blob: 7658ebb4b1ee2af83b2fee59d3b5d1568f641cb1 [file] [log] [blame]
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +00001
2:mod:`threading` --- Higher-level threading interface
3=====================================================
4
5.. module:: threading
6 :synopsis: Higher-level threading interface.
7
8
9This module constructs higher-level threading interfaces on top of the lower
10level :mod:`thread` module.
Georg Brandl7a148c22008-05-12 10:03:16 +000011See also the :mod:`mutex` and :mod:`queue` modules.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000012
13The :mod:`dummy_threading` module is provided for situations where
14:mod:`threading` cannot be used because :mod:`thread` is missing.
15
16This module defines the following functions and objects:
17
18
19.. function:: activeCount()
20
21 Return the number of :class:`Thread` objects currently alive. The returned
22 count is equal to the length of the list returned by :func:`enumerate`.
23
24
25.. function:: Condition()
26 :noindex:
27
28 A factory function that returns a new condition variable object. A condition
29 variable allows one or more threads to wait until they are notified by another
30 thread.
31
32
33.. function:: currentThread()
34
35 Return the current :class:`Thread` object, corresponding to the caller's thread
36 of control. If the caller's thread of control was not created through the
37 :mod:`threading` module, a dummy thread object with limited functionality is
38 returned.
39
40
41.. function:: enumerate()
42
43 Return a list of all :class:`Thread` objects currently alive. The list includes
44 daemonic threads, dummy thread objects created by :func:`currentThread`, and the
45 main thread. It excludes terminated threads and threads that have not yet been
46 started.
47
48
49.. function:: Event()
50 :noindex:
51
52 A factory function that returns a new event object. An event manages a flag
53 that can be set to true with the :meth:`set` method and reset to false with the
54 :meth:`clear` method. The :meth:`wait` method blocks until the flag is true.
55
56
57.. class:: local
58
59 A class that represents thread-local data. Thread-local data are data whose
60 values are thread specific. To manage thread-local data, just create an
61 instance of :class:`local` (or a subclass) and store attributes on it::
62
63 mydata = threading.local()
64 mydata.x = 1
65
66 The instance's values will be different for separate threads.
67
68 For more details and extensive examples, see the documentation string of the
69 :mod:`_threading_local` module.
70
71 .. versionadded:: 2.4
72
73
74.. function:: Lock()
75
76 A factory function that returns a new primitive lock object. Once a thread has
77 acquired it, subsequent attempts to acquire it block, until it is released; any
78 thread may release it.
79
80
81.. function:: RLock()
82
83 A factory function that returns a new reentrant lock object. A reentrant lock
84 must be released by the thread that acquired it. Once a thread has acquired a
85 reentrant lock, the same thread may acquire it again without blocking; the
86 thread must release it once for each time it has acquired it.
87
88
89.. function:: Semaphore([value])
90 :noindex:
91
92 A factory function that returns a new semaphore object. A semaphore manages a
93 counter representing the number of :meth:`release` calls minus the number of
94 :meth:`acquire` calls, plus an initial value. The :meth:`acquire` method blocks
95 if necessary until it can return without making the counter negative. If not
96 given, *value* defaults to 1.
97
98
99.. function:: BoundedSemaphore([value])
100
101 A factory function that returns a new bounded semaphore object. A bounded
102 semaphore checks to make sure its current value doesn't exceed its initial
103 value. If it does, :exc:`ValueError` is raised. In most situations semaphores
104 are used to guard resources with limited capacity. If the semaphore is released
105 too many times it's a sign of a bug. If not given, *value* defaults to 1.
106
107
108.. class:: Thread
109
110 A class that represents a thread of control. This class can be safely
111 subclassed in a limited fashion.
112
113
114.. class:: Timer
115
116 A thread that executes a function after a specified interval has passed.
117
118
119.. function:: settrace(func)
120
121 .. index:: single: trace function
122
123 Set a trace function for all threads started from the :mod:`threading` module.
124 The *func* will be passed to :func:`sys.settrace` for each thread, before its
125 :meth:`run` method is called.
