from __future__ import absolute_import from __future__ import print_function import os import sys from io import BytesIO from io import DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE from io import FileIO from io import RawIOBase from io import UnsupportedOperation from gevent._compat import reraise from gevent._fileobjectcommon import cancel_wait_ex from gevent._fileobjectcommon import FileObjectBase from gevent._fileobjectcommon import OpenDescriptor from gevent._hub_primitives import wait_on_watcher from gevent.hub import get_hub from gevent.os import _read from gevent.os import _write from gevent.os import ignored_errors from gevent.os import make_nonblocking class GreenFileDescriptorIO(RawIOBase): # Internal, undocumented, class. All that's documented is that this # is a IOBase object. Constructor is private. # Note that RawIOBase has a __del__ method that calls # self.close(). (In C implementations like CPython, this is # the type's tp_dealloc slot; prior to Python 3, the object doesn't # appear to have a __del__ method, even though it functionally does) _read_watcher = None _write_watcher = None _closed = False _seekable = None _keep_alive = None # An object that needs to live as long as we do. def __init__(self, fileno, open_descriptor, closefd=True): RawIOBase.__init__(self) self._closefd = closefd self._fileno = fileno self.mode = open_descriptor.fileio_mode make_nonblocking(fileno) readable = open_descriptor.can_read writable = open_descriptor.can_write self.hub = get_hub() io_watcher = self.hub.loop.io try: if readable: self._read_watcher = io_watcher(fileno, 1) if writable: self._write_watcher = io_watcher(fileno, 2) except: # If anything goes wrong, it's important to go ahead and # close these watchers *now*, especially under libuv, so # that they don't get eventually reclaimed by the garbage # collector at some random time, thanks to the C level # slot (even though we don't seem to have any actual references # at the Python level). Previously, if we didn't close now, # that random close in the future would cause issues if we had duplicated # the fileno (if a wrapping with statement had closed an open fileobject, # for example) # test__fileobject can show a failure if this doesn't happen # TRAVIS=true GEVENT_LOOP=libuv python -m gevent.tests.test__fileobject \ # TestFileObjectPosix.test_seek TestFileObjectThread.test_bufsize_0 self.close() raise def isatty(self): # TODO: Couldn't we just subclass FileIO? f = FileIO(self._fileno, 'r', False) try: return f.isatty() finally: f.close() def readable(self): return self._read_watcher is not None def writable(self): return self._write_watcher is not None def seekable(self): if self._seekable is None: try: os.lseek(self._fileno, 0, os.SEEK_CUR) except OSError: self._seekable = False else: self._seekable = True return self._seekable def fileno(self): return self._fileno @property def closed(self): return self._closed def __destroy_events(self): read_event = self._read_watcher write_event = self._write_watcher hub = self.hub self.hub = self._read_watcher = self._write_watcher = None hub.cancel_waits_close_and_then( (read_event, write_event), cancel_wait_ex, self.__finish_close, self._closefd, self._fileno, self._keep_alive ) def close(self): if self._closed: return self.flush() # TODO: Can we use 'read_event is not None and write_event is # not None' to mean _closed? self._closed = True try: self.__destroy_events() finally: self._fileno = self._keep_alive = None @staticmethod def __finish_close(closefd, fileno, keep_alive): try: if closefd: os.close(fileno) finally: if hasattr(keep_alive, 'close'): keep_alive.close() # RawIOBase provides a 'read' method that will call readall() if # the `size` was missing or -1 and otherwise call readinto(). We # want to take advantage of this to avoid single byte reads when # possible. This is highlighted by a bug in BufferedIOReader that # calls read() in a loop when its readall() method is invoked; # this was fixed in Python 3.3, but we still need our workaround for 2.7. See # https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/675) def __read(self, n): if self._read_watcher is None: raise UnsupportedOperation('read') while 1: try: return _read(self._fileno, n) except (IOError, OSError) as ex: if ex.args[0] not in ignored_errors: raise wait_on_watcher(self._read_watcher, None, None, self.hub) def readall(self): ret = BytesIO() while True: try: data = self.__read(DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE) except cancel_wait_ex: # We were closed while reading. A buffered reader # just returns what it has handy at that point, # so we do to. data = None if not data: break ret.write(data) return ret.getvalue() def readinto(self, b): data = self.