cpython/Lib/test/test_threaded_import.py
Tim Peters d97422115e Implementing an idea from Guido on the checkins list:
When regrtest.py finds an attribute "test_main" in a test it imports,
regrtest runs the test's test_main after the import.  test_threaded_import
needs this else the cross-thread import lock prevents it from making
progress.  Other tests can use this hack too, but I doubt it will ever be
popular.
2001-05-22 18:28:25 +00:00

47 lines
1.5 KiB
Python

# This is a variant of the very old (early 90's) file
# Demo/threads/bug.py. It simply provokes a number of threads into
# trying to import the same module "at the same time".
# There are no pleasant failure modes -- most likely is that Python
# complains several times about module random having no attribute
# randrange, and then Python hangs.
import thread
from test_support import verbose
critical_section = thread.allocate_lock()
done = thread.allocate_lock()
def task():
global N, critical_section, done
import random
x = random.randrange(1, 3)
critical_section.acquire()
N -= 1
if N == 0:
done.release()
critical_section.release()
# Tricky: When regrtest imports this module, the thread running regrtest
# grabs the import lock and won't let go of it until this module returns.
# All other threads attempting an import hang for the duration. Since
# this test spawns threads that do little *but* import, we can't do that
# successfully until after this module finishes importing and regrtest
# regains control. To make this work, a special case was added to
# regrtest to invoke a module's "test_main" function (if any) after
# importing it.
def test_main(): # magic name! see above
global N, done
done.acquire()
for N in (20, 50) * 3:
if verbose:
print "Trying", N, "threads ...",
for i in range(N):
thread.start_new_thread(task, ())
done.acquire()
if verbose:
print "OK."
if __name__ == "__main__":
test_main()