[2] | 1 | # Defines classes that provide synchronization objects. Note that use of
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| 2 | # this module requires that your Python support threads.
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| 3 | #
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| 4 | # condition(lock=None) # a POSIX-like condition-variable object
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| 5 | # barrier(n) # an n-thread barrier
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| 6 | # event() # an event object
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| 7 | # semaphore(n=1) # a semaphore object, with initial count n
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| 8 | # mrsw() # a multiple-reader single-writer lock
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| 9 | #
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| 10 | # CONDITIONS
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| 11 | #
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| 12 | # A condition object is created via
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| 13 | # import this_module
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| 14 | # your_condition_object = this_module.condition(lock=None)
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| 15 | #
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| 16 | # As explained below, a condition object has a lock associated with it,
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| 17 | # used in the protocol to protect condition data. You can specify a
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| 18 | # lock to use in the constructor, else the constructor will allocate
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| 19 | # an anonymous lock for you. Specifying a lock explicitly can be useful
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| 20 | # when more than one condition keys off the same set of shared data.
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| 21 | #
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| 22 | # Methods:
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| 23 | # .acquire()
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| 24 | # acquire the lock associated with the condition
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| 25 | # .release()
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| 26 | # release the lock associated with the condition
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| 27 | # .wait()
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| 28 | # block the thread until such time as some other thread does a
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| 29 | # .signal or .broadcast on the same condition, and release the
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| 30 | # lock associated with the condition. The lock associated with
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| 31 | # the condition MUST be in the acquired state at the time
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| 32 | # .wait is invoked.
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| 33 | # .signal()
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| 34 | # wake up exactly one thread (if any) that previously did a .wait
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| 35 | # on the condition; that thread will awaken with the lock associated
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| 36 | # with the condition in the acquired state. If no threads are
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| 37 | # .wait'ing, this is a nop. If more than one thread is .wait'ing on
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| 38 | # the condition, any of them may be awakened.
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| 39 | # .broadcast()
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| 40 | # wake up all threads (if any) that are .wait'ing on the condition;
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| 41 | # the threads are woken up serially, each with the lock in the
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| 42 | # acquired state, so should .release() as soon as possible. If no
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| 43 | # threads are .wait'ing, this is a nop.
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| 44 | #
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| 45 | # Note that if a thread does a .wait *while* a signal/broadcast is
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| 46 | # in progress, it's guaranteeed to block until a subsequent
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| 47 | # signal/broadcast.
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| 48 | #
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| 49 | # Secret feature: `broadcast' actually takes an integer argument,
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| 50 | # and will wake up exactly that many waiting threads (or the total
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| 51 | # number waiting, if that's less). Use of this is dubious, though,
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| 52 | # and probably won't be supported if this form of condition is
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| 53 | # reimplemented in C.
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| 54 | #
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| 55 | # DIFFERENCES FROM POSIX
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| 56 | #
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| 57 | # + A separate mutex is not needed to guard condition data. Instead, a
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| 58 | # condition object can (must) be .acquire'ed and .release'ed directly.
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| 59 | # This eliminates a common error in using POSIX conditions.
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| 60 | #
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| 61 | # + Because of implementation difficulties, a POSIX `signal' wakes up
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| 62 | # _at least_ one .wait'ing thread. Race conditions make it difficult
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| 63 | # to stop that. This implementation guarantees to wake up only one,
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| 64 | # but you probably shouldn't rely on that.
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| 65 | #
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| 66 | # PROTOCOL
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| 67 | #
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| 68 | # Condition objects are used to block threads until "some condition" is
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| 69 | # true. E.g., a thread may wish to wait until a producer pumps out data
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| 70 | # for it to consume, or a server may wish to wait until someone requests
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| 71 | # its services, or perhaps a whole bunch of threads want to wait until a
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| 72 | # preceding pass over the data is complete. Early models for conditions
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| 73 | # relied on some other thread figuring out when a blocked thread's
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| 74 | # condition was true, and made the other thread responsible both for
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| 75 | # waking up the blocked thread and guaranteeing that it woke up with all
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| 76 | # data in a correct state. This proved to be very delicate in practice,
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| 77 | # and gave conditions a bad name in some circles.