126
127 .. versionadded:: 2.3
128
129
130.. function:: setprofile(func)
131
132 .. index:: single: profile function
133
134 Set a profile function for all threads started from the :mod:`threading` module.
135 The *func* will be passed to :func:`sys.setprofile` for each thread, before its
136 :meth:`run` method is called.
137
138 .. versionadded:: 2.3
139
140
141.. function:: stack_size([size])
142
143 Return the thread stack size used when creating new threads. The optional
144 *size* argument specifies the stack size to be used for subsequently created
145 threads, and must be 0 (use platform or configured default) or a positive
146 integer value of at least 32,768 (32kB). If changing the thread stack size is
147 unsupported, a :exc:`ThreadError` is raised. If the specified stack size is
148 invalid, a :exc:`ValueError` is raised and the stack size is unmodified. 32kB
149 is currently the minimum supported stack size value to guarantee sufficient
150 stack space for the interpreter itself. Note that some platforms may have
151 particular restrictions on values for the stack size, such as requiring a
152 minimum stack size > 32kB or requiring allocation in multiples of the system
153 memory page size - platform documentation should be referred to for more
154 information (4kB pages are common; using multiples of 4096 for the stack size is
155 the suggested approach in the absence of more specific information).
156 Availability: Windows, systems with POSIX threads.
157
158 .. versionadded:: 2.5
159
160Detailed interfaces for the objects are documented below.
161
162The design of this module is loosely based on Java's threading model. However,
163where Java makes locks and condition variables basic behavior of every object,
164they are separate objects in Python. Python's :class:`Thread` class supports a
165subset of the behavior of Java's Thread class; currently, there are no
166priorities, no thread groups, and threads cannot be destroyed, stopped,
167suspended, resumed, or interrupted. The static methods of Java's Thread class,
168when implemented, are mapped to module-level functions.
169
170All of the methods described below are executed atomically.
171
172
173.. _lock-objects:
174
175Lock Objects
176------------
177
178A primitive lock is a synchronization primitive that is not owned by a
179particular thread when locked. In Python, it is currently the lowest level
180synchronization primitive available, implemented directly by the :mod:`thread`
181extension module.
182
183A primitive lock is in one of two states, "locked" or "unlocked". It is created
184in the unlocked state. It has two basic methods, :meth:`acquire` and
185:meth:`release`. When the state is unlocked, :meth:`acquire` changes the state
186to locked and returns immediately. When the state is locked, :meth:`acquire`
187blocks until a call to :meth:`release` in another thread changes it to unlocked,
188then the :meth:`acquire` call resets it to locked and returns. The
189:meth:`release` method should only be called in the locked state; it changes the
190state to unlocked and returns immediately. If an attempt is made to release an
191unlocked lock, a :exc:`RuntimeError` will be raised.
192
193When more than one thread is blocked in :meth:`acquire` waiting for the state to
194turn to unlocked, only one thread proceeds when a :meth:`release` call resets
195the state to unlocked; which one of the waiting threads proceeds is not defined,
196and may vary across implementations.
197
198All methods are executed atomically.
199
200
201.. method:: Lock.acquire([blocking=1])
202
203 Acquire a lock, blocking or non-blocking.
204
205 When invoked without arguments, block until the lock is unlocked, then set it to
206 locked, and return true.
207
208 When invoked with the *blocking* argument set to true, do the same thing as when
209 called without arguments, and return true.
210
211 When invoked with the *blocking* argument set to false, do not block. If a call
212 without an argument would block, return false immediately; otherwise, do the
213 same thing as when called without arguments, and return true.
214
215
216.. method:: Lock.release()
217
218 Release a lock.
219
220 When the lock is locked, reset it to unlocked, and return. If any other threads
221 are blocked waiting for the lock to become unlocked, allow exactly one of them
222 to proceed.
