gevent.thread
– Implementation of the standard thread
module that spawns greenlets¶Implementation of the standard thread
module that spawns greenlets.
Note
This module is a helper for gevent.monkey
and is not
intended to be used directly. For spawning greenlets in your
applications, prefer higher level constructs like
gevent.Greenlet
class or gevent.spawn()
.
alias of RuntimeError
Bases: _AtomicBoundedSemaphore
Acquire the semaphore.
Note
If this semaphore was initialized with a value of 0, this method will block forever (unless a timeout is given or blocking is set to false).
A bool
indicating whether the semaphore was acquired.
If blocking
is True and timeout
is None (the default), then
(so long as this semaphore was initialized with a size greater than 0)
this will always return True. If a timeout was given, and it expired before
the semaphore was acquired, False will be returned. (Note that this can still
raise a Timeout
exception, if some other caller had already started a timer.)
allocate_lock() -> lock object (allocate() is an obsolete synonym)
Create a new lock object. See help(type(threading.Lock())) for information about locks.
exit() (exit_thread() is an obsolete synonym)
This is synonymous to ``raise SystemExit’’. It will cause the current thread to exit silently unless the exception is caught.
Return a non-negative integer identifying the thread as reported by the OS (kernel). This may be used to uniquely identify a particular thread within a system.
Simulate the arrival of the given signal in the main thread, where the corresponding signal handler will be executed. If signum is omitted, SIGINT is assumed. A subthread can use this function to interrupt the main thread.
Note: the default signal handler for SIGINT raises KeyboardInterrupt
.
start_new_thread(function, args[, kwargs]) (start_new() is an obsolete synonym)
Start a new thread and return its identifier. The thread will call the function with positional arguments from the tuple args and keyword arguments taken from the optional dictionary kwargs. The thread exits when the function returns; the return value is ignored. The thread will also exit when the function raises an unhandled exception; a stack trace will be printed unless the exception is SystemExit.
Next page: gevent.threading
– Implementation of the standard threading
using greenlets