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| 78 | #
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| 79 | # The POSIX model addresses these problems by making a thread responsible
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| 80 | # for ensuring that its own state is correct when it wakes, and relies
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| 81 | # on a rigid protocol to make this easy; so long as you stick to the
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| 82 | # protocol, POSIX conditions are easy to "get right":
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| 83 | #
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| 84 | # A) The thread that's waiting for some arbitrarily-complex condition
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| 85 | # (ACC) to become true does:
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| 86 | #
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| 87 | # condition.acquire()
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| 88 | # while not (code to evaluate the ACC):
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| 89 | # condition.wait()
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| 90 | # # That blocks the thread, *and* releases the lock. When a
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| 91 | # # condition.signal() happens, it will wake up some thread that
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| 92 | # # did a .wait, *and* acquire the lock again before .wait
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| 93 | # # returns.
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| 94 | # #
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| 95 | # # Because the lock is acquired at this point, the state used
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| 96 | # # in evaluating the ACC is frozen, so it's safe to go back &
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| 97 | # # reevaluate the ACC.
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| 98 | #
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| 99 | # # At this point, ACC is true, and the thread has the condition
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| 100 | # # locked.
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| 101 | # # So code here can safely muck with the shared state that
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| 102 | # # went into evaluating the ACC -- if it wants to.
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| 103 | # # When done mucking with the shared state, do
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| 104 | # condition.release()
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| 105 | #
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| 106 | # B) Threads that are mucking with shared state that may affect the
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| 107 | # ACC do:
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| 108 | #
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| 109 | # condition.acquire()
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| 110 | # # muck with shared state
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| 111 | # condition.release()
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| 112 | # if it's possible that ACC is true now:
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| 113 | # condition.signal() # or .broadcast()
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| 114 | #
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| 115 | # Note: You may prefer to put the "if" clause before the release().
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| 116 | # That's fine, but do note that anyone waiting on the signal will
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| 117 | # stay blocked until the release() is done (since acquiring the
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| 118 | # condition is part of what .wait() does before it returns).
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| 119 | #
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| 120 | # TRICK OF THE TRADE
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| 121 | #
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| 122 | # With simpler forms of conditions, it can be impossible to know when
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| 123 | # a thread that's supposed to do a .wait has actually done it. But
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| 124 | # because this form of condition releases a lock as _part_ of doing a
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| 125 | # wait, the state of that lock can be used to guarantee it.
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| 126 | #
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| 127 | # E.g., suppose thread A spawns thread B and later wants to wait for B to
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| 128 | # complete:
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| 129 | #
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| 130 | # In A: In B:
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| 131 | #
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| 132 | # B_done = condition() ... do work ...
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| 133 | # B_done.acquire() B_done.acquire(); B_done.release()
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| 134 | # spawn B B_done.signal()
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| 135 | # ... some time later ... ... and B exits ...
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| 136 | # B_done.wait()
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| 137 | #
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| 138 | # Because B_done was in the acquire'd state at the time B was spawned,
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| 139 | # B's attempt to acquire B_done can't succeed until A has done its
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| 140 | # B_done.wait() (which releases B_done). So B's B_done.signal() is
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| 141 | # guaranteed to be seen by the .wait(). Without the lock trick, B
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| 142 | # may signal before A .waits, and then A would wait forever.
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| 143 | #
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| 144 | # BARRIERS
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| 145 | #
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| 146 | # A barrier object is created via
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| 147 | # import this_module
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| 148 | # your_barrier = this_module.barrier(num_threads)
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| 149 | #
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| 150 | # Methods:
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| 151 | # .enter()
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| 152 | # the thread blocks until num_threads threads in all have done
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| 153 | # .enter(). Then the num_threads threads that .enter'ed resume,
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| 154 | # and the barrier resets to capture the next num_threads threads
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| 155 | # that .enter it.
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| 156 | #
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| 157 | # EVENTS
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| 158 | #
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| 159 | # An event object is created via
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| 160 | # import this_module
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| 161 | # your_event = this_module.event()
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| 162 | #
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| 163 | # An event has two states, `posted' and `cleared'. An event is
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| 164 | # created in the cleared state.
