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| """Event loop and event loop policy.""" | |
| __all__ = ( | |
| 'AbstractEventLoopPolicy', | |
| 'AbstractEventLoop', 'AbstractServer', | |
| 'Handle', 'TimerHandle', | |
| 'get_event_loop_policy', 'set_event_loop_policy', | |
| 'get_event_loop', 'set_event_loop', 'new_event_loop', | |
| 'get_child_watcher', 'set_child_watcher', | |
| '_set_running_loop', 'get_running_loop', | |
| '_get_running_loop', | |
| ) | |
| import contextvars | |
| import os | |
| import socket | |
| import subprocess | |
| import sys | |
| import threading | |
| from . import format_helpers | |
| class Handle: | |
| """Object returned by callback registration methods.""" | |
| __slots__ = ('_callback', '_args', '_cancelled', '_loop', | |
| '_source_traceback', '_repr', '__weakref__', | |
| '_context') | |
| def __init__(self, callback, args, loop, context=None): | |
| if context is None: | |
| context = contextvars.copy_context() | |
| self._context = context | |
| self._loop = loop | |
| self._callback = callback | |
| self._args = args | |
| self._cancelled = False | |
| self._repr = None | |
| if self._loop.get_debug(): | |
| self._source_traceback = format_helpers.extract_stack( | |
| sys._getframe(1)) | |
| else: | |
| self._source_traceback = None | |
| def _repr_info(self): | |
| info = [self.__class__.__name__] | |
| if self._cancelled: | |
| info.append('cancelled') | |
| if self._callback is not None: | |
| info.append(format_helpers._format_callback_source( | |
| self._callback, self._args)) | |
| if self._source_traceback: | |
| frame = self._source_traceback[-1] | |
| info.append(f'created at {frame[0]}:{frame[1]}') | |
| return info | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| if self._repr is not None: | |
| return self._repr | |
| info = self._repr_info() | |
| return '<{}>'.format(' '.join(info)) | |
| def cancel(self): | |
| if not self._cancelled: | |
| self._cancelled = True | |
| if self._loop.get_debug(): | |
| # Keep a representation in debug mode to keep callback and | |
| # parameters. For example, to log the warning | |
| # "Executing <Handle...> took 2.5 second" | |
| self._repr = repr(self) | |
| self._callback = None | |
| self._args = None | |
| def cancelled(self): | |
| return self._cancelled | |
| def _run(self): | |
| try: | |
| self._context.run(self._callback, *self._args) | |
| except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt): | |
| raise | |
| except BaseException as exc: | |
| cb = format_helpers._format_callback_source( | |
| self._callback, self._args) | |
| msg = f'Exception in callback {cb}' | |
| context = { | |
| 'message': msg, | |
| 'exception': exc, | |
| 'handle': self, | |
| } | |
| if self._source_traceback: | |
| context['source_traceback'] = self._source_traceback | |
| self._loop.call_exception_handler(context) | |
| self = None # Needed to break cycles when an exception occurs. | |
| class TimerHandle(Handle): | |
| """Object returned by timed callback registration methods.""" | |
| __slots__ = ['_scheduled', '_when'] | |
| def __init__(self, when, callback, args, loop, context=None): | |
| super().__init__(callback, args, loop, context) | |
| if self._source_traceback: | |
| del self._source_traceback[-1] | |
| self._when = when | |
| self._scheduled = False | |
| def _repr_info(self): | |
| info = super()._repr_info() | |
| pos = 2 if self._cancelled else 1 | |
| info.insert(pos, f'when={self._when}') | |
| return info | |
| def __hash__(self): | |
| return hash(self._when) | |
| def __lt__(self, other): | |
| if isinstance(other, TimerHandle): | |
| return self._when < other._when | |
| return NotImplemented | |
| def __le__(self, other): | |
| if isinstance(other, TimerHandle): | |
| return self._when < other._when or self.__eq__(other) | |
| return NotImplemented | |
| def __gt__(self, other): | |
| if isinstance(other, TimerHandle): | |
| return self._when > other._when | |
| return NotImplemented | |
| def __ge__(self, other): | |
| if isinstance(other, TimerHandle): | |
| return self._when > other._when or self.__eq__(other) | |
| return NotImplemented | |
| def __eq__(self, other): | |
| if isinstance(other, TimerHandle): | |
| return (self._when == other._when and | |
| self._callback == other._callback and | |
| self._args == other._args and | |
| self._cancelled == other._cancelled) | |
| return NotImplemented | |
| def cancel(self): | |
| if not self._cancelled: | |
| self._loop._timer_handle_cancelled(self) | |
| super().cancel() | |
| def when(self): | |
| """Return a scheduled callback time. | |
| The time is an absolute timestamp, using the same time | |
| reference as loop.time(). | |
| """ | |
