"""SCons.Job
This module defines the Serial and Parallel classes that execute tasks to
complete a build. The Jobs class provides a higher level interface to start,
stop, and wait on jobs.
"""
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__revision__ = "__FILE__ __REVISION__ __DATE__ __DEVELOPER__"
import SCons.compat
import os
import signal
import SCons.Errors
# The default stack size (in kilobytes) of the threads used to execute
# jobs in parallel.
#
# We use a stack size of 256 kilobytes. The default on some platforms
# is too large and prevents us from creating enough threads to fully
# parallelized the build. For example, the default stack size on linux
# is 8 MBytes.
explicit_stack_size = None
default_stack_size = 256
interrupt_msg = 'Build interrupted.'
[docs]class InterruptState:
def __init__(self):
self.interrupted = False
[docs] def set(self):
self.interrupted = True
def __call__(self):
return self.interrupted
[docs]class Jobs:
"""An instance of this class initializes N jobs, and provides
methods for starting, stopping, and waiting on all N jobs.
"""
def __init__(self, num, taskmaster):
"""
Create 'num' jobs using the given taskmaster.
If 'num' is 1 or less, then a serial job will be used,
otherwise a parallel job with 'num' worker threads will
be used.
The 'num_jobs' attribute will be set to the actual number of jobs
allocated. If more than one job is requested but the Parallel
class can't do it, it gets reset to 1. Wrapping interfaces that
care should check the value of 'num_jobs' after initialization.
"""
self.job = None
if num > 1:
stack_size = explicit_stack_size
if stack_size is None:
stack_size = default_stack_size
try:
self.job = Parallel(taskmaster, num, stack_size)
self.num_jobs = num
except NameError:
pass
if self.job is None:
self.job = Serial(taskmaster)
self.num_jobs = 1
[docs] def run(self, postfunc=lambda: None):
"""Run the jobs.
postfunc() will be invoked after the jobs has run. It will be
invoked even if the jobs are interrupted by a keyboard
interrupt (well, in fact by a signal such as either SIGINT,
SIGTERM or SIGHUP). The execution of postfunc() is protected
against keyboard interrupts and is guaranteed to run to
completion."""
self._setup_sig_handler()
try:
self.job.start()
finally:
postfunc()
self._reset_sig_handler()
[docs] def were_interrupted(self):
"""Returns whether the jobs were interrupted by a signal."""
return self.job.interrupted()
[docs] def _setup_sig_handler(self):
"""Setup an interrupt handler so that SCons can shutdown cleanly in
various conditions:
a) SIGINT: Keyboard interrupt
b) SIGTERM: kill or system shutdown
c) SIGHUP: Controlling shell exiting
We handle all of these cases by stopping the taskmaster. It
turns out that it's very difficult to stop the build process
by throwing asynchronously an exception such as
KeyboardInterrupt. For example, the python Condition
variables (threading.Condition) and queues do not seem to be
asynchronous-exception-safe. It would require adding a whole
bunch of try/finally block and except KeyboardInterrupt all
over the place.
Note also that we have to be careful to handle the case when
SCons forks before executing another process. In that case, we
want the child to exit immediately.
"""
def handler(signum, stack, self=self, parentpid=os.getpid()):
if os.getpid() == parentpid:
self.job.taskmaster.stop()
self.job.interrupted.set()
else:
os._exit(2)
self.old_sigint = signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, handler)
self.old_sigterm = signal.signal(signal.SIGTERM, handler)
try:
self.old_sighup = signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, handler)
except AttributeError:
pass
[docs] def _reset_sig_handler(self):
"""Restore the signal handlers to their previous state (before the
call to _setup_sig_handler()."""
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, self.old_sigint)
signal.signal(signal.SIGTERM, self.old_sigterm)
try:
signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, self.old_sighup)
except AttributeError:
pass
[docs]class Serial:
"""This class is used to execute tasks in series, and is more efficient
than Parallel, but is only appropriate for non-parallel builds. Only
one instance of this class should be in existence at a time.
This class is not thread safe.
"""
def __init__(self, taskmaster):
"""Create a new serial job given a taskmaster.
The taskmaster's next_task() method should return the next task
that needs to be executed, or None if there are no more tasks. The
taskmaster's executed() method will be called for each task when it
is successfully executed, or failed() will be called if it failed to
execute (e.g. execute() raised an exception)."""
self.taskmaster = taskmaster
self.interrupted = InterruptState()
[docs] def start(self):
"""Start the job. This will begin pulling tasks from the taskmaster
and executing them, and return when there are no more tasks. If a task
fails to execute (i.e. execute() raises an exception), then the job will
stop."""
