futures are not pending or running. This mirrors the behavior
of asyncio.Future, and prevents AssertionErrors in asyncio.wrap_future
when set_result is called multiple times.
Currently, asyncio.wait_for(fut), upon reaching the timeout deadline,
cancels the future and returns immediately. This is problematic for
when *fut* is a Task, because it will be left running for an arbitrary
amount of time. This behavior is iself surprising and may lead to
related bugs such as the one described in bpo-33638:
condition = asyncio.Condition()
async with condition:
await asyncio.wait_for(condition.wait(), timeout=0.5)
Currently, instead of raising a TimeoutError, the above code will fail
with `RuntimeError: cannot wait on un-acquired lock`, because
`__aexit__` is reached _before_ `condition.wait()` finishes its
cancellation and re-acquires the condition lock.
To resolve this, make `wait_for` await for the task cancellation.
The tradeoff here is that the `timeout` promise may be broken if the
task decides to handle its cancellation in a slow way. This represents
a behavior change and should probably not be back-patched to 3.6 and
earlier.
Use transport.set_write_buffer_limits() in sendfile tests of
test_asyncio to make sure that the protocol is paused after sending
4 KiB. Previously,
test_sendfile_fallback_close_peer_in_the_middle_of_receiving() failed
on FreeBSD if the DATA was smaller than the default limit of 64 KiB.
Fix a race condition in SSLProtocol.connection_made() of
asyncio.sslproto: start immediately the handshake instead of using
call_soon(). Previously, data_received() could be called before the
handshake started, causing the handshake to hang or fail.
In this commit:
* Support BufferedProtocol in set_protocol() and start_tls()
* Fix proactor to cancel readers reliably
* Update tests to be compatible with OpenSSL 1.1.1
* Clarify BufferedProtocol docs
* Bump TLS tests timeouts to 60 seconds; eliminate possible race from start_serving
* Rewrite test_start_tls_server_1
* bpo-33263 Fix FD leak in _SelectorSocketTransport. (GH-6450)
Under particular circumstances _SelectorSocketTransport can try to add a reader
even the transport is already being closed. This can lead to FD leak and
invalid stated of the following connections. Fixed the SelectorSocketTransport
to add the reader only if the trasport is still active.
Fix typo from commit 6370f345e1
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
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# Pull Request title
It should be in the following format:
```
bpo-NNNN: Summary of the changes made
```
Where: bpo-NNNN refers to the issue number in the https://bugs.python.org.
Most PRs will require an issue number. Trivial changes, like fixing a typo, do not need an issue.
# Backport Pull Request title
If this is a backport PR (PR made against branches other than `master`),
please ensure that the PR title is in the following format:
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```
Where: [X.Y] is the branch name, e.g. [3.6].
GH-NNNN refers to the PR number from `master`.
-->
<!-- issue-number: bpo-32262 -->
https://bugs.python.org/issue32262
<!-- /issue-number -->
Fix the following bugs in the C implementation:
* get_future_loop() silenced all exceptions raised when look up the get_loop
attribute, not just an AttributeError.
* enter_task() silenced all exceptions raised when look up the current task,
not just a KeyError.
* repr() was called for a borrowed link in enter_task() and task_step_impl().
* str() was used instead of repr() in formatting one error message (in
Python implementation too).
* There where few reference leaks in error cases.
The proactor event loop has a race condition when reading with
pausing/resuming. `resume_reading()` unconditionally schedules the read
function to read from the current future. If `resume_reading()` was
called before the previously scheduled done callback fires, this results
in two attempts to get the data from the most recent read and an
assertion failure. This commit tracks whether or not `resume_reading`
needs to reschedule the callback to restart the loop, preventing a
second attempt to read the data.