| return self._when | |
| class AbstractServer: | |
| """Abstract server returned by create_server().""" | |
| def close(self): | |
| """Stop serving. This leaves existing connections open.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def get_loop(self): | |
| """Get the event loop the Server object is attached to.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def is_serving(self): | |
| """Return True if the server is accepting connections.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def start_serving(self): | |
| """Start accepting connections. | |
| This method is idempotent, so it can be called when | |
| the server is already being serving. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def serve_forever(self): | |
| """Start accepting connections until the coroutine is cancelled. | |
| The server is closed when the coroutine is cancelled. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def wait_closed(self): | |
| """Coroutine to wait until service is closed.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def __aenter__(self): | |
| return self | |
| async def __aexit__(self, *exc): | |
| self.close() | |
| await self.wait_closed() | |
| class AbstractEventLoop: | |
| """Abstract event loop.""" | |
| # Running and stopping the event loop. | |
| def run_forever(self): | |
| """Run the event loop until stop() is called.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def run_until_complete(self, future): | |
| """Run the event loop until a Future is done. | |
| Return the Future's result, or raise its exception. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def stop(self): | |
| """Stop the event loop as soon as reasonable. | |
| Exactly how soon that is may depend on the implementation, but | |
| no more I/O callbacks should be scheduled. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def is_running(self): | |
| """Return whether the event loop is currently running.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def is_closed(self): | |
| """Returns True if the event loop was closed.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def close(self): | |
| """Close the loop. | |
| The loop should not be running. | |
| This is idempotent and irreversible. | |
| No other methods should be called after this one. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def shutdown_asyncgens(self): | |
| """Shutdown all active asynchronous generators.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def shutdown_default_executor(self): | |
| """Schedule the shutdown of the default executor.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Methods scheduling callbacks. All these return Handles. | |
| def _timer_handle_cancelled(self, handle): | |
| """Notification that a TimerHandle has been cancelled.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def call_soon(self, callback, *args, context=None): | |
| return self.call_later(0, callback, *args, context=context) | |
| def call_later(self, delay, callback, *args, context=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def call_at(self, when, callback, *args, context=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def time(self): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def create_future(self): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Method scheduling a coroutine object: create a task. | |
| def create_task(self, coro, *, name=None, context=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Methods for interacting with threads. | |
| def call_soon_threadsafe(self, callback, *args, context=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def run_in_executor(self, executor, func, *args): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def set_default_executor(self, executor): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Network I/O methods returning Futures. | |
| async def getaddrinfo(self, host, port, *, | |
| family=0, type=0, proto=0, flags=0): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def getnameinfo(self, sockaddr, flags=0): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def create_connection( | |
| self, protocol_factory, host=None, port=None, | |
| *, ssl=None, family=0, proto=0, | |
| flags=0, sock=None, local_addr=None, | |
| server_hostname=None, | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout=None, | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout=None, | |
| happy_eyeballs_delay=None, interleave=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def create_server( | |
| self, protocol_factory, host=None, port=None, | |
| *, family=socket.AF_UNSPEC, | |
| flags=socket.AI_PASSIVE, sock=None, backlog=100, | |
