* the benefits of twisted.thread.
* how to use the thread of twisted.
Running code in a thread-safe manner
Most code in Twisted is not thread-safe. For example, writing data to a transport from a protocol is not thread-safe. Therefore, we want a way to schedule methods to be run in the main event loop. This can be done using the function
twisted.internet.interfaces.IReactorThreads.callFromThread:from twisted.internet import reactor def notThreadSafe(x): """do something that isn't thread-safe""" # ... def threadSafeScheduler(): """Run in thread-safe manner.""" reactor.callFromThread(notThreadSafe, 3) # will run 'notThreadSafe(3)' # in the event loop reactor.run()
Running code in threads
Sometimes we may want to run methods in threads - for example, in order to access blocking APIs. Twisted provides methods for doing so using the IReactorThreads API (
twisted.internet.interfaces.IReactorThreads). Additional utility functions are provided in twisted.internet.threads
. Basically, these methods allow us to queue methods to be run by a thread pool.For example, to run a method in a thread we can do:
from twisted.internet import reactor def aSillyBlockingMethod(x): import time time.sleep(2) print x # run method in thread reactor.callInThread(aSillyBlockingMethod, "2 seconds have passed") reactor.run()
Utility Methods
The utility methods are not part of the
twisted.internet.reactor APIs, but are implemented in twisted.internet.threads
.If we have multiple methods to run sequentially within a thread, we can do:
from twisted.internet import reactor, threads def aSillyBlockingMethodOne(x): import time time.sleep(2) print x def aSillyBlockingMethodTwo(x): print x # run both methods sequentially in a thread commands = [(aSillyBlockingMethodOne, ["Calling First"], {})] commands.append((aSillyBlockingMethodTwo, ["And the second"], {})) threads.callMultipleInThread(commands) reactor.run()For functions whose results we wish to get, we can have the result returned as a Deferred:
from twisted.internet import reactor, threads def doLongCalculation(): # .... do long calculation here ... return 3 def printResult(x): print x # run method in thread and get result as defer.Deferred d = threads.deferToThread(doLongCalculation) d.addCallback(printResult) reactor.run()If you wish to call a method in the reactor thread and get its result, you can use
blockingCallFromThread
:from twisted.internet import threads, reactor, defer from twisted.web.client import getPage from twisted.web.error import Error def inThread(): try: result = threads.blockingCallFromThread( reactor, getPage, "http://twistedmatrix.com/") except Error, exc: print exc else: print result reactor.callFromThread(reactor.stop) reactor.callInThread(inThread) reactor.run()
blockingCallFromThread
will return the object or raise the exception returned or raised by the function passed to it. If the function passed to it returns a Deferred, it will return the value the Deferred is called back with or raise the exception it is errbacked with.Managing the Thread Pool
The thread pool is implemented by
twisted.python.threadpool.ThreadPool.We may want to modify the size of the threadpool, increasing or decreasing the number of threads in use. We can do this do this quite easily:
from twisted.internet import reactor reactor.suggestThreadPoolSize(30)The default size of the thread pool depends on the reactor being used; the default reactor uses a minimum size of 5 and a maximum size of 10. Be careful that you understand threads and their resource usage before drastically altering the thread pool sizes.
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