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| 165 | #
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| 166 | # Methods:
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| 167 | #
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| 168 | # .post()
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| 169 | # Put the event in the posted state, and resume all threads
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| 170 | # .wait'ing on the event (if any).
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| 171 | #
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| 172 | # .clear()
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| 173 | # Put the event in the cleared state.
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| 174 | #
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| 175 | # .is_posted()
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| 176 | # Returns 0 if the event is in the cleared state, or 1 if the event
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| 177 | # is in the posted state.
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| 178 | #
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| 179 | # .wait()
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| 180 | # If the event is in the posted state, returns immediately.
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| 181 | # If the event is in the cleared state, blocks the calling thread
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| 182 | # until the event is .post'ed by another thread.
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| 183 | #
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| 184 | # Note that an event, once posted, remains posted until explicitly
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| 185 | # cleared. Relative to conditions, this is both the strength & weakness
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| 186 | # of events. It's a strength because the .post'ing thread doesn't have to
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| 187 | # worry about whether the threads it's trying to communicate with have
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| 188 | # already done a .wait (a condition .signal is seen only by threads that
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| 189 | # do a .wait _prior_ to the .signal; a .signal does not persist). But
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| 190 | # it's a weakness because .clear'ing an event is error-prone: it's easy
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| 191 | # to mistakenly .clear an event before all the threads you intended to
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| 192 | # see the event get around to .wait'ing on it. But so long as you don't
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| 193 | # need to .clear an event, events are easy to use safely.
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| 194 | #
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| 195 | # SEMAPHORES
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| 196 | #
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| 197 | # A semaphore object is created via
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| 198 | # import this_module
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| 199 | # your_semaphore = this_module.semaphore(count=1)
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| 200 | #
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| 201 | # A semaphore has an integer count associated with it. The initial value
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| 202 | # of the count is specified by the optional argument (which defaults to
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| 203 | # 1) passed to the semaphore constructor.
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| 204 | #
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| 205 | # Methods:
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| 206 | #
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| 207 | # .p()
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| 208 | # If the semaphore's count is greater than 0, decrements the count
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| 209 | # by 1 and returns.
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| 210 | # Else if the semaphore's count is 0, blocks the calling thread
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| 211 | # until a subsequent .v() increases the count. When that happens,
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| 212 | # the count will be decremented by 1 and the calling thread resumed.
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| 213 | #
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| 214 | # .v()
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| 215 | # Increments the semaphore's count by 1, and wakes up a thread (if
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| 216 | # any) blocked by a .p(). It's an (detected) error for a .v() to
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| 217 | # increase the semaphore's count to a value larger than the initial
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| 218 | # count.
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| 219 | #
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| 220 | # MULTIPLE-READER SINGLE-WRITER LOCKS
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| 221 | #
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| 222 | # A mrsw lock is created via
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| 223 | # import this_module
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| 224 | # your_mrsw_lock = this_module.mrsw()
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| 225 | #
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| 226 | # This kind of lock is often useful with complex shared data structures.
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| 227 | # The object lets any number of "readers" proceed, so long as no thread
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| 228 | # wishes to "write". When a (one or more) thread declares its intention
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| 229 | # to "write" (e.g., to update a shared structure), all current readers
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| 230 | # are allowed to finish, and then a writer gets exclusive access; all
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| 231 | # other readers & writers are blocked until the current writer completes.
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| 232 | # Finally, if some thread is waiting to write and another is waiting to
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| 233 | # read, the writer takes precedence.
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| 234 | #
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| 235 | # Methods:
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| 236 | #
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| 237 | # .read_in()
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| 238 | # If no thread is writing or waiting to write, returns immediately.
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| 239 | # Else blocks until no thread is writing or waiting to write. So
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| 240 | # long as some thread has completed a .read_in but not a .read_out,
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| 241 | # writers are blocked.
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| 242 | #
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| 243 | # .read_out()
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| 244 | # Use sometime after a .read_in to declare that the thread is done
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| 245 | # reading. When all threads complete reading, a writer can proceed.