| ssl=None, reuse_address=None, reuse_port=None, | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout=None, | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout=None, | |
| start_serving=True): | |
| """A coroutine which creates a TCP server bound to host and port. | |
| The return value is a Server object which can be used to stop | |
| the service. | |
| If host is an empty string or None all interfaces are assumed | |
| and a list of multiple sockets will be returned (most likely | |
| one for IPv4 and another one for IPv6). The host parameter can also be | |
| a sequence (e.g. list) of hosts to bind to. | |
| family can be set to either AF_INET or AF_INET6 to force the | |
| socket to use IPv4 or IPv6. If not set it will be determined | |
| from host (defaults to AF_UNSPEC). | |
| flags is a bitmask for getaddrinfo(). | |
| sock can optionally be specified in order to use a preexisting | |
| socket object. | |
| backlog is the maximum number of queued connections passed to | |
| listen() (defaults to 100). | |
| ssl can be set to an SSLContext to enable SSL over the | |
| accepted connections. | |
| reuse_address tells the kernel to reuse a local socket in | |
| TIME_WAIT state, without waiting for its natural timeout to | |
| expire. If not specified will automatically be set to True on | |
| UNIX. | |
| reuse_port tells the kernel to allow this endpoint to be bound to | |
| the same port as other existing endpoints are bound to, so long as | |
| they all set this flag when being created. This option is not | |
| supported on Windows. | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout is the time in seconds that an SSL server | |
| will wait for completion of the SSL handshake before aborting the | |
| connection. Default is 60s. | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout is the time in seconds that an SSL server | |
| will wait for completion of the SSL shutdown procedure | |
| before aborting the connection. Default is 30s. | |
| start_serving set to True (default) causes the created server | |
| to start accepting connections immediately. When set to False, | |
| the user should await Server.start_serving() or Server.serve_forever() | |
| to make the server to start accepting connections. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sendfile(self, transport, file, offset=0, count=None, | |
| *, fallback=True): | |
| """Send a file through a transport. | |
| Return an amount of sent bytes. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def start_tls(self, transport, protocol, sslcontext, *, | |
| server_side=False, | |
| server_hostname=None, | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout=None, | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout=None): | |
| """Upgrade a transport to TLS. | |
| Return a new transport that *protocol* should start using | |
| immediately. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def create_unix_connection( | |
| self, protocol_factory, path=None, *, | |
| ssl=None, sock=None, | |
| server_hostname=None, | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout=None, | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def create_unix_server( | |
| self, protocol_factory, path=None, *, | |
| sock=None, backlog=100, ssl=None, | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout=None, | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout=None, | |
| start_serving=True): | |
| """A coroutine which creates a UNIX Domain Socket server. | |
| The return value is a Server object, which can be used to stop | |
| the service. | |
| path is a str, representing a file system path to bind the | |
| server socket to. | |
| sock can optionally be specified in order to use a preexisting | |
| socket object. | |
| backlog is the maximum number of queued connections passed to | |
| listen() (defaults to 100). | |
| ssl can be set to an SSLContext to enable SSL over the | |
| accepted connections. | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout is the time in seconds that an SSL server | |
| will wait for the SSL handshake to complete (defaults to 60s). | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout is the time in seconds that an SSL server | |
| will wait for the SSL shutdown to finish (defaults to 30s). | |
| start_serving set to True (default) causes the created server | |
| to start accepting connections immediately. When set to False, | |
| the user should await Server.start_serving() or Server.serve_forever() | |
| to make the server to start accepting connections. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def connect_accepted_socket( | |
| self, protocol_factory, sock, | |
| *, ssl=None, | |
