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root/tags/cherrypy-3.1.0beta2/cherrypy/_cpthreadinglocal.py

Revision 1479 (checked in by fumanchu, 2 years ago)

Fix for thread locals on Jython (see http://groups.google.com/group/cherrypy-users/browse_frm/thread/ccbad8001cdc0146 and also http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lang.jython.devel/2601 and its responses).

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1 # This is a backport of Python-2.4's threading.local() implementation
2
3 """Thread-local objects
4
5 (Note that this module provides a Python version of thread
6  threading.local class.  Depending on the version of Python you're
7  using, there may be a faster one available.  You should always import
8  the local class from threading.)
9
10 Thread-local objects support the management of thread-local data.
11 If you have data that you want to be local to a thread, simply create
12 a thread-local object and use its attributes:
13
14   >>> mydata = local()
15   >>> mydata.number = 42
16   >>> mydata.number
17   42
18
19 You can also access the local-object's dictionary:
20
21   >>> mydata.__dict__
22   {'number': 42}
23   >>> mydata.__dict__.setdefault('widgets', [])
24   []
25   >>> mydata.widgets
26   []
27
28 What's important about thread-local objects is that their data are
29 local to a thread. If we access the data in a different thread:
30
31   >>> log = []
32   >>> def f():
33   ...     items = mydata.__dict__.items()
34   ...     items.sort()
35   ...     log.append(items)
36   ...     mydata.number = 11
37   ...     log.append(mydata.number)
38
39   >>> import threading
40   >>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f)
41   >>> thread.start()
42   >>> thread.join()
43   >>> log
44   [[], 11]
45
46 we get different data.  Furthermore, changes made in the other thread
47 don't affect data seen in this thread:
48
49   >>> mydata.number
50   42
51
52 Of course, values you get from a local object, including a __dict__
53 attribute, are for whatever thread was current at the time the
54 attribute was read.  For that reason, you generally don't want to save
55 these values across threads, as they apply only to the thread they
56 came from.
57
58 You can create custom local objects by subclassing the local class:
59
60   >>> class MyLocal(local):
61   ...     number = 2
62   ...     initialized = False
63   ...     def __init__(self, **kw):
64   ...         if self.initialized:
65   ...             raise SystemError('__init__ called too many times')
66   ...         self.initialized = True
67   ...         self.__dict__.update(kw)
68   ...     def squared(self):
69   ...         return self.number ** 2
70
71 This can be useful to support default values, methods and
72 initialization.  Note that if you define an __init__ method, it will be
73 called each time the local object is used in a separate thread.  This
74 is necessary to initialize each thread's dictionary.
75
76 Now if we create a local object:
77
78   >>> mydata = MyLocal(color='red')
79
80 Now we have a default number:
81
82   >>> mydata.number
83   2
84
85 an initial color:
86
87   >>> mydata.color
88   'red'
89   >>> del mydata.color
90
91 And a method that operates on the data:
92
93   >>> mydata.squared()
94   4
95
96 As before, we can access the data in a separate thread:
97
98   >>> log = []
99   >>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f)
100   >>> thread.start()
101   >>> thread.join()
102   >>> log
103   [[('color', 'red'), ('initialized', True)], 11]
104
105 without affecting this thread's data:
106
107   >>> mydata.number
108   2
109   >>> mydata.color
110   Traceback (most recent call last):
111   ...
112   AttributeError: 'MyLocal' object has no attribute 'color'
113
114 Note that subclasses can define slots, but they are not thread
115 local. They are shared across threads:
116
117   >>> class MyLocal(local):
118   ...     __slots__ = 'number'
119
120   >>> mydata = MyLocal()
121   >>> mydata.number = 42
122   >>> mydata.color = 'red'
123
124 So, the separate thread:
125
126   >>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f)
127   >>> thread.start()
128   >>> thread.join()
129
130 affects what we see:
131
132   >>> mydata.number
133   11
134
135 >>> del mydata
136 """
137
138 # Threading import is at end
139
140 class _localbase(object):
141     __slots__ = '_local__key', '_local__args', '_local__lock'
142
143     def __new__(cls, *args, **kw):
144         self = object.__new__(cls)
145         key = 'thread.local.' + str(id(self))
146         object.__setattr__(self, '_local__key', key)
147         object.__setattr__(self, '_local__args', (args, kw))
148         object.__setattr__(self, '_local__lock', RLock())
149
150         if args or kw and (cls.__init__ is object.__init__):
151             raise TypeError("Initialization arguments are not supported")
152
153         # We need to create the thread dict in anticipation of
154         # __init__ being called, to make sure we don't call it
155         # again ourselves.
156         dict = object.__getattribute__(self, '__dict__')
157         currentThread().__dict__[key] = dict
158
159         return self
160
161 def _patch(self):
162     key = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__key')
163     d = currentThread().__dict__.get(key)
164     if d is None:
165         d = {}
166         currentThread().__dict__[key] = d
167         object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d)
168
169         # we have a new instance dict, so call out __init__ if we have
170         # one
171         cls = type(self)
172         if cls.__init__ is not object.__init__:
173             args, kw = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__args')
174             cls.__init__(self, *args, **kw)
175     else:
176         object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d)
177
178 class local(_localbase):
179
180     def __getattribute__(self, name):
181         lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
182         lock.acquire()
183         try:
184             _patch(self)
185             return object.__getattribute__(self, name)
186         finally:
187             lock.release()
188
189     def __setattr__(self, name, value):
190         lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
191         lock.acquire()
192         try:
193             _patch(self)
194             return object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
195         finally:
196             lock.release()
197
198     def __delattr__(self, name):
199         lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
200         lock.acquire()
201         try:
202             _patch(self)
203             return object.__delattr__(self, name)
204         finally:
205             lock.release()
206
207
208     def __del__():
209         threading_enumerate = enumerate
210         __getattribute__ = object.__getattribute__
211
212         def __del__(self):
213             key = __getattribute__(self, '_local__key')
214
215             try:
216                 threads = list(threading_enumerate())
217             except:
218                 # if enumerate fails, as it seems to do during
219                 # shutdown, we'll skip cleanup under the assumption
220                 # that there is nothing to clean up
221                 return
222
223             for thread in threads:
224                 try:
225                     __dict__ = thread.__dict__
226                 except AttributeError:
227                     # Thread is dying, rest in peace
228                     continue
229
230                 if key in __dict__:
231                     try:
232                         del __dict__[key]
233                     except KeyError:
234                         pass # didn't have anything in this thread
235
236         return __del__
237     __del__ = __del__()
238
239 from threading import currentThread, enumerate, RLock
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