pycapnp/test/test_capability.py

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import pytest
import capnp
import test_capability_capnp as capability
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@pytest.fixture(autouse=True)
async def kj_loop():
async with capnp.kj_loop():
yield
class Server(capability.TestInterface.Server):
def __init__(self, val=1):
self.val = val
async def foo(self, i, j, **kwargs):
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extra = 0
if j:
extra = 1
return str(i * 5 + extra + self.val)
async def buz(self, i, **kwargs):
return i.host + "_test"
async def bam(self, i, **kwargs):
return str(i) + "_test", i
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class PipelineServer(capability.TestPipeline.Server):
async def getCap(self, n, inCap, _context, **kwargs):
response = await inCap.foo(i=n)
_results = _context.results
_results.s = response.x + "_foo"
_results.outBox.cap = Server(100)
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async def test_client():
client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(Server())
req = client._request("foo")
req.i = 5
remote = req.send()
response = await remote
assert response.x == "26"
req = client.foo_request()
req.i = 5
remote = req.send()
response = await remote
assert response.x == "26"
with pytest.raises(AttributeError):
client.foo2_request()
req = client.foo_request()
with pytest.raises(Exception):
req.i = "foo"
req = client.foo_request()
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with pytest.raises(AttributeError):
req.baz = 1
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async def test_simple_client():
client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(Server())
remote = client._send("foo", i=5)
response = await remote
assert response.x == "26"
remote = client.foo(i=5)
response = await remote
assert response.x == "26"
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remote = client.foo(i=5, j=True)
response = await remote
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assert response.x == "27"
remote = client.foo(5)
response = await remote
assert response.x == "26"
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remote = client.foo(5, True)
response = await remote
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assert response.x == "27"
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remote = client.foo(5, j=True)
response = await remote
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assert response.x == "27"
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remote = client.buz(capability.TestSturdyRefHostId.new_message(host="localhost"))
response = await remote
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assert response.x == "localhost_test"
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remote = client.bam(i=5)
response = await remote
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assert response.x == "5_test"
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assert response.i == 5
with pytest.raises(Exception):
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remote = client.foo(5, 10)
with pytest.raises(Exception):
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remote = client.foo(5, True, 100)
with pytest.raises(Exception):
remote = client.foo(i="foo")
with pytest.raises(AttributeError):
remote = client.foo2(i=5)
with pytest.raises(Exception):
remote = client.foo(baz=5)
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async def test_pipeline():
client = capability.TestPipeline._new_client(PipelineServer())
foo_client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(Server())
remote = client.getCap(n=5, inCap=foo_client)
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outCap = remote.outBox.cap
pipelinePromise = outCap.foo(i=10)
response = await pipelinePromise
assert response.x == "150"
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response = await remote
assert response.s == "26_foo"
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class BadServer(capability.TestInterface.Server):
def __init__(self, val=1):
self.val = val
async def foo(self, i, j, **kwargs):
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extra = 0
if j:
extra = 1
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return str(i * 5 + extra + self.val), 10 # returning too many args
async def test_exception_client():
client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(BadServer())
remote = client._send("foo", i=5)
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with pytest.raises(capnp.KjException):
await remote
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class BadPipelineServer(capability.TestPipeline.Server):
async def getCap(self, n, inCap, _context, **kwargs):
try:
await inCap.foo(i=n)
except capnp.KjException:
raise Exception("test was a success")
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async def test_exception_chain():
client = capability.TestPipeline._new_client(BadPipelineServer())
foo_client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(BadServer())
remote = client.getCap(n=5, inCap=foo_client)
try:
await remote
except Exception as e:
assert "test was a success" in str(e)
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async def test_pipeline_exception():
client = capability.TestPipeline._new_client(BadPipelineServer())
foo_client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(BadServer())
remote = client.getCap(n=5, inCap=foo_client)
outCap = remote.outBox.cap
pipelinePromise = outCap.foo(i=10)
with pytest.raises(Exception):
await pipelinePromise
with pytest.raises(Exception):
await remote
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async def test_casting():
client = capability.TestExtends._new_client(Server())
client2 = client.upcast(capability.TestInterface)
_ = client2.cast_as(capability.TestInterface)
with pytest.raises(Exception):
client.upcast(capability.TestPipeline)
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class TailCallOrder(capability.TestCallOrder.Server):
def __init__(self):
self.count = -1
async def getCallSequence(self, expected, **kwargs):
self.count += 1
return self.count
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class TailCaller(capability.TestTailCaller.Server):
def __init__(self):
self.count = 0
async def foo(self, i, callee, _context, **kwargs):
self.count += 1
tail = callee.foo_request(i=i, t="from TailCaller")
return await _context.tail_call(tail)
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class TailCallee(capability.TestTailCallee.Server):
def __init__(self):
self.count = 0
async def foo(self, i, t, _context, **kwargs):
self.count += 1
results = _context.results
results.i = i
results.t = t
results.c = TailCallOrder()
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async def test_tail_call():
callee_server = TailCallee()
caller_server = TailCaller()
callee = capability.TestTailCallee._new_client(callee_server)
caller = capability.TestTailCaller._new_client(caller_server)
promise = caller.foo(i=456, callee=callee)
dependent_call1 = promise.c.getCallSequence()
response = await promise
assert response.i == 456
assert response.i == 456
dependent_call2 = response.c.getCallSequence()
dependent_call3 = response.c.getCallSequence()
result = await dependent_call1
assert result.n == 0
result = await dependent_call2
assert result.n == 1
result = await dependent_call3
assert result.n == 2
assert callee_server.count == 1