while True:
task = self.taskmaster.next_task()
if task is None:
break
try:
task.prepare()
if task.needs_execute():
task.execute()
except Exception:
if self.interrupted():
try:
raise SCons.Errors.BuildError(
task.targets[0], errstr=interrupt_msg)
except:
task.exception_set()
else:
task.exception_set()
# Let the failed() callback function arrange for the
# build to stop if that's appropriate.
task.failed()
else:
task.executed()
task.postprocess()
self.taskmaster.cleanup()
# Trap import failure so that everything in the Job module but the
# Parallel class (and its dependent classes) will work if the interpreter
# doesn't support threads.
try:
import queue
import threading
except ImportError:
pass
else:
[docs] class Worker(threading.Thread):
"""A worker thread waits on a task to be posted to its request queue,
dequeues the task, executes it, and posts a tuple including the task
and a boolean indicating whether the task executed successfully. """
def __init__(self, requestQueue, resultsQueue, interrupted):
threading.Thread.__init__(self)
self.setDaemon(1)
self.requestQueue = requestQueue
self.resultsQueue = resultsQueue
self.interrupted = interrupted
self.start()
[docs] def run(self):
while True:
task = self.requestQueue.get()
if task is None:
# The "None" value is used as a sentinel by
# ThreadPool.cleanup(). This indicates that there
# are no more tasks, so we should quit.
break
try:
if self.interrupted():
raise SCons.Errors.BuildError(
task.targets[0], errstr=interrupt_msg)
task.execute()
except:
task.exception_set()
ok = False
else:
ok = True
self.resultsQueue.put((task, ok))
[docs] class ThreadPool:
"""This class is responsible for spawning and managing worker threads."""
def __init__(self, num, stack_size, interrupted):
"""Create the request and reply queues, and 'num' worker threads.
One must specify the stack size of the worker threads. The
stack size is specified in kilobytes.
"""
self.requestQueue = queue.Queue(0)
self.resultsQueue = queue.Queue(0)
try:
prev_size = threading.stack_size(stack_size*1024)
except AttributeError as e:
# Only print a warning if the stack size has been
# explicitly set.
if explicit_stack_size is not None:
msg = "Setting stack size is unsupported by this version of Python:\n " + \
e.args[0]
SCons.Warnings.warn(SCons.Warnings.StackSizeWarning, msg)
except ValueError as e:
msg = "Setting stack size failed:\n " + str(e)
SCons.Warnings.warn(SCons.Warnings.StackSizeWarning, msg)
# Create worker threads
self.workers = []
for _ in range(num):
worker = Worker(self.requestQueue, self.resultsQueue, interrupted)
self.workers.append(worker)
if 'prev_size' in locals():
threading.stack_size(prev_size)
[docs] def put(self, task):
"""Put task into request queue."""
self.requestQueue.put(task)
[docs] def get(self):
"""Remove and return a result tuple from the results queue."""
return self.resultsQueue.get()
[docs] def preparation_failed(self, task):
self.resultsQueue.put((task, False))
[docs] def cleanup(self):
"""
Shuts down the thread pool, giving each worker thread a
chance to shut down gracefully.
"""
# For each worker thread, put a sentinel "None" value
# on the requestQueue (indicating that there's no work
# to be done) so that each worker thread will get one and
# terminate gracefully.
for _ in self.workers:
self.requestQueue.put(None)
# Wait for all of the workers to terminate.
#
# If we don't do this, later Python versions (2.4, 2.5) often
# seem to raise exceptions during shutdown. This happens
# in requestQueue.get(), as an assertion failure that
# requestQueue.not_full is notified while not acquired,
# seemingly because the main thread has shut down (or is
# in the process of doing so) while the workers are still
# trying to pull sentinels off the requestQueue.
#
# Normally these terminations should happen fairly quickly,
# but we'll stick a one-second timeout on here just in case
# someone gets hung.
for worker in self.workers:
worker.join(1.0)
self.workers = []
[docs] class Parallel:
"""This class is used to execute tasks in parallel, and is somewhat
less efficient than Serial, but is appropriate for parallel builds.
This class is thread safe.
"""
def __init__(self, taskmaster, num, stack_size):
"""Create a new parallel job given a taskmaster.
The taskmaster's next_task() method should return the next
task that needs to be executed, or None if there are no more
tasks. The taskmaster's executed() method will be called
for each task when it is successfully executed, or failed()
will be called if the task failed to execute (i.e. execute()
raised an exception).
Note: calls to taskmaster are serialized, but calls to
execute() on distinct tasks are not serialized, because
that is the whole point of parallel jobs: they can execute
multiple tasks simultaneously. """
self.taskmaster = taskmaster
self.interrupted = InterruptState()
self.tp = ThreadPool(num, stack_size, self.interrupted)
self.maxjobs = num
[docs] def start(self):
"""Start the job. This will begin pulling tasks from the
taskmaster and executing them, and return when there are no
more tasks. If a task fails to execute (i.e. execute() raises
an exception), then the job will stop."""
jobs = 0
while True:
# Start up as many available tasks as we're
# allowed to.
while jobs < self.maxjobs:
task = self.taskmaster.next_task()
if task is None:
break
try:
# prepare task for execution
task.prepare()
except:
task.exception_set()
task.failed()
task.postprocess()
else:
if task.needs_execute():
# dispatch task
self.tp.put(task)
jobs = jobs + 1
else:
task.executed()
task.postprocess()
if not task and not jobs: break
# Let any/all completed tasks finish up before we go
# back and put the next batch of tasks on the queue.
while True:
task, ok = self.tp.get()
jobs = jobs - 1
if ok:
task.executed()
else:
if self.interrupted():
try:
raise SCons.Errors.BuildError(
task.targets[0], errstr=interrupt_msg)
except:
task.exception_set()
# Let the failed() callback function arrange
# for the build to stop if that's appropriate.
task.failed()
task.postprocess()
if self.tp.resultsQueue.empty():
break
self.tp.cleanup()
self.taskmaster.cleanup()
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