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| 246 | #
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| 247 | # .write_in()
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| 248 | # If no thread is writing (has completed a .write_in, but hasn't yet
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| 249 | # done a .write_out) or reading (similarly), returns immediately.
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| 250 | # Else blocks the calling thread, and threads waiting to read, until
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| 251 | # the current writer completes writing or all the current readers
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| 252 | # complete reading; if then more than one thread is waiting to
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| 253 | # write, one of them is allowed to proceed, but which one is not
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| 254 | # specified.
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| 255 | #
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| 256 | # .write_out()
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| 257 | # Use sometime after a .write_in to declare that the thread is done
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| 258 | # writing. Then if some other thread is waiting to write, it's
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| 259 | # allowed to proceed. Else all threads (if any) waiting to read are
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| 260 | # allowed to proceed.
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| 261 | #
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| 262 | # .write_to_read()
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| 263 | # Use instead of a .write_in to declare that the thread is done
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| 264 | # writing but wants to continue reading without other writers
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| 265 | # intervening. If there are other threads waiting to write, they
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| 266 | # are allowed to proceed only if the current thread calls
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| 267 | # .read_out; threads waiting to read are only allowed to proceed
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[391] | 268 | # if there are no threads waiting to write. (This is a
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[2] | 269 | # weakness of the interface!)
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| 270 |
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| 271 | import thread
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| 272 |
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| 273 | class condition:
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| 274 | def __init__(self, lock=None):
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| 275 | # the lock actually used by .acquire() and .release()
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| 276 | if lock is None:
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| 277 | self.mutex = thread.allocate_lock()
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| 278 | else:
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| 279 | if hasattr(lock, 'acquire') and \
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| 280 | hasattr(lock, 'release'):
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| 281 | self.mutex = lock
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| 282 | else:
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| 283 | raise TypeError, 'condition constructor requires ' \
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| 284 | 'a lock argument'
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| 285 |
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| 286 | # lock used to block threads until a signal
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| 287 | self.checkout = thread.allocate_lock()
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| 288 | self.checkout.acquire()
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| 289 |
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| 290 | # internal critical-section lock, & the data it protects
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| 291 | self.idlock = thread.allocate_lock()
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| 292 | self.id = 0
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| 293 | self.waiting = 0 # num waiters subject to current release
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| 294 | self.pending = 0 # num waiters awaiting next signal
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| 295 | self.torelease = 0 # num waiters to release
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| 296 | self.releasing = 0 # 1 iff release is in progress
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| 297 |
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| 298 | def acquire(self):
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| 299 | self.mutex.acquire()
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| 300 |
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| 301 | def release(self):
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| 302 | self.mutex.release()
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| 303 |
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| 304 | def wait(self):
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| 305 | mutex, checkout, idlock = self.mutex, self.checkout, self.idlock
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| 306 | if not mutex.locked():
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| 307 | raise ValueError, \
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| 308 | "condition must be .acquire'd when .wait() invoked"
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| 309 |
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| 310 | idlock.acquire()
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| 311 | myid = self.id