223
224 Do not call this method when the lock is unlocked.
225
226 There is no return value.
227
228
229.. _rlock-objects:
230
231RLock Objects
232-------------
233
234A reentrant lock is a synchronization primitive that may be acquired multiple
235times by the same thread. Internally, it uses the concepts of "owning thread"
236and "recursion level" in addition to the locked/unlocked state used by primitive
237locks. In the locked state, some thread owns the lock; in the unlocked state,
238no thread owns it.
239
240To lock the lock, a thread calls its :meth:`acquire` method; this returns once
241the thread owns the lock. To unlock the lock, a thread calls its
242:meth:`release` method. :meth:`acquire`/:meth:`release` call pairs may be
243nested; only the final :meth:`release` (the :meth:`release` of the outermost
244pair) resets the lock to unlocked and allows another thread blocked in
245:meth:`acquire` to proceed.
246
247
248.. method:: RLock.acquire([blocking=1])
249
250 Acquire a lock, blocking or non-blocking.
251
252 When invoked without arguments: if this thread already owns the lock, increment
253 the recursion level by one, and return immediately. Otherwise, if another
254 thread owns the lock, block until the lock is unlocked. Once the lock is
255 unlocked (not owned by any thread), then grab ownership, set the recursion level
256 to one, and return. If more than one thread is blocked waiting until the lock
257 is unlocked, only one at a time will be able to grab ownership of the lock.
258 There is no return value in this case.
259
260 When invoked with the *blocking* argument set to true, do the same thing as when
261 called without arguments, and return true.
262
263 When invoked with the *blocking* argument set to false, do not block. If a call
264 without an argument would block, return false immediately; otherwise, do the
265 same thing as when called without arguments, and return true.
266
267
268.. method:: RLock.release()
269
270 Release a lock, decrementing the recursion level. If after the decrement it is
271 zero, reset the lock to unlocked (not owned by any thread), and if any other
272 threads are blocked waiting for the lock to become unlocked, allow exactly one
273 of them to proceed. If after the decrement the recursion level is still
274 nonzero, the lock remains locked and owned by the calling thread.
275
276 Only call this method when the calling thread owns the lock. A
277 :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised if this method is called when the lock is
278 unlocked.
279
280 There is no return value.
281
282
283.. _condition-objects:
284
285Condition Objects
286-----------------
287
288A condition variable is always associated with some kind of lock; this can be
289passed in or one will be created by default. (Passing one in is useful when
290several condition variables must share the same lock.)
291
292A condition variable has :meth:`acquire` and :meth:`release` methods that call
293the corresponding methods of the associated lock. It also has a :meth:`wait`
294method, and :meth:`notify` and :meth:`notifyAll` methods. These three must only
295be called when the calling thread has acquired the lock, otherwise a
296:exc:`RuntimeError` is raised.
297
298The :meth:`wait` method releases the lock, and then blocks until it is awakened
299by a :meth:`notify` or :meth:`notifyAll` call for the same condition variable in
300another thread. Once awakened, it re-acquires the lock and returns. It is also
301possible to specify a timeout.
302
303The :meth:`notify` method wakes up one of the threads waiting for the condition
304variable, if any are waiting. The :meth:`notifyAll` method wakes up all threads
305waiting for the condition variable.
306
307Note: the :meth:`notify` and :meth:`notifyAll` methods don't release the lock;
308this means that the thread or threads awakened will not return from their
309:meth:`wait` call immediately, but only when the thread that called
310:meth:`notify` or :meth:`notifyAll` finally relinquishes ownership of the lock.