| ssl_handshake_timeout=None, | |
| ssl_shutdown_timeout=None): | |
| """Handle an accepted connection. | |
| This is used by servers that accept connections outside of | |
| asyncio, but use asyncio to handle connections. | |
| This method is a coroutine. When completed, the coroutine | |
| returns a (transport, protocol) pair. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def create_datagram_endpoint(self, protocol_factory, | |
| local_addr=None, remote_addr=None, *, | |
| family=0, proto=0, flags=0, | |
| reuse_address=None, reuse_port=None, | |
| allow_broadcast=None, sock=None): | |
| """A coroutine which creates a datagram endpoint. | |
| This method will try to establish the endpoint in the background. | |
| When successful, the coroutine returns a (transport, protocol) pair. | |
| protocol_factory must be a callable returning a protocol instance. | |
| socket family AF_INET, socket.AF_INET6 or socket.AF_UNIX depending on | |
| host (or family if specified), socket type SOCK_DGRAM. | |
| reuse_address tells the kernel to reuse a local socket in | |
| TIME_WAIT state, without waiting for its natural timeout to | |
| expire. If not specified it will automatically be set to True on | |
| UNIX. | |
| reuse_port tells the kernel to allow this endpoint to be bound to | |
| the same port as other existing endpoints are bound to, so long as | |
| they all set this flag when being created. This option is not | |
| supported on Windows and some UNIX's. If the | |
| :py:data:`~socket.SO_REUSEPORT` constant is not defined then this | |
| capability is unsupported. | |
| allow_broadcast tells the kernel to allow this endpoint to send | |
| messages to the broadcast address. | |
| sock can optionally be specified in order to use a preexisting | |
| socket object. | |
| """ | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Pipes and subprocesses. | |
| async def connect_read_pipe(self, protocol_factory, pipe): | |
| """Register read pipe in event loop. Set the pipe to non-blocking mode. | |
| protocol_factory should instantiate object with Protocol interface. | |
| pipe is a file-like object. | |
| Return pair (transport, protocol), where transport supports the | |
| ReadTransport interface.""" | |
| # The reason to accept file-like object instead of just file descriptor | |
| # is: we need to own pipe and close it at transport finishing | |
| # Can got complicated errors if pass f.fileno(), | |
| # close fd in pipe transport then close f and vice versa. | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def connect_write_pipe(self, protocol_factory, pipe): | |
| """Register write pipe in event loop. | |
| protocol_factory should instantiate object with BaseProtocol interface. | |
| Pipe is file-like object already switched to nonblocking. | |
| Return pair (transport, protocol), where transport support | |
| WriteTransport interface.""" | |
| # The reason to accept file-like object instead of just file descriptor | |
| # is: we need to own pipe and close it at transport finishing | |
| # Can got complicated errors if pass f.fileno(), | |
| # close fd in pipe transport then close f and vice versa. | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def subprocess_shell(self, protocol_factory, cmd, *, | |
| stdin=subprocess.PIPE, | |
| stdout=subprocess.PIPE, | |
| stderr=subprocess.PIPE, | |
| **kwargs): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def subprocess_exec(self, protocol_factory, *args, | |
| stdin=subprocess.PIPE, | |
| stdout=subprocess.PIPE, | |
| stderr=subprocess.PIPE, | |
| **kwargs): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Ready-based callback registration methods. | |
| # The add_*() methods return None. | |
| # The remove_*() methods return True if something was removed, | |
| # False if there was nothing to delete. | |
| def add_reader(self, fd, callback, *args): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def remove_reader(self, fd): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def add_writer(self, fd, callback, *args): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def remove_writer(self, fd): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Completion based I/O methods returning Futures. | |
| async def sock_recv(self, sock, nbytes): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_recv_into(self, sock, buf): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_recvfrom(self, sock, bufsize): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_recvfrom_into(self, sock, buf, nbytes=0): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_sendall(self, sock, data): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_sendto(self, sock, data, address): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_connect(self, sock, address): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_accept(self, sock): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| async def sock_sendfile(self, sock, file, offset=0, count=None, | |
