Wrap the callback call within the `add_done_callback` function within concurrent.futures, in order to behave in an identical manner to callbacks added to a running future are triggered once it has completed.
Deprecated passing the following arguments as keyword arguments:
- "func" in functools.partialmethod(), weakref.finalize(),
profile.Profile.runcall(), cProfile.Profile.runcall(),
bdb.Bdb.runcall(), trace.Trace.runfunc() and
curses.wrapper().
- "function" in unittest.addModuleCleanup() and
unittest.TestCase.addCleanup().
- "fn" in the submit() method of concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor
and concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor.
- "callback" in contextlib.ExitStack.callback(),
contextlib.AsyncExitStack.callback() and
contextlib.AsyncExitStack.push_async_callback().
- "c" and "typeid" in the create() method of multiprocessing.managers.Server
and multiprocessing.managers.SharedMemoryServer.
- "obj" in weakref.finalize().
Also allowed to pass arbitrary keyword arguments (even "self" and "func")
if the above arguments are passed as positional argument.
Use a monotonic clock to compute timeouts in :meth:`Executor.map` and :func:`as_completed`, in order to prevent timeouts from deviating when the system clock is adjusted.
This may not be sufficient on all systems. On POSIX for example, the actual waiting (e.g. in ``sem_timedwait``) is specified to rely on the CLOCK_REALTIME clock.
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.
This was possible before. GH-1560 introduced a regression after 3.6.2 got
released where only sequences were accepted now. This commit addresses this
problem.
* bpo-27144: concurrent.futures as_complie and map iterators do not keep
reference to returned object
* Some nits. Improve wordings in docstrings and comments, and avoid relying on
sys.getrefcount() in tests.
This changes the main documentation, doc strings, source code comments, and a
couple error messages in the test suite. In some cases the word was removed
or edited some other way to fix the grammar.