311
312Tip: the typical programming style using condition variables uses the lock to
313synchronize access to some shared state; threads that are interested in a
314particular change of state call :meth:`wait` repeatedly until they see the
315desired state, while threads that modify the state call :meth:`notify` or
316:meth:`notifyAll` when they change the state in such a way that it could
317possibly be a desired state for one of the waiters. For example, the following
318code is a generic producer-consumer situation with unlimited buffer capacity::
319
320 # Consume one item
321 cv.acquire()
322 while not an_item_is_available():
323 cv.wait()
324 get_an_available_item()
325 cv.release()
326
327 # Produce one item
328 cv.acquire()
329 make_an_item_available()
330 cv.notify()
331 cv.release()
332
333To choose between :meth:`notify` and :meth:`notifyAll`, consider whether one
334state change can be interesting for only one or several waiting threads. E.g.
335in a typical producer-consumer situation, adding one item to the buffer only
336needs to wake up one consumer thread.
337
338
339.. class:: Condition([lock])
340
341 If the *lock* argument is given and not ``None``, it must be a :class:`Lock` or
342 :class:`RLock` object, and it is used as the underlying lock. Otherwise, a new
343 :class:`RLock` object is created and used as the underlying lock.
344
345
346.. method:: Condition.acquire(*args)
347
348 Acquire the underlying lock. This method calls the corresponding method on the
349 underlying lock; the return value is whatever that method returns.
350
351
352.. method:: Condition.release()
353
354 Release the underlying lock. This method calls the corresponding method on the
355 underlying lock; there is no return value.
356
357
358.. method:: Condition.wait([timeout])
359
360 Wait until notified or until a timeout occurs. If the calling thread has not
361 acquired the lock when this method is called, a :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised.
362
363 This method releases the underlying lock, and then blocks until it is awakened
364 by a :meth:`notify` or :meth:`notifyAll` call for the same condition variable in
365 another thread, or until the optional timeout occurs. Once awakened or timed
366 out, it re-acquires the lock and returns.
367
368 When the *timeout* argument is present and not ``None``, it should be a floating
369 point number specifying a timeout for the operation in seconds (or fractions
370 thereof).
371
372 When the underlying lock is an :class:`RLock`, it is not released using its
373 :meth:`release` method, since this may not actually unlock the lock when it was
374 acquired multiple times recursively. Instead, an internal interface of the
375 :class:`RLock` class is used, which really unlocks it even when it has been
376 recursively acquired several times. Another internal interface is then used to
377 restore the recursion level when the lock is reacquired.
378
379
380.. method:: Condition.notify()
381
382 Wake up a thread waiting on this condition, if any. Wait until notified or until
383 a timeout occurs. If the calling thread has not acquired the lock when this
384 method is called, a :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised.
385
386 This method wakes up one of the threads waiting for the condition variable, if
387 any are waiting; it is a no-op if no threads are waiting.
388
389 The current implementation wakes up exactly one thread, if any are waiting.
390 However, it's not safe to rely on this behavior. A future, optimized
391 implementation may occasionally wake up more than one thread.
392
393 Note: the awakened thread does not actually return from its :meth:`wait` call
394 until it can reacquire the lock. Since :meth:`notify` does not release the
395 lock, its caller should.
396
397
398.. method:: Condition.notifyAll()
399
400 Wake up all threads waiting on this condition. This method acts like
401 :meth:`notify`, but wakes up all waiting threads instead of one. If the calling
402 thread has not acquired the lock when this method is called, a
403 :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised.
404
405
406.. _semaphore-objects:
407
408Semaphore Objects
409-----------------
410
411This is one of the oldest synchronization primitives in the history of computer
412science, invented by the early Dutch computer scientist Edsger W. Dijkstra (he
413used :meth:`P` and :meth:`V` instead of :meth:`acquire` and :meth:`release`).
414
415A semaphore manages an internal counter which is decremented by each
416:meth:`acquire` call and incremented by each :meth:`release` call. The counter
417can never go below zero; when :meth:`acquire` finds that it is zero, it blocks,
418waiting until some other thread calls :meth:`release`.
