# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # copyright 2018 gevent """ Exceptions. .. versionadded:: 1.3b1 """ from __future__ import absolute_import from __future__ import division from __future__ import print_function __all__ = [ 'LoopExit', ] class LoopExit(Exception): """ Exception thrown when the hub finishes running (`gevent.hub.Hub.run` would return). In a normal application, this is never thrown or caught explicitly. The internal implementation of functions like :meth:`gevent.hub.Hub.join` and :func:`gevent.joinall` may catch it, but user code generally should not. .. caution:: Errors in application programming can also lead to this exception being raised. Some examples include (but are not limited too): - greenlets deadlocking on a lock; - using a socket or other gevent object with native thread affinity from a different thread """ def __repr__(self): # pylint:disable=unsubscriptable-object if len(self.args) == 3: # From the hub import pprint return "%s\n\tHub: %s\n\tHandles:\n%s" % ( self.args[0], self.args[1], pprint.pformat(self.args[2]) ) return Exception.__repr__(self) def __str__(self): return repr(self) class BlockingSwitchOutError(AssertionError): """ Raised when a gevent synchronous function is called from a low-level event loop callback. This is usually a programming error. """ class InvalidSwitchError(AssertionError): """ Raised when the event loop returns control to a greenlet in an unexpected way. This is usually a bug in gevent, greenlet, or the event loop. """ class ConcurrentObjectUseError(AssertionError): """ Raised when an object is used (waited on) by two greenlets independently, meaning the object was entered into a blocking state by one greenlet and then another while still blocking in the first one. This is usually a programming error. .. seealso:: `gevent.socket.wait` """ class InvalidThreadUseError(RuntimeError): """ Raised when an object is used from a different thread than the one it is bound to. Some objects, such as gevent sockets, semaphores, and threadpools, are tightly bound to their hub and its loop. The hub and loop are not thread safe, with a few exceptions. Attempting to use such objects from a different thread is an error, and may cause problems ranging from incorrect results to memory corruption and a crashed process. In some cases, gevent catches this "accidentally", and the result is a `LoopExit`. In some cases, gevent doesn't catch this at all. In other cases (typically when the consequences are suspected to be more on the more severe end of the scale, and when the operation in question is already relatively heavyweight), gevent explicitly checks for this usage and will raise this exception when it is detected. .. versionadded:: 1.5a3 """