1 """A generally useful event scheduler class.
3 Each instance of this class manages its own queue.
4 No multi-threading is implied; you are supposed to hack that
5 yourself, or use a single instance per application.
7 Each instance is parametrized with two functions, one that is
8 supposed to return the current time, one that is supposed to
9 implement a delay. You can implement real-time scheduling by
10 substituting time and sleep from built-in module time, or you can
11 implement simulated time by writing your own functions. This can
12 also be used to integrate scheduling with STDWIN events; the delay
13 function is allowed to modify the queue. Time can be expressed as
14 integers or floating point numbers, as long as it is consistent.
16 Events are specified by tuples (time, priority, action, argument).
17 As in UNIX, lower priority numbers mean higher priority; in this
18 way the queue can be maintained as a priority queue. Execution of the
19 event means calling the action function, passing it the argument.
20 Remember that in Python, multiple function arguments can be packed
21 in a tuple. The action function may be an instance method so it
22 has another way to reference private data (besides global variables).
23 Parameterless functions or methods cannot be used, however.
26 # XXX The timefunc and delayfunc should have been defined as methods
27 # XXX so you can define new kinds of schedulers using subclassing
28 # XXX instead of having to define a module or class just to hold
29 # XXX the global state of your particular time and delay functions.
33 __all__
= ["scheduler"]
36 def __init__(self
, timefunc
, delayfunc
):
37 """Initialize a new instance, passing the time and delay
40 self
.timefunc
= timefunc
41 self
.delayfunc
= delayfunc
43 def enterabs(self
, time
, priority
, action
, argument
):
44 """Enter a new event in the queue at an absolute time.
46 Returns an ID for the event which can be used to remove it,
50 event
= time
, priority
, action
, argument
51 heapq
.heappush(self
.queue
, event
)
54 def enter(self
, delay
, priority
, action
, argument
):
55 """A variant that specifies the time as a relative time.
57 This is actually the more commonly used interface.
60 time
= self
.timefunc() + delay
61 return self
.enterabs(time
, priority
, action
, argument
)
63 def cancel(self
, event
):
64 """Remove an event from the queue.
66 This must be presented the ID as returned by enter().
67 If the event is not in the queue, this raises RuntimeError.
70 self
.queue
.remove(event
)
71 heapq
.heapify(self
.queue
)
74 """Check whether the queue is empty."""
75 return not not self
.queue
78 """Execute events until the queue is empty.
80 When there is a positive delay until the first event, the
81 delay function is called and the event is left in the queue;
82 otherwise, the event is removed from the queue and executed
83 (its action function is called, passing it the argument). If
84 the delay function returns prematurely, it is simply
87 It is legal for both the delay function and the action
88 function to to modify the queue or to raise an exception;
89 exceptions are not caught but the scheduler's state remains
90 well-defined so run() may be called again.
92 A questionably hack is added to allow other threads to run:
93 just after an event is executed, a delay of 0 is executed, to
94 avoid monopolizing the CPU when other threads are also
98 # localize variable access to minimize overhead
99 # and to improve thread safety
101 delayfunc
= self
.delayfunc
102 timefunc
= self
.timefunc
105 time
, priority
, action
, argument
= checked_event
= q
[0]
108 delayfunc(time
- now
)
111 # Verify that the event was not removed or altered
112 # by another thread after we last looked at q[0].
113 if event
is checked_event
:
114 void
= action(*argument
)
115 delayfunc(0) # Let other threads run
117 heapq
.heappush(event
)