419
420
421.. class:: Semaphore([value])
422
423 The optional argument gives the initial *value* for the internal counter; it
424 defaults to ``1``. If the *value* given is less than 0, :exc:`ValueError` is
425 raised.
426
427
428.. method:: Semaphore.acquire([blocking])
429
430 Acquire a semaphore.
431
432 When invoked without arguments: if the internal counter is larger than zero on
433 entry, decrement it by one and return immediately. If it is zero on entry,
434 block, waiting until some other thread has called :meth:`release` to make it
435 larger than zero. This is done with proper interlocking so that if multiple
436 :meth:`acquire` calls are blocked, :meth:`release` will wake exactly one of them
437 up. The implementation may pick one at random, so the order in which blocked
438 threads are awakened should not be relied on. There is no return value in this
439 case.
440
441 When invoked with *blocking* set to true, do the same thing as when called
442 without arguments, and return true.
443
444 When invoked with *blocking* set to false, do not block. If a call without an
445 argument would block, return false immediately; otherwise, do the same thing as
446 when called without arguments, and return true.
447
448
449.. method:: Semaphore.release()
450
451 Release a semaphore, incrementing the internal counter by one. When it was zero
452 on entry and another thread is waiting for it to become larger than zero again,
453 wake up that thread.
454
455
456.. _semaphore-examples:
457
458:class:`Semaphore` Example
459^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
460
461Semaphores are often used to guard resources with limited capacity, for example,
462a database server. In any situation where the size of the resource size is
463fixed, you should use a bounded semaphore. Before spawning any worker threads,
464your main thread would initialize the semaphore::
465
466 maxconnections = 5
467 ...
468 pool_sema = BoundedSemaphore(value=maxconnections)
469
470Once spawned, worker threads call the semaphore's acquire and release methods
471when they need to connect to the server::
472
473 pool_sema.acquire()
474 conn = connectdb()
475 ... use connection ...
476 conn.close()
477 pool_sema.release()
478
479The use of a bounded semaphore reduces the chance that a programming error which
480causes the semaphore to be released more than it's acquired will go undetected.
481
482
483.. _event-objects:
484
485Event Objects
486-------------
487
488This is one of the simplest mechanisms for communication between threads: one
489thread signals an event and other threads wait for it.
490
491An event object manages an internal flag that can be set to true with the
492:meth:`set` method and reset to false with the :meth:`clear` method. The
493:meth:`wait` method blocks until the flag is true.
494
495
496.. class:: Event()
497
498 The internal flag is initially false.
499
500
501.. method:: Event.isSet()
502
503 Return true if and only if the internal flag is true.
504
505
506.. method:: Event.set()
507
508 Set the internal flag to true. All threads waiting for it to become true are
509 awakened. Threads that call :meth:`wait` once the flag is true will not block at
510 all.
511
512
513.. method:: Event.clear()
514
515 Reset the internal flag to false. Subsequently, threads calling :meth:`wait`
516 will block until :meth:`set` is called to set the internal flag to true again.
517
518
519.. method:: Event.wait([timeout])
520
521 Block until the internal flag is true. If the internal flag is true on entry,
522 return immediately. Otherwise, block until another thread calls :meth:`set` to
523 set the flag to true, or until the optional timeout occurs.
524
525 When the timeout argument is present and not ``None``, it should be a floating
526 point number specifying a timeout for the operation in seconds (or fractions
527 thereof).
528
529
530.. _thread-objects:
531
532Thread Objects
533--------------
534
535This class represents an activity that is run in a separate thread of control.
536There are two ways to specify the activity: by passing a callable object to the
537constructor, or by overriding the :meth:`run` method in a subclass. No other
538methods (except for the constructor) should be overridden in a subclass. In
539other words, *only* override the :meth:`__init__` and :meth:`run` methods of
540this class.
541
542Once a thread object is created, its activity must be started by calling the
543thread's :meth:`start` method. This invokes the :meth:`run` method in a
544separate thread of control.