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| 312 | self.pending = self.pending + 1
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| 313 | idlock.release()
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| 314 |
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| 315 | mutex.release()
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| 316 |
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| 317 | while 1:
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| 318 | checkout.acquire(); idlock.acquire()
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| 319 | if myid < self.id:
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| 320 | break
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| 321 | checkout.release(); idlock.release()
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| 322 |
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| 323 | self.waiting = self.waiting - 1
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| 324 | self.torelease = self.torelease - 1
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| 325 | if self.torelease:
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| 326 | checkout.release()
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| 327 | else:
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| 328 | self.releasing = 0
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| 329 | if self.waiting == self.pending == 0:
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| 330 | self.id = 0
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| 331 | idlock.release()
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| 332 | mutex.acquire()
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| 333 |
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| 334 | def signal(self):
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| 335 | self.broadcast(1)
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| 336 |
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| 337 | def broadcast(self, num = -1):
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| 338 | if num < -1:
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| 339 | raise ValueError, '.broadcast called with num %r' % (num,)
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| 340 | if num == 0:
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| 341 | return
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| 342 | self.idlock.acquire()
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| 343 | if self.pending:
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| 344 | self.waiting = self.waiting + self.pending
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| 345 | self.pending = 0
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| 346 | self.id = self.id + 1
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| 347 | if num == -1:
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| 348 | self.torelease = self.waiting
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| 349 | else:
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| 350 | self.torelease = min( self.waiting,
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| 351 | self.torelease + num )
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| 352 | if self.torelease and not self.releasing:
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| 353 | self.releasing = 1
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| 354 | self.checkout.release()
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| 355 | self.idlock.release()
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| 356 |
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| 357 | class barrier:
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| 358 | def __init__(self, n):
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| 359 | self.n = n
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| 360 | self.togo = n
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| 361 | self.full = condition()
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| 362 |
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| 363 | def enter(self):
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| 364 | full = self.full
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| 365 | full.acquire()
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| 366 | self.togo = self.togo - 1
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| 367 | if self.togo:
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| 368 | full.wait()
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| 369 | else:
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| 370 | self.togo = self.n
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| 371 | full.broadcast()
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| 372 | full.release()
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| 373 |
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| 374 | class event:
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| 375 | def __init__(self):
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| 376 | self.state = 0
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| 377 | self.posted = condition()
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| 378 |
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| 379 | def post(self):
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| 380 | self.posted.acquire()
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| 381 | self.state = 1
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| 382 | self.posted.broadcast()
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| 383 | self.posted.release()
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| 384 |
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| 385 | def clear(self):
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| 386 | self.posted.acquire()
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| 387 | self.state = 0
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| 388 | self.posted.release()
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| 389 |
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| 390 | def is_posted(self):
