# Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Denis Bilenko. See LICENSE for details. """ Waiting for I/O completion. """ from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function import sys from gevent.event import Event from gevent.hub import _get_hub_noargs as get_hub from gevent.hub import sleep as _g_sleep from gevent._compat import integer_types from gevent._compat import iteritems from gevent._util import copy_globals from gevent._util import _NONE from errno import EINTR from select import select as _real_original_select if sys.platform.startswith('win32'): def _original_select(r, w, x, t): # windows cant handle three empty lists, but we've always # accepted that if not r and not w and not x: return ((), (), ()) return _real_original_select(r, w, x, t) else: _original_select = _real_original_select try: from select import poll as original_poll from select import POLLIN, POLLOUT, POLLNVAL __implements__ = ['select', 'poll'] except ImportError: original_poll = None __implements__ = ['select'] __all__ = ['error'] + __implements__ import select as __select__ error = __select__.error __imports__ = copy_globals(__select__, globals(), names_to_ignore=__all__, dunder_names_to_keep=()) _EV_READ = 1 _EV_WRITE = 2 def get_fileno(obj): try: fileno_f = obj.fileno except AttributeError: if not isinstance(obj, integer_types): raise TypeError('argument must be an int, or have a fileno() method: %r' % (obj,)) return obj else: return fileno_f() class SelectResult(object): __slots__ = ('read', 'write', 'event') def __init__(self): self.read = [] self.write = [] self.event = Event() def add_read(self, socket): self.read.append(socket) self.event.set() add_read.event = _EV_READ def add_write(self, socket): self.write.append(socket) self.event.set() add_write.event = _EV_WRITE def __add_watchers(self, watchers, fdlist, callback, io, pri): for fd in fdlist: watcher = io(get_fileno(fd), callback.event) watcher.priority = pri watchers.append(watcher) watcher.start(callback, fd) def _make_watchers(self, watchers, rlist, wlist): loop = get_hub().loop io = loop.io MAXPRI = loop.MAXPRI try: self.__add_watchers(watchers, rlist, self.add_read, io, MAXPRI) self.__add_watchers(watchers, wlist, self.add_write, io, MAXPRI) except IOError as ex: raise error(*ex.args) def _closeall(self, watchers): for watcher in watchers: watcher.stop() watcher.close() del watchers[:] def select(self, rlist, wlist, timeout): watchers = [] try: self._make_watchers(watchers, rlist, wlist) self.event.wait(timeout=timeout) return self.read, self.write, [] finally: self._closeall(watchers) def select(rlist, wlist, xlist, timeout=None): # pylint:disable=unused-argument """An implementation of :meth:`select.select` that blocks only the current greenlet. .. caution:: *xlist* is ignored. .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 Raise a :exc:`ValueError` if timeout is negative. This matches Python 3's behaviour (Python 2 would raise a ``select.error``). Previously gevent had undefined behaviour. .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 Raise an exception if any of the file descriptors are invalid. """ if timeout is not None and timeout < 0: # Raise an error like the real implementation; which error # depends on the version. Python 3, where select.error is OSError, # raises a ValueError (which makes sense). Older pythons raise # the error from the select syscall...but we don't actually get there. # We choose to just raise the ValueError as it makes more sense and is # forward compatible raise ValueError("timeout must be non-negative") # First, do a poll with the original select system call. This # is the most efficient way to check to see if any of the file descriptors # have previously been closed and raise the correct corresponding exception. # (Because libev tends to just return them as ready...) # We accept the *xlist* here even though we can't below because this is all about # error handling. sel_results = ((), (), ()) try: sel_results = _original_select(rlist, wlist, xlist, 0) except error as e: enumber = getattr(e, 'errno', None) or e.args[0] if enumber != EINTR: # Ignore interrupted syscalls raise if sel_results[0] or sel_results[1] or sel_results[2] or (timeout is not None and timeout == 0): # If we actually had stuff ready, go ahead and return it. No need # to go through the trouble of doing our own stuff. # Likewise, if the timeout is 0, we already did a 0 timeout # select and we don't need to do it again. Note that in libuv, # zero duration timers may be called immediately, without # cycling the event loop at all. 2.7/test_telnetlib.py "hangs" # calling zero-duration timers if we go to the loop here. # However, because this is typically a place where scheduling switches # can occur, we need to make sure that's still the case; otherwise a single # consumer could monopolize the thread. (shows up in test_ftplib.) _g_sleep() return sel_results result = SelectResult() return result.select(rlist, wlist, timeout) if original_poll is not None: class PollResult(object): __slots__ = ('events', 'event') def __init__(self): self.events = set() self.event = Event() def add_event(self, events, fd): if events < 0: result_flags = POLLNVAL else: result_flags = 0 if events & _EV_READ: result_flags = POLLIN if events & _EV_WRITE: result_flags |= POLLOUT self.events.add((fd, result_flags)) self.event.set() class poll(object): """ An implementation of :class:`select.poll` that blocks only the current greenlet. .. caution:: ``POLLPRI`` data is not supported. .. versionadded:: 1.1b1 """ def __init__(self): # {int -> flags} # We can't keep watcher objects in here because people commonly # just drop the poll object when they're done, without calling # unregister(). dnspython does this. self.fds = {} self.loop = get_hub().loop def register(self, fd, eventmask=_NONE): if eventmask is _NONE: flags = _EV_READ | _EV_WRITE else: flags = 0 if eventmask & POLLIN: flags = _EV_READ if eventmask & POLLOUT: flags |= _EV_WRITE # If they ask for POLLPRI, we can't support # that. Should we raise an error? fileno = get_fileno(fd) self.fds[fileno] = flags def modify(self, fd, eventmask): self.register(fd, eventmask) def poll(self, timeout=None): """ poll the registered fds. .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 File descriptors that are closed are reported with POLLNVAL. .. versionchanged:: 1.3a2 Under libuv, interpret *timeout* values less than 0 the same as *None*, i.e., block. This was always the case with libev. """ result = PollResult() watchers = [] io = self.loop.io MAXPRI = self.loop.MAXPRI try: for fd, flags in iteritems(self.fds): watcher = io(fd, flags) watchers.append(watcher) watcher.priority = MAXPRI watcher.start(result.add_event, fd, pass_events=True) if timeout is not None: if timeout < 0: # The docs for python say that an omitted timeout, # a negative timeout and a timeout of None are all # supposed to block forever. Many, but not all # OS's accept any negative number to mean that. Some # OS's raise errors for anything negative but not -1. # Python 3.7 changes to always pass exactly -1 in that # case from selectors. # Our Timeout class currently does not have a defined behaviour # for negative values. On libuv, it uses a check watcher and effectively # doesn't block. On libev, it seems to block. In either case, we # *want* to block, so turn this into the sure fire block request. timeout = None elif timeout: # The docs for poll.poll say timeout is in # milliseconds. Our result objects work in # seconds, so this should be *=, shouldn't it? timeout /= 1000.0 result.event.wait(timeout=timeout) return list(result.events) finally: for awatcher in watchers: awatcher.stop() awatcher.close() def unregister(self, fd): """ Unregister the *fd*. .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 Raise a `KeyError` if *fd* was not registered, like the standard library. Previously gevent did nothing. """ fileno = get_fileno(fd) del self.fds[fileno] del original_poll