545
546Once the thread's activity is started, the thread is considered 'alive'. It
547stops being alive when its :meth:`run` method terminates -- either normally, or
548by raising an unhandled exception. The :meth:`isAlive` method tests whether the
549thread is alive.
550
551Other threads can call a thread's :meth:`join` method. This blocks the calling
552thread until the thread whose :meth:`join` method is called is terminated.
553
554A thread has a name. The name can be passed to the constructor, set with the
555:meth:`setName` method, and retrieved with the :meth:`getName` method.
556
557A thread can be flagged as a "daemon thread". The significance of this flag is
558that the entire Python program exits when only daemon threads are left. The
559initial value is inherited from the creating thread. The flag can be set with
560the :meth:`setDaemon` method and retrieved with the :meth:`isDaemon` method.
561
562There is a "main thread" object; this corresponds to the initial thread of
563control in the Python program. It is not a daemon thread.
564
565There is the possibility that "dummy thread objects" are created. These are
566thread objects corresponding to "alien threads", which are threads of control
567started outside the threading module, such as directly from C code. Dummy
568thread objects have limited functionality; they are always considered alive and
569daemonic, and cannot be :meth:`join`\ ed. They are never deleted, since it is
570impossible to detect the termination of alien threads.
571
572
573.. class:: Thread(group=None, target=None, name=None, args=(), kwargs={})
574
575 This constructor should always be called with keyword arguments. Arguments are:
576
577 *group* should be ``None``; reserved for future extension when a
578 :class:`ThreadGroup` class is implemented.
579
580 *target* is the callable object to be invoked by the :meth:`run` method.
581 Defaults to ``None``, meaning nothing is called.
582
583 *name* is the thread name. By default, a unique name is constructed of the form
584 "Thread-*N*" where *N* is a small decimal number.
585
586 *args* is the argument tuple for the target invocation. Defaults to ``()``.
587
588 *kwargs* is a dictionary of keyword arguments for the target invocation.
589 Defaults to ``{}``.
590
591 If the subclass overrides the constructor, it must make sure to invoke the base
592 class constructor (``Thread.__init__()``) before doing anything else to the
593 thread.
594
595
596.. method:: Thread.start()
597
598 Start the thread's activity.
599
600 It must be called at most once per thread object. It arranges for the object's
601 :meth:`run` method to be invoked in a separate thread of control.
602
603 This method will raise a :exc:`RuntimeException` if called more than once on the
604 same thread object.
605
606
607.. method:: Thread.run()
608
609 Method representing the thread's activity.
610
611 You may override this method in a subclass. The standard :meth:`run` method
612 invokes the callable object passed to the object's constructor as the *target*
613 argument, if any, with sequential and keyword arguments taken from the *args*
614 and *kwargs* arguments, respectively.
615
616
617.. method:: Thread.join([timeout])
618
619 Wait until the thread terminates. This blocks the calling thread until the
620 thread whose :meth:`join` method is called terminates -- either normally or
621 through an unhandled exception -- or until the optional timeout occurs.
622
623 When the *timeout* argument is present and not ``None``, it should be a floating
624 point number specifying a timeout for the operation in seconds (or fractions
Georg Brandl6ebc5272008-01-19 17:38:53 +0000625 thereof). As :meth:`join` always returns ``None``, you must call :meth:`isAlive`
626 after :meth:`join` to decide whether a timeout happened -- if the thread is
627 still alive, the :meth:`join` call timed out.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000628
629 When the *timeout* argument is not present or ``None``, the operation will block
630 until the thread terminates.