| *, fallback=None): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Signal handling. | |
| def add_signal_handler(self, sig, callback, *args): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def remove_signal_handler(self, sig): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Task factory. | |
| def set_task_factory(self, factory): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def get_task_factory(self): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Error handlers. | |
| def get_exception_handler(self): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def set_exception_handler(self, handler): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def default_exception_handler(self, context): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def call_exception_handler(self, context): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Debug flag management. | |
| def get_debug(self): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def set_debug(self, enabled): | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| class AbstractEventLoopPolicy: | |
| """Abstract policy for accessing the event loop.""" | |
| def get_event_loop(self): | |
| """Get the event loop for the current context. | |
| Returns an event loop object implementing the AbstractEventLoop interface, | |
| or raises an exception in case no event loop has been set for the | |
| current context and the current policy does not specify to create one. | |
| It should never return None.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def set_event_loop(self, loop): | |
| """Set the event loop for the current context to loop.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def new_event_loop(self): | |
| """Create and return a new event loop object according to this | |
| policy's rules. If there's need to set this loop as the event loop for | |
| the current context, set_event_loop must be called explicitly.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| # Child processes handling (Unix only). | |
| def get_child_watcher(self): | |
| "Get the watcher for child processes." | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| def set_child_watcher(self, watcher): | |
| """Set the watcher for child processes.""" | |
| raise NotImplementedError | |
| class BaseDefaultEventLoopPolicy(AbstractEventLoopPolicy): | |
| """Default policy implementation for accessing the event loop. | |
| In this policy, each thread has its own event loop. However, we | |
| only automatically create an event loop by default for the main | |
| thread; other threads by default have no event loop. | |
| Other policies may have different rules (e.g. a single global | |
| event loop, or automatically creating an event loop per thread, or | |
| using some other notion of context to which an event loop is | |
| associated). | |
| """ | |
| _loop_factory = None | |
| class _Local(threading.local): | |
| _loop = None | |
| _set_called = False | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| self._local = self._Local() | |
| def get_event_loop(self): | |
| """Get the event loop for the current context. | |
| Returns an instance of EventLoop or raises an exception. | |
| """ | |
| if (self._local._loop is None and | |
| not self._local._set_called and | |
| threading.current_thread() is threading.main_thread()): | |
| self.set_event_loop(self.new_event_loop()) | |
| if self._local._loop is None: | |
| raise RuntimeError('There is no current event loop in thread %r.' | |
| % threading.current_thread().name) | |
| return self._local._loop | |
| def set_event_loop(self, loop): | |
| """Set the event loop.""" | |
| self._local._set_called = True | |
| if loop is not None and not isinstance(loop, AbstractEventLoop): | |
| raise TypeError(f"loop must be an instance of AbstractEventLoop or None, not '{type(loop).__name__}'") | |
| self._local._loop = loop | |
| def new_event_loop(self): | |
| """Create a new event loop. | |
| You must call set_event_loop() to make this the current event | |
| loop. | |
| """ | |
| return self._loop_factory() | |
| # Event loop policy. The policy itself is always global, even if the | |
| # policy's rules say that there is an event loop per thread (or other | |
| # notion of context). The default policy is installed by the first | |
| # call to get_event_loop_policy(). | |
| _event_loop_policy = None | |
