This document describes the current stable version of Celery (4.2). For development docs, go here.

Source code for celery.utils.threads

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""Threading primitives and utilities."""
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function, unicode_literals

import os
import socket
import sys
import threading
import traceback
from contextlib import contextmanager

from celery.five import THREAD_TIMEOUT_MAX, items, python_2_unicode_compatible
from celery.local import Proxy

try:
    from greenlet import getcurrent as get_ident
except ImportError:  # pragma: no cover
    try:
        from _thread import get_ident                   # noqa
    except ImportError:
        try:
            from thread import get_ident                # noqa
        except ImportError:  # pragma: no cover
            try:
                from _dummy_thread import get_ident     # noqa
            except ImportError:
                from dummy_thread import get_ident      # noqa


__all__ = (
    'bgThread', 'Local', 'LocalStack', 'LocalManager',
    'get_ident', 'default_socket_timeout',
)

USE_FAST_LOCALS = os.environ.get('USE_FAST_LOCALS')


[docs]@contextmanager def default_socket_timeout(timeout): """Context temporarily setting the default socket timeout.""" prev = socket.getdefaulttimeout() socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout) yield
socket.setdefaulttimeout(prev)
[docs]class bgThread(threading.Thread): """Background service thread.""" def __init__(self, name=None, **kwargs): super(bgThread, self).__init__() self._is_shutdown = threading.Event() self._is_stopped = threading.Event() self.daemon = True self.name = name or self.__class__.__name__
[docs] def body(self):
raise NotImplementedError()
[docs] def on_crash(self, msg, *fmt, **kwargs): print(msg.format(*fmt), file=sys.stderr)
traceback.print_exc(None, sys.stderr)
[docs] def run(self): body = self.body shutdown_set = self._is_shutdown.is_set try: while not shutdown_set(): try: body() except Exception as exc: # pylint: disable=broad-except try: self.on_crash('{0!r} crashed: {1!r}', self.name, exc) self._set_stopped() finally: sys.stderr.flush() os._exit(1) # exiting by normal means won't work finally:
self._set_stopped() def _set_stopped(self): try: self._is_stopped.set() except TypeError: # pragma: no cover # we lost the race at interpreter shutdown, # so gc collected built-in modules. pass
[docs] def stop(self): """Graceful shutdown.""" self._is_shutdown.set() self._is_stopped.wait() if self.is_alive():
self.join(THREAD_TIMEOUT_MAX) def release_local(local): """Release the contents of the local for the current context. This makes it possible to use locals without a manager. With this function one can release :class:`Local` objects as well as :class:`StackLocal` objects. However it's not possible to release data held by proxies that way, one always has to retain a reference to the underlying local object in order to be able to release it. Example: >>> loc = Local() >>> loc.foo = 42 >>> release_local(loc) >>> hasattr(loc, 'foo') False """ local.__release_local__()
[docs]class Local(object): """Local object.""" __slots__ = ('__storage__', '__ident_func__') def __init__(self): object.__setattr__(self, '__storage__', {}) object.__setattr__(self, '__ident_func__', get_ident) def __iter__(self): return iter(items(self.__storage__)) def __call__(self, proxy): """Create a proxy for a name.""" return Proxy(self, proxy) def __release_local__(self): self.__storage__.pop(self.__ident_func__(), None) def __getattr__(self, name): try: return self.__storage__[self.__ident_func__()][name] except KeyError: raise AttributeError(name) def __setattr__(self, name, value): ident = self.__ident_func__() storage = self.__storage__ try: storage[ident][name] = value except KeyError: storage[ident] = {name: value} def __delattr__(self, name): try: del self.__storage__[self.__ident_func__()][name] except KeyError:
raise AttributeError(name) class _LocalStack(object): """Local stack. This class works similar to a :class:`Local` but keeps a stack of objects instead. This is best explained with an example:: >>> ls = LocalStack() >>> ls.push(42) >>> ls.top 42 >>> ls.push(23) >>> ls.top 23 >>> ls.pop() 23 >>> ls.top 42 They can be force released by using a :class:`LocalManager` or with the :func:`release_local` function but the correct way is to pop the item from the stack after using. When the stack is empty it will no longer be bound to the current context (and as such released). By calling the stack without arguments it will return a proxy that resolves to the topmost item on the stack. """ def __init__(self): self._local = Local() def __release_local__(self): self._local.__release_local__() def _get__ident_func__(self): return self._local.__ident_func__ def _set__ident_func__(self, value): object.__setattr__(self._local, '__ident_func__', value) __ident_func__ = property(_get__ident_func__, _set__ident_func__) del _get__ident_func__, _set__ident_func__ def __call__(self): def _lookup(): rv = self.top if rv is None: raise RuntimeError('object unbound') return rv return Proxy(_lookup) def push(self, obj): """Push a new item to the stack.""" rv = getattr(self._local, 'stack', None) if rv is None: # pylint: disable=assigning-non-slot # This attribute is defined now. self._local.stack = rv = [] rv.append(obj) return rv def pop(self): """Remove the topmost item from the stack. Note: Will return the old value or `None` if the stack was already empty. """ stack = getattr(self._local, 'stack', None) if stack is None: return None elif len(stack) == 1: release_local(self._local) return stack[-1] else: return stack.pop() def __len__(self): stack = getattr(self._local, 'stack', None) return len(stack) if stack else 0 @property def stack(self): # get_current_worker_task uses this to find # the original task that was executed by the worker. stack = getattr(self._local, 'stack', None) if stack is not None: return stack return [] @property def top(self): """The topmost item on the stack. Note: If the stack is empty, :const:`None` is returned. """ try: return self._local.stack[-1] except (AttributeError, IndexError): return None
[docs]@python_2_unicode_compatible class LocalManager(object): """Local objects cannot manage themselves. For that you need a local manager. You can pass a local manager multiple locals or add them later by appending them to ``manager.locals``. Every time the manager cleans up, it will clean up all the data left in the locals for this context. The ``ident_func`` parameter can be added to override the default ident function for the wrapped locals. """ def __init__(self, locals=None, ident_func=None): if locals is None: self.locals = [] elif isinstance(locals, Local): self.locals = [locals] else: self.locals = list(locals) if ident_func is not None: self.ident_func = ident_func for local in self.locals: object.__setattr__(local, '__ident_func__', ident_func) else: self.ident_func = get_ident
[docs] def get_ident(self): """Return context identifier. This is the indentifer the local objects use internally for this context. You cannot override this method to change the behavior but use it to link other context local objects (such as SQLAlchemy's scoped sessions) to the Werkzeug locals. """
return self.ident_func()
[docs] def cleanup(self): """Manually clean up the data in the locals for this context. Call this at the end of the request or use ``make_middleware()``. """ for local in self.locals:
release_local(local) def __repr__(self): return '<{0} storages: {1}>'.format(
self.__class__.__name__, len(self.locals)) class _FastLocalStack(threading.local): def __init__(self): self.stack = [] self.push = self.stack.append self.pop = self.stack.pop super(_FastLocalStack, self).__init__() @property def top(self): try: return self.stack[-1] except (AttributeError, IndexError): return None def __len__(self): return len(self.stack) if USE_FAST_LOCALS: # pragma: no cover LocalStack = _FastLocalStack else: # pragma: no cover # - See #706 # since each thread has its own greenlet we can just use those as # identifiers for the context. If greenlets aren't available we # fall back to the current thread ident. LocalStack = _LocalStack # noqa