631
632 A thread can be :meth:`join`\ ed many times.
633
Georg Brandl6ebc5272008-01-19 17:38:53 +0000634 :meth:`join` raises a :exc:`RuntimeError` if an attempt is made to join
635 the current thread as that would cause a deadlock. It is also an error to
636 :meth:`join` a thread before it has been started and attempts to do so
637 raises the same exception.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000638
639
640.. method:: Thread.getName()
641
642 Return the thread's name.
643
644
645.. method:: Thread.setName(name)
646
647 Set the thread's name.
648
649 The name is a string used for identification purposes only. It has no semantics.
650 Multiple threads may be given the same name. The initial name is set by the
651 constructor.
652
653
654.. method:: Thread.isAlive()
655
656 Return whether the thread is alive.
657
658 Roughly, a thread is alive from the moment the :meth:`start` method returns
659 until its :meth:`run` method terminates. The module function :func:`enumerate`
660 returns a list of all alive threads.
661
662
663.. method:: Thread.isDaemon()
664
665 Return the thread's daemon flag.
666
667
668.. method:: Thread.setDaemon(daemonic)
669
670 Set the thread's daemon flag to the Boolean value *daemonic*. This must be
671 called before :meth:`start` is called, otherwise :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised.
672
673 The initial value is inherited from the creating thread.
674
675 The entire Python program exits when no alive non-daemon threads are left.
676
677
678.. _timer-objects:
679
680Timer Objects
681-------------
682
683This class represents an action that should be run only after a certain amount
684of time has passed --- a timer. :class:`Timer` is a subclass of :class:`Thread`
685and as such also functions as an example of creating custom threads.
686
687Timers are started, as with threads, by calling their :meth:`start` method. The
688timer can be stopped (before its action has begun) by calling the :meth:`cancel`
689method. The interval the timer will wait before executing its action may not be
690exactly the same as the interval specified by the user.
691
692For example::
693
694 def hello():
695 print "hello, world"
696
697 t = Timer(30.0, hello)
698 t.start() # after 30 seconds, "hello, world" will be printed
699
700
701.. class:: Timer(interval, function, args=[], kwargs={})
702
703 Create a timer that will run *function* with arguments *args* and keyword
704 arguments *kwargs*, after *interval* seconds have passed.
705
706
707.. method:: Timer.cancel()
708
709 Stop the timer, and cancel the execution of the timer's action. This will only
710 work if the timer is still in its waiting stage.
711
712
713.. _with-locks:
714
715Using locks, conditions, and semaphores in the :keyword:`with` statement
716------------------------------------------------------------------------
717
718All of the objects provided by this module that have :meth:`acquire` and
719:meth:`release` methods can be used as context managers for a :keyword:`with`
720statement. The :meth:`acquire` method will be called when the block is entered,
721and :meth:`release` will be called when the block is exited.
722
723Currently, :class:`Lock`, :class:`RLock`, :class:`Condition`,
724:class:`Semaphore`, and :class:`BoundedSemaphore` objects may be used as
725:keyword:`with` statement context managers. For example::
726
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000727 import threading
728
729 some_rlock = threading.RLock()
730
731 with some_rlock:
732 print "some_rlock is locked while this executes"
733
Georg Brandl2e255512008-03-13 07:21:41 +0000734
735.. _threaded-imports:
736
737Importing in threaded code
738--------------------------
739
740While the import machinery is thread safe, there are two key
741restrictions on threaded imports due to inherent limitations in the way
742that thread safety is provided:
743
744* Firstly, other than in the main module, an import should not have the
745 side effect of spawning a new thread and then waiting for that thread in
746 any way. Failing to abide by this restriction can lead to a deadlock if
747 the spawned thread directly or indirectly attempts to import a module.
748* Secondly, all import attempts must be completed before the interpreter
749 starts shutting itself down. This can be most easily achieved by only
750 performing imports from non-daemon threads created through the threading
751 module. Daemon threads and threads created directly with the thread
752 module will require some other form of synchronization to ensure they do
753 not attempt imports after system shutdown has commenced. Failure to
754 abide by this restriction will lead to intermittent exceptions and
755 crashes during interpreter shutdown (as the late imports attempt to
756 access machinery which is no longer in a valid state).