Allow Handlers as callbacks. Add EventLoop.close().

This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 2013-01-08 19:39:28 -08:00
parent b9c08eaf8f
commit b7ec592492
1 changed files with 37 additions and 25 deletions

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@ -148,10 +148,18 @@ loop per thread.
Event Loop Interface
--------------------
(A note about times: as usual in Python, all timeouts, intervals and
A note about times: as usual in Python, all timeouts, intervals and
delays are measured in seconds, and may be ints or floats. The
accuracy and precision of the clock are up to the implementation; the
default implementation uses ``time.monotonic()``.)
default implementation uses ``time.monotonic()``.
A note about callbacks and Handlers: any function that takes a
callback and a variable number of arguments for it can also be given a
Handler object instead of the callback. Then no arguments should be
given, and the Handler should represent an immediate callback (as
returned from ``call_soon()``), not a delayed callback (as returned
from ``call_later()``). If the Handler is already cancelled, the
call is a no-op.
A conforming event loop object has the following methods:
@ -173,15 +181,6 @@ A conforming event loop object has the following methods:
TBD: How many variants of this do we really need?
- ``stop()``. Stops the event loop as soon as it is convenient. It
is fine to restart the loop with ``run()`` (or one of its variants)
subsequently.
Note: How soon exactly is up to the implementation. All immediate
callbacks that were already scheduled to run before ``stop()`` is
called must still be run, but callbacks scheduled after it is called
(or scheduled to be run later) will not be run.
- ``run_forever()``. Runs the event loop until ``stop()`` is called.
- ``run_until_complete(future, timeout=None)``. Runs the event loop
@ -205,6 +204,20 @@ A conforming event loop object has the following methods:
``call_soon()``, causing an infinite loop, ``run_once()`` should
still return.
- ``stop()``. Stops the event loop as soon as it is convenient. It
is fine to restart the loop with ``run()`` (or one of its variants)
subsequently.
Note: How soon exactly is up to the implementation. All immediate
callbacks that were already scheduled to run before ``stop()`` is
called must still be run, but callbacks scheduled after it is called
(or scheduled to be run later) will not be run.
- ``close()``. Closes the event loop, releasing any resources it may
hold, such as the file descriptor used by ``epoll()`` or
``kqueue()``. This should not be called while the event loop is
running. It may be called multiple times.
- ``call_later(delay, callback, *args)``. Arrange for
``callback(*args)`` to be called approximately ``delay`` seconds in
the future, once, unless cancelled. Returns
@ -232,24 +245,25 @@ A conforming event loop object has the following methods:
- ``add_signal_handler(sig, callback, *args). Whenever signal ``sig``
is received, arrange for ``callback(*args)`` to be called. Returns
a ``Handler`` which can be used to cancel the signal callback.
(Cancelling the handler causes ``remove_signal_handler()`` to be
called the next time the signal arrives. Explicitly calling
``remove_signal_handler()`` is preferred.)
Specifying another callback for the same signal replaces the
previous handler (only one handler can be active per signal). The
``sig`` must be a valid sigal number defined in the ``signal``
module. If the signal cannot be handled this raises an exception:
ValueError if it is not a valid signal or if it is an uncatchable
signale (e.g. ``SIGKILL``), RuntimeError if this particular event
``ValueError`` if it is not a valid signal or if it is an uncatchable
signale (e.g. ``SIGKILL``), ``RuntimeError`` if this particular event
loop instance cannot handle signals (since signals are global per
process, only an event loop associated with the main thread can
handle signals).
- ``remove_signal_handler(sig)``. Removes the handler for signal
``sig``, if one is set. Raises the same exceptions as
``add_signal_handler()``.
- TBD: A way to register a callback that is already wrapped in a
``Handler``. Maybe ``call_soon()`` could just check
``isinstance(callback, Handler)``? It should silently skip
a cancelled callback.
``add_signal_handler()`` (except that it may return ``False``
instead raising ``RuntimeError`` for uncatchable signals). Returns
``True``e\ if a handler was removed successfully, ``False`` if no
handler was set.
Some methods in the standard conforming interface return Futures:
@ -257,15 +271,13 @@ Some methods in the standard conforming interface return Futures:
instance of ``concurrent.futures.Future``) and returns a Future
compatible with the event loop (i.e., a ``tulip.Future`` instance).
- ``run_in_executor(executor, function, *args)``. Arrange to call
``function(*args)`` in an executor (see PEP 3148). Returns a Future
- ``run_in_executor(executor, callback, *args)``. Arrange to call
``callback(*args)`` in an executor (see PEP 3148). Returns a Future
whose result on success is the return value that call. This is
equivalent to ``wrap_future(executor.submit(function, *args))``. If
equivalent to ``wrap_future(executor.submit(callback, *args))``. If
``executor`` is ``None``, a default ``ThreadPoolExecutor`` with 5
threads is used. (TBD: Should the default executor be shared
between different event loops? Should we even have a default
executor? Should be be able to set its thread count? Shoul we even
have this method?)
between different event loops?)
- ``set_default_executor(executor)``. Set the default executor used
by ``run_in_executor()``.