1 | """ |
---|
2 | A global thread pool for CPU-intensive tasks. |
---|
3 | |
---|
4 | Motivation: |
---|
5 | |
---|
6 | * Certain tasks are blocking on CPU, and so should be run in a thread. |
---|
7 | * The Twisted thread pool is used for operations that don't necessarily block |
---|
8 | on CPU, like DNS lookups. CPU processing should not block DNS lookups! |
---|
9 | * The number of threads should be fixed, and tied to the number of available |
---|
10 | CPUs. |
---|
11 | |
---|
12 | As a first pass, this uses ``os.cpu_count()`` to determine the max number of |
---|
13 | threads. This may create too many threads, as it doesn't cover things like |
---|
14 | scheduler affinity or cgroups, but that's not the end of the world. |
---|
15 | """ |
---|
16 | |
---|
17 | import os |
---|
18 | from typing import TypeVar, Callable, cast |
---|
19 | from functools import partial |
---|
20 | import threading |
---|
21 | from typing_extensions import ParamSpec |
---|
22 | from unittest import TestCase |
---|
23 | |
---|
24 | from twisted.python.threadpool import ThreadPool |
---|
25 | from twisted.internet.threads import deferToThreadPool |
---|
26 | from twisted.internet import reactor |
---|
27 | from twisted.internet.interfaces import IReactorFromThreads |
---|
28 | |
---|
29 | _CPU_THREAD_POOL = ThreadPool(minthreads=0, maxthreads=os.cpu_count() or 1, name="TahoeCPU") |
---|
30 | if hasattr(threading, "_register_atexit"): |
---|
31 | # This is a private API present in Python 3.8 or later, specifically |
---|
32 | # designed for thread pool shutdown. Since it's private, it might go away |
---|
33 | # at any point, so if it doesn't exist we still have a solution. |
---|
34 | threading._register_atexit(_CPU_THREAD_POOL.stop) # type: ignore |
---|
35 | else: |
---|
36 | # Daemon threads allow shutdown to happen without any explicit stopping of |
---|
37 | # threads. There are some bugs in old Python versions related to daemon |
---|
38 | # threads (fixed in subsequent CPython patch releases), but Python's own |
---|
39 | # thread pools use daemon threads in those versions so we're no worse off. |
---|
40 | _CPU_THREAD_POOL.threadFactory = partial( # type: ignore |
---|
41 | _CPU_THREAD_POOL.threadFactory, daemon=True |
---|
42 | ) |
---|
43 | _CPU_THREAD_POOL.start() |
---|
44 | |
---|
45 | |
---|
46 | P = ParamSpec("P") |
---|
47 | R = TypeVar("R") |
---|
48 | |
---|
49 | # Is running in a thread pool disabled? Should only be true in synchronous unit |
---|
50 | # tests. |
---|
51 | _DISABLED = False |
---|
52 | |
---|
53 | |
---|
54 | async def defer_to_thread(f: Callable[P, R], *args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs) -> R: |
---|
55 | """ |
---|
56 | Run the function in a thread, return the result. |
---|
57 | |
---|
58 | However, if ``disable_thread_pool_for_test()`` was called the function will |
---|
59 | be called synchronously inside the current thread. |
---|
60 | |
---|
61 | To reduce chances of synchronous tests being misleading as a result, this |
---|
62 | is an async function on presumption that will encourage immediate ``await``ing. |
---|
63 | """ |
---|
64 | if _DISABLED: |
---|
65 | return f(*args, **kwargs) |
---|
66 | |
---|
67 | # deferToThreadPool has no type annotations... |
---|
68 | result = await deferToThreadPool(cast(IReactorFromThreads, reactor), _CPU_THREAD_POOL, f, *args, **kwargs) |
---|
69 | return result |
---|
70 | |
---|
71 | |
---|
72 | def disable_thread_pool_for_test(test: TestCase) -> None: |
---|
73 | """ |
---|
74 | For the duration of the test, calls to ``defer_to_thread()`` will actually |
---|
75 | run synchronously, which is useful for synchronous unit tests. |
---|
76 | """ |
---|
77 | global _DISABLED |
---|
78 | |
---|
79 | def restore(): |
---|
80 | global _DISABLED |
---|
81 | _DISABLED = False |
---|
82 | |
---|
83 | test.addCleanup(restore) |
---|
84 | |
---|
85 | _DISABLED = True |
---|
86 | |
---|
87 | |
---|
88 | __all__ = ["defer_to_thread", "disable_thread_pool_for_test"] |
---|