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| 391 | self.posted.acquire()
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| 392 | answer = self.state
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| 393 | self.posted.release()
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| 394 | return answer
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| 395 |
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| 396 | def wait(self):
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| 397 | self.posted.acquire()
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| 398 | if not self.state:
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| 399 | self.posted.wait()
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| 400 | self.posted.release()
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| 401 |
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| 402 | class semaphore:
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| 403 | def __init__(self, count=1):
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| 404 | if count <= 0:
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| 405 | raise ValueError, 'semaphore count %d; must be >= 1' % count
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| 406 | self.count = count
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| 407 | self.maxcount = count
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| 408 | self.nonzero = condition()
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| 409 |
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| 410 | def p(self):
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| 411 | self.nonzero.acquire()
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| 412 | while self.count == 0:
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| 413 | self.nonzero.wait()
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| 414 | self.count = self.count - 1
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| 415 | self.nonzero.release()
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| 416 |
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| 417 | def v(self):
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| 418 | self.nonzero.acquire()
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| 419 | if self.count == self.maxcount:
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| 420 | raise ValueError, '.v() tried to raise semaphore count above ' \
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| 421 | 'initial value %r' % self.maxcount
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| 422 | self.count = self.count + 1
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| 423 | self.nonzero.signal()
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| 424 | self.nonzero.release()
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| 425 |
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| 426 | class mrsw:
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| 427 | def __init__(self):
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| 428 | # critical-section lock & the data it protects
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| 429 | self.rwOK = thread.allocate_lock()
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| 430 | self.nr = 0 # number readers actively reading (not just waiting)
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| 431 | self.nw = 0 # number writers either waiting to write or writing
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| 432 | self.writing = 0 # 1 iff some thread is writing
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| 433 |
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| 434 | # conditions
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| 435 | self.readOK = condition(self.rwOK) # OK to unblock readers
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| 436 | self.writeOK = condition(self.rwOK) # OK to unblock writers
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| 437 |
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| 438 | def read_in(self):
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| 439 | self.rwOK.acquire()
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| 440 | while self.nw:
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| 441 | self.readOK.wait()
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| 442 | self.nr = self.nr + 1
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| 443 | self.rwOK.release()
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| 444 |
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| 445 | def read_out(self):
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| 446 | self.rwOK.acquire()
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| 447 | if self.nr <= 0:
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| 448 | raise ValueError, \
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| 449 | '.read_out() invoked without an active reader'
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| 450 | self.nr = self.nr - 1
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| 451 | if self.nr == 0:
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| 452 | self.writeOK.signal()
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| 453 | self.rwOK.release()
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| 454 |
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| 455 | def write_in(self):
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| 456 | self.rwOK.acquire()
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| 457 | self.nw = self.nw + 1
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| 458 | while self.writing or self.nr:
|
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| 459 | self.writeOK.wait()
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| 460 | self.writing = 1
|
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| 461 | self.rwOK.release()
|
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| 462 |
|
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| 463 | def write_out(self):
|