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assert caller_server.count == 1
async def test_cancel():
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client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(Server())
req = client._request("foo")
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req.i = 5
remote = req.send()
remote.cancel()
with pytest.raises(Exception):
await remote
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Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
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req = client.foo(5)
await req
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
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req.cancel() # Cancel a promise that was already consumed
req = client.foo(5)
req.cancel()
with pytest.raises(Exception):
await req
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
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req = client.foo(5)
assert (await req).x == "26"
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
2023-06-06 20:08:15 +02:00
with pytest.raises(Exception):
await req
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
2023-06-06 20:08:15 +02:00
2014-04-13 18:15:36 -07:00
async def test_double_send():
client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(Server())
req = client._request("foo")
req.i = 5
await req.send()
with pytest.raises(Exception):
await req.send()
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
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class PromiseJoinServer(capability.TestPipeline.Server):
async def getCap(self, n, inCap, _context, **kwargs):
res = await inCap.foo(i=n)
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response = await inCap.foo(i=int(res.x) + 1)
_results = _context.results
_results.s = response.x + "_bar"
_results.outBox.cap = inCap
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
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async def test_promise_joining():
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
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client = capability.TestPipeline._new_client(PromiseJoinServer())
foo_client = capability.TestInterface._new_client(Server())
remote = client.getCap(n=5, inCap=foo_client)
assert (await remote).s == "136_bar"
Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop (#310) * Integrate the KJ event loop into Python's asyncio event loop Fix #256 This PR attempts to remove the slow and expensive polling behavior for asyncio in favor of proper linking of the KJ event loop to the asyncio event loop. * Don't memcopy buffer * Improve promise cancellation and prepare for timer implementation * Add attribution for asyncProvider.cpp * Implement timeout * Cleanup * First round of simplifications * Add more a_wait functions and a shutdown function * Fix edge-cases with loop shutdown * Clean up calculator examples * Cleanup * Cleanup * Reformat * Fix warnings * Reformat again * Compatibility with macos * Inline the asyncio loop in some places where this is feasible * Add todo * Fix * Remove synchronous wait * Wrap fd listening callbacks in a class * Remove poll_forever * Remove the thread-local/thread-global optimization This will not matter much soon anyway, and simplifies things * Share promise code by using fused types * Improve refcounting of python objects in promises We replace many instances of PyObject* by Own<PyRefCounter> for more automatic reference management. * Code wrapPyFunc in a similar way to wrapPyFuncNoArg * Refactor capabilityHelper, fix several memory bugs for promises and add __await__ * Improve promise ownership, reduce memory leaks Promise wrappers now hold a Own<Promise<Own<PyRefCounter>>> object. This might seem like excessive nesting of objects (which to some degree it is, but with good reason): - The outer Own is needed because Cython cannot allocate objects without a nullary constructor on the stack (Promise doesn't have a nullary constructor). Additionally, I believe it would be difficult or impossible to detect when a promise is cancelled/moved if we use a bare Promise. - Every promise returns a Owned PyRefCounter. PyRefCounter makes sure that a reference to the returned object keeps existing until the promise is fulfilled or cancelled. Previously, this was attempted using attach, which is redundant and makes reasoning about PyINCREF and PyDECREF very difficult. - Because a promise holds a Own<Promise<...>>, when we perform any kind of action on that promise (a_wait, then, ...), we have to explicitly move() the ownership around. This will leave the original promise with a NULL-pointer, which we can easily detect as a cancelled promise. Promises now only hold references to their 'parents' when strictly needed. This should reduce memory pressure. * Simplify and test the promise joining functionality * Attach forgotten parent * Catch exceptions in add_reader and friends * Further cleanup of memory leaks * Get rid of a_wait() in examples * Cancel all fd read operations when the python asyncio loop is closed * Formatting * Remove support for capnp < 7000 * Bring asyncProvider.cpp more in line with upstream async-io-unix.c++ It was originally copied from the nodejs implementation, which in turn copied from async-io-unix.c++. But that copy is pretty old. * Fix a bug that caused file descriptors to never be closed * Implement AsyncIoStream based on Python transports and protocols * Get rid of asyncProvider All asyncio now goes through _AsyncIoStream * Formatting * Add __dict__ to PyAsyncIoStreamProtocol for python 3.7 * Reintroduce strange ipv4/ipv6 selection code to make ci happy * Extra pause_reading() * Work around more python bugs * Be careful to only close transport when this is still possible * Move pause_reading() workaround
2023-06-06 20:08:15 +02:00
class ExtendsServer(Server):
async def qux(self, **kwargs):
pass
async def test_inheritance():
client = capability.TestExtends._new_client(ExtendsServer())
await client.qux()
remote = client.foo(i=5)
response = await remote
assert response.x == "26"
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class PassedCapTest(capability.TestPassedCap.Server):
async def foo(self, cap, _context, **kwargs):
res = await cap.foo(5)
_context.results.x = res.x
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async def test_null_cap():
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client = capability.TestPassedCap._new_client(PassedCapTest())
assert (await client.foo(Server())).x == "26"
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with pytest.raises(capnp.KjException):
await client.foo()
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class StructArgTest(capability.TestStructArg.Server):
async def bar(self, a, b, **kwargs):
return a + str(b)
async def test_struct_args():
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client = capability.TestStructArg._new_client(StructArgTest())
assert (await client.bar(a="test", b=1)).c == "test1"
with pytest.raises(capnp.KjException):
assert (await client.bar("test", 1)).c == "test1"
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class GenericTest(capability.TestGeneric.Server):
async def foo(self, a, **kwargs):
return a.as_text() + "test"
async def test_generic():
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client = capability.TestGeneric._new_client(GenericTest())
obj = capnp._MallocMessageBuilder().get_root_as_any()
obj.set_as_text("anypointer_")
assert (await client.foo(obj)).b == "anypointer_test"