__read(len(b)) n = len(data) try: b[:n] = data except TypeError as err: import array if not isinstance(b, array.array): raise err b[:n] = array.array(b'b', data) return n def write(self, b): if self._write_watcher is None: raise UnsupportedOperation('write') while True: try: return _write(self._fileno, b) except (IOError, OSError) as ex: if ex.args[0] not in ignored_errors: raise wait_on_watcher(self._write_watcher, None, None, self.hub) def seek(self, offset, whence=0): try: return os.lseek(self._fileno, offset, whence) except IOError: # pylint:disable=try-except-raise raise except OSError as ex: # pylint:disable=duplicate-except # Python 2.x # make sure on Python 2.x we raise an IOError # as documented for RawIOBase. # See https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/1323 reraise(IOError, IOError(*ex.args), sys.exc_info()[2]) def __repr__(self): return "<%s at 0x%x fileno=%s mode=%r>" % ( type(self).__name__, id(self), self._fileno, self.mode ) class GreenOpenDescriptor(OpenDescriptor): def open_raw(self): if self.is_fd(): fileio = GreenFileDescriptorIO(self.fobj, self, closefd=self.closefd) else: closefd = False # Either an existing file object or a path string (which # we open to get a file object). In either case, the other object # owns the descriptor and we must not close it. closefd = False if hasattr(self.fobj, 'fileno'): raw = self.fobj else: raw = OpenDescriptor.open_raw(self) fileno = raw.fileno() fileio = GreenFileDescriptorIO(fileno, self, closefd=closefd) fileio._keep_alive = raw return fileio class FileObjectPosix(FileObjectBase): """ FileObjectPosix() A file-like object that operates on non-blocking files but provides a synchronous, cooperative interface. .. caution:: This object is only effective wrapping files that can be used meaningfully with :func:`select.select` such as sockets and pipes. In general, on most platforms, operations on regular files (e.g., ``open('a_file.txt')``) are considered non-blocking already, even though they can take some time to complete as data is copied to the kernel and flushed to disk: this time is relatively bounded compared to sockets or pipes, though. A :func:`~os.read` or :func:`~os.write` call on such a file will still effectively block for some small period of time. Therefore, wrapping this class around a regular file is unlikely to make IO gevent-friendly: reading or writing large amounts of data could still block the event loop. If you'll be working with regular files and doing IO in large chunks, you may consider using :class:`~gevent.fileobject.FileObjectThread` or :func:`~gevent.os.tp_read` and :func:`~gevent.os.tp_write` to bypass this concern. .. tip:: Although this object provides a :meth:`fileno` method and so can itself be passed to :func:`fcntl.fcntl`, setting the :data:`os.O_NONBLOCK` flag will have no effect (reads will still block the greenlet, although other greenlets can run). However, removing that flag *will cause this object to no longer be cooperative* (other greenlets will no longer run). You can use the internal ``fileio`` attribute of this object (a :class:`io.RawIOBase`) to perform non-blocking byte reads. Note, however, that once you begin directly using this attribute, the results from using methods of *this* object are undefined, especially in text mode. (See :issue:`222`.) .. versionchanged:: 1.1 Now uses the :mod:`io` package internally. Under Python 2, previously used the undocumented class :class:`socket._fileobject`. This provides better file-like semantics (and portability to Python 3). .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 Document the ``fileio`` attribute for non-blocking reads. .. versionchanged:: 1.2a1 A bufsize of 0 in write mode is no longer forced to be 1. Instead, the underlying buffer is flushed after every write operation to simulate a bufsize of 0. In gevent 1.0, a bufsize of 0 was flushed when a newline was written, while in gevent 1.1 it was flushed when more than one byte was written. Note that this may have performance impacts. .. versionchanged:: 1.3a1 On Python 2, enabling universal newlines no longer forces unicode IO. .. versionchanged:: 1.5 The default value for *mode* was changed from ``rb`` to ``r``. This is consistent with :func:`open`, :func:`io.open`, and :class:`~.FileObjectThread`, which is the default ``FileObject`` on some platforms. .. versionchanged:: 1.5 Stop forcing buffering. Previously, given a ``buffering=0`` argument, *buffering* would be set to 1, and ``buffering=1`` would be forced to the default buffer size. This was a workaround for a long-standing concurrency issue. Now the *buffering* argument is interpreted as intended. """ default_bufsize = DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): descriptor = GreenOpenDescriptor(*args, **kwargs) # This attribute is documented as available for non-blocking reads. self.fileio, buffered_fobj = descriptor.open_raw_and_wrapped() FileObjectBase.__init__(self, buffered_fobj, descriptor.closefd) def _do_close(self, fobj, closefd): try: fobj.close() # self.fileio already knows whether or not to close the # file descriptor self.fileio.close() finally: self.fileio = None