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| 464 | self.rwOK.acquire()
|
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| 465 | if not self.writing:
|
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| 466 | raise ValueError, \
|
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| 467 | '.write_out() invoked without an active writer'
|
---|
| 468 | self.writing = 0
|
---|
| 469 | self.nw = self.nw - 1
|
---|
| 470 | if self.nw:
|
---|
| 471 | self.writeOK.signal()
|
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| 472 | else:
|
---|
| 473 | self.readOK.broadcast()
|
---|
| 474 | self.rwOK.release()
|
---|
| 475 |
|
---|
| 476 | def write_to_read(self):
|
---|
| 477 | self.rwOK.acquire()
|
---|
| 478 | if not self.writing:
|
---|
| 479 | raise ValueError, \
|
---|
| 480 | '.write_to_read() invoked without an active writer'
|
---|
| 481 | self.writing = 0
|
---|
| 482 | self.nw = self.nw - 1
|
---|
| 483 | self.nr = self.nr + 1
|
---|
| 484 | if not self.nw:
|
---|
| 485 | self.readOK.broadcast()
|
---|
| 486 | self.rwOK.release()
|
---|
| 487 |
|
---|
| 488 | # The rest of the file is a test case, that runs a number of parallelized
|
---|
| 489 | # quicksorts in parallel. If it works, you'll get about 600 lines of
|
---|
| 490 | # tracing output, with a line like
|
---|
| 491 | # test passed! 209 threads created in all
|
---|
| 492 | # as the last line. The content and order of preceding lines will
|
---|
| 493 | # vary across runs.
|
---|
| 494 |
|
---|
| 495 | def _new_thread(func, *args):
|
---|
| 496 | global TID
|
---|
| 497 | tid.acquire(); id = TID = TID+1; tid.release()
|
---|
| 498 | io.acquire(); alive.append(id); \
|
---|
| 499 | print 'starting thread', id, '--', len(alive), 'alive'; \
|
---|
| 500 | io.release()
|
---|
| 501 | thread.start_new_thread( func, (id,) + args )
|
---|
| 502 |
|
---|
| 503 | def _qsort(tid, a, l, r, finished):
|
---|
| 504 | # sort a[l:r]; post finished when done
|
---|
| 505 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'qsort', l, r; io.release()
|
---|
| 506 | if r-l > 1:
|
---|
| 507 | pivot = a[l]
|
---|
| 508 | j = l+1 # make a[l:j] <= pivot, and a[j:r] > pivot
|
---|
| 509 | for i in range(j, r):
|
---|
| 510 | if a[i] <= pivot:
|
---|
| 511 | a[j], a[i] = a[i], a[j]
|
---|
| 512 | j = j + 1
|
---|
| 513 | a[l], a[j-1] = a[j-1], pivot
|
---|
| 514 |
|
---|
| 515 | l_subarray_sorted = event()
|
---|
| 516 | r_subarray_sorted = event()
|
---|
| 517 | _new_thread(_qsort, a, l, j-1, l_subarray_sorted)
|
---|
| 518 | _new_thread(_qsort, a, j, r, r_subarray_sorted)
|
---|
| 519 | l_subarray_sorted.wait()
|
---|
| 520 | r_subarray_sorted.wait()
|
---|
| 521 |
|
---|
| 522 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'qsort done'; \
|
---|
| 523 | alive.remove(tid); io.release()
|
---|
| 524 | finished.post()
|
---|
| 525 |
|
---|
| 526 | def _randarray(tid, a, finished):
|
---|
| 527 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'randomizing array'; \
|
---|
| 528 | io.release()
|
---|
| 529 | for i in range(1, len(a)):
|
---|
| 530 | wh.acquire(); j = randint(0,i); wh.release()
|
---|
| 531 | a[i], a[j] = a[j], a[i]
|
---|
| 532 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'randomizing done'; \
|
---|
| 533 | alive.remove(tid); io.release()
|
---|
| 534 | finished.post()
|
---|
| 535 |
|
---|
| 536 | def _check_sort(a):
|
---|
| 537 | if a != range(len(a)):
|
---|
| 538 | raise ValueError, ('a not sorted', a)
|
---|
| 539 |
|
---|
| 540 | def _run_one_sort(tid, a, bar, done):
|
---|
| 541 | # randomize a, and quicksort it
|
---|
| 542 | # for variety, all the threads running this enter a barrier
|
---|
| 543 | # at the end, and post `done' after the barrier exits
|
---|
| 544 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'randomizing', a; \
|
---|
| 545 | io.release()
|
---|
| 546 | finished = event()
|
---|
| 547 | _new_thread(_randarray, a, finished)
|
---|
| 548 | finished.wait()
|
---|
| 549 |
|
---|
| 550 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'sorting', a; io.release()
|
---|
| 551 | finished.clear()
|
---|
| 552 | _new_thread(_qsort, a, 0, len(a), finished)
|
---|
| 553 | finished.wait()
|
---|
| 554 | _check_sort(a)
|
---|
| 555 |
|
---|
| 556 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'entering barrier'; \
|
---|
| 557 | io.release()
|
---|
| 558 | bar.enter()
|
---|
| 559 | io.acquire(); print 'thread', tid, 'leaving barrier'; \
|
---|
| 560 | io.release()
|
---|
| 561 | io.acquire(); alive.remove(tid); io.release()
|
---|
| 562 | bar.enter() # make sure they've all removed themselves from alive
|
---|
| 563 | ## before 'done' is posted
|
---|
| 564 | bar.enter() # just to be cruel
|
---|
| 565 | done.post()
|
---|
| 566 |
|
---|
| 567 | def test():
|
---|
| 568 | global TID, tid, io, wh, randint, alive
|
---|
| 569 | import random
|
---|
| 570 | randint = random.randint
|
---|
| 571 |
|
---|
| 572 | TID = 0 # thread ID (1, 2, ...)
|
---|
| 573 | tid = thread.allocate_lock() # for changing TID
|
---|
| 574 | io = thread.allocate_lock() # for printing, and 'alive'
|
---|
| 575 | wh = thread.allocate_lock() # for calls to random
|
---|
| 576 | alive = [] # IDs of active threads
|
---|
| 577 |
|
---|
| 578 | NSORTS = 5
|
---|
| 579 | arrays = []
|
---|
| 580 | for i in range(NSORTS):
|
---|
| 581 | arrays.append( range( (i+1)*10 ) )
|
---|
| 582 |
|
---|
| 583 | bar = barrier(NSORTS)
|
---|
| 584 | finished = event()
|
---|
| 585 | for i in range(NSORTS):
|
---|
| 586 | _new_thread(_run_one_sort, arrays[i], bar, finished)
|
---|
| 587 | finished.wait()
|
---|
| 588 |
|
---|
| 589 | print 'all threads done, and checking results ...'
|
---|
| 590 | if alive:
|
---|
| 591 | raise ValueError, ('threads still alive at end', alive)
|
---|
| 592 | for i in range(NSORTS):
|
---|
| 593 | a = arrays[i]
|
---|
| 594 | if len(a) != (i+1)*10:
|
---|
| 595 | raise ValueError, ('length of array', i, 'screwed up')
|
---|
| 596 | _check_sort(a)
|
---|
| 597 |
|
---|
| 598 | print 'test passed!', TID, 'threads created in all'
|
---|
| 599 |
|
---|
| 600 | if __name__ == '__main__':
|
---|
| 601 | test()
|
---|
| 602 |
|
---|
| 603 | # end of module
|
---|