| """Drop-in replacement for the thread module. |
| |
| Meant to be used as a brain-dead substitute so that threaded code does |
| not need to be rewritten for when the thread module is not present. |
| |
| Suggested usage is:: |
| |
| try: |
| import thread |
| except ImportError: |
| import dummy_thread as thread |
| |
| """ |
| __author__ = "Brett Cannon" |
| __email__ = "brett@python.org" |
| |
| # Exports only things specified by thread documentation |
| # (skipping obsolete synonyms allocate(), start_new(), exit_thread()) |
| __all__ = ['error', 'start_new_thread', 'exit', 'get_ident', 'allocate_lock', |
| 'LockType'] |
| |
| import traceback as _traceback |
| |
| class error(Exception): |
| """Dummy implementation of thread.error.""" |
| |
| def __init__(self, *args): |
| self.args = args |
| |
| def start_new_thread(function, args, kwargs={}): |
| """Dummy implementation of thread.start_new_thread(). |
| |
| Compatibility is maintained by making sure that ``args`` is a |
| tuple and ``kwargs`` is a dictionary. If an exception is raised |
| and it is SystemExit (which can be done by thread.exit()) it is |
| caught and nothing is done; all other exceptions are printed out |
| by using traceback.print_exc(). |
| |
| """ |
| if type(args) != type(tuple()): |
| raise TypeError("2nd arg must be a tuple") |
| if type(kwargs) != type(dict()): |
| raise TypeError("3rd arg must be a dict") |
| try: |
| function(*args, **kwargs) |
| except SystemExit: |
| pass |
| except: |
| _traceback.print_exc() |
| |
| def exit(): |
| """Dummy implementation of thread.exit().""" |
| raise SystemExit |
| |
| def get_ident(): |
| """Dummy implementation of thread.get_ident(). |
| |
| Since this module should only be used when threadmodule is not |
| available, it is safe to assume that the current process is the |
| only thread. Thus a constant can be safely returned. |
| """ |
| return -1 |
| |
| def allocate_lock(): |
| """Dummy implementation of thread.allocate_lock().""" |
| return LockType() |
| |
| class LockType(object): |
| """Class implementing dummy implementation of thread.LockType. |
| |
| Compatibility is maintained by maintaining self.locked_status |
| which is a boolean that stores the state of the lock. Pickling of |
| the lock, though, should not be done since if the thread module is |
| then used with an unpickled ``lock()`` from here problems could |
| occur from this class not having atomic methods. |
| |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self): |
| self.locked_status = False |
| |
| def acquire(self, waitflag=None): |
| """Dummy implementation of acquire(). |
| |
| For blocking calls, self.locked_status is automatically set to |
| True and returned appropriately based on value of |
| ``waitflag``. If it is non-blocking, then the value is |
| actually checked and not set if it is already acquired. This |
| is all done so that threading.Condition's assert statements |
| aren't triggered and throw a little fit. |
| |
| """ |
| if waitflag is None: |
| self.locked_status = True |
| return None |
| elif not waitflag: |
| if not self.locked_status: |
| self.locked_status = True |
| return True |
| else: |
| return False |
| else: |
| self.locked_status = True |
| return True |
| |
| def release(self): |
| """Release the dummy lock.""" |
| # XXX Perhaps shouldn't actually bother to test? Could lead |
| # to problems for complex, threaded code. |
| if not self.locked_status: |
| raise error |
| self.locked_status = False |
| return True |
| |
| def locked(self): |
| return self.locked_status |