| # Lock for protecting the on-the-fly creation of the event loop policy. | |
| _lock = threading.Lock() | |
| # A TLS for the running event loop, used by _get_running_loop. | |
| class _RunningLoop(threading.local): | |
| loop_pid = (None, None) | |
| _running_loop = _RunningLoop() | |
| def get_running_loop(): | |
| """Return the running event loop. Raise a RuntimeError if there is none. | |
| This function is thread-specific. | |
| """ | |
| # NOTE: this function is implemented in C (see _asynciomodule.c) | |
| loop = _get_running_loop() | |
| if loop is None: | |
| raise RuntimeError('no running event loop') | |
| return loop | |
| def _get_running_loop(): | |
| """Return the running event loop or None. | |
| This is a low-level function intended to be used by event loops. | |
| This function is thread-specific. | |
| """ | |
| # NOTE: this function is implemented in C (see _asynciomodule.c) | |
| running_loop, pid = _running_loop.loop_pid | |
| if running_loop is not None and pid == os.getpid(): | |
| return running_loop | |
| def _set_running_loop(loop): | |
| """Set the running event loop. | |
| This is a low-level function intended to be used by event loops. | |
| This function is thread-specific. | |
| """ | |
| # NOTE: this function is implemented in C (see _asynciomodule.c) | |
| _running_loop.loop_pid = (loop, os.getpid()) | |
| def _init_event_loop_policy(): | |
| global _event_loop_policy | |
| with _lock: | |
| if _event_loop_policy is None: # pragma: no branch | |
| from . import DefaultEventLoopPolicy | |
| _event_loop_policy = DefaultEventLoopPolicy() | |
| def get_event_loop_policy(): | |
| """Get the current event loop policy.""" | |
| if _event_loop_policy is None: | |
| _init_event_loop_policy() | |
| return _event_loop_policy | |
| def set_event_loop_policy(policy): | |
| """Set the current event loop policy. | |
| If policy is None, the default policy is restored.""" | |
| global _event_loop_policy | |
| if policy is not None and not isinstance(policy, AbstractEventLoopPolicy): | |
| raise TypeError(f"policy must be an instance of AbstractEventLoopPolicy or None, not '{type(policy).__name__}'") | |
| _event_loop_policy = policy | |
| def get_event_loop(): | |
| """Return an asyncio event loop. | |
| When called from a coroutine or a callback (e.g. scheduled with call_soon | |
| or similar API), this function will always return the running event loop. | |
| If there is no running event loop set, the function will return | |
| the result of `get_event_loop_policy().get_event_loop()` call. | |
| """ | |
| # NOTE: this function is implemented in C (see _asynciomodule.c) | |
| return _py__get_event_loop() | |
| def _get_event_loop(stacklevel=3): | |
| # This internal method is going away in Python 3.12, left here only for | |
| # backwards compatibility with 3.10.0 - 3.10.8 and 3.11.0. | |
| # Similarly, this method's C equivalent in _asyncio is going away as well. | |
| # See GH-99949 for more details. | |
| current_loop = _get_running_loop() | |
| if current_loop is not None: | |
| return current_loop | |
| return get_event_loop_policy().get_event_loop() | |
| def set_event_loop(loop): | |
| """Equivalent to calling get_event_loop_policy().set_event_loop(loop).""" | |
| get_event_loop_policy().set_event_loop(loop) | |
| def new_event_loop(): | |
| """Equivalent to calling get_event_loop_policy().new_event_loop().""" | |
| return get_event_loop_policy().new_event_loop() | |
| def get_child_watcher(): | |
| """Equivalent to calling get_event_loop_policy().get_child_watcher().""" | |
| return get_event_loop_policy().get_child_watcher() | |
| def set_child_watcher(watcher): | |
| """Equivalent to calling | |
| get_event_loop_policy().set_child_watcher(watcher).""" | |
| return get_event_loop_policy().set_child_watcher(watcher) | |
| # Alias pure-Python implementations for testing purposes. | |
| _py__get_running_loop = _get_running_loop | |
| _py__set_running_loop = _set_running_loop | |
| _py_get_running_loop = get_running_loop | |
| _py_get_event_loop = get_event_loop | |
| _py__get_event_loop = _get_event_loop | |
| try: | |
| # get_event_loop() is one of the most frequently called | |
| # functions in asyncio. Pure Python implementation is | |
| # about 4 times slower than C-accelerated. | |
| from _asyncio import (_get_running_loop, _set_running_loop, | |
| get_running_loop, get_event_loop, _get_event_loop) | |
| except ImportError: | |
| pass | |
| else: | |
| # Alias C implementations for testing purposes. | |
| _c__get_running_loop = _get_running_loop | |
| _c__set_running_loop = _set_running_loop | |
| _c_get_running_loop = get_running_loop | |
| _c_get_event_loop = get_event_loop | |
| _c__get_event_loop = _get_event_loop | |