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path: root/extmod/uasyncio/funcs.py
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2020-12-02extmod/uasyncio: Fix cancellation handling of wait_for.Damien George
This commit switches the roles of the helper task from a cancellation task to a runner task, to get the correct semantics for cancellation of wait_for. Some uasyncio tests are now disabled for the native emitter due to issues with native code generation of generators and yield-from. Fixes #5797. Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-12-02extmod/uasyncio: Delay calling Loop.call_exception_handler by 1 loop.Damien George
When a tasks raises an exception which is uncaught, and no other task await's on that task, then an error message is printed (or a user function called) via a call to Loop.call_exception_handler. In CPython this call is made when the Task object is freed (eg via reference counting) because it's at that point that it is known that the exception that was raised will never be handled. MicroPython does not have reference counting and the current behaviour is to deal with uncaught exceptions as early as possible, ie as soon as they terminate the task. But this can be undesirable because in certain cases a task can start and raise an exception immediately (before any await is executed in that task's coro) and before any other task gets a chance to await on it to catch the exception. This commit changes the behaviour so that tasks which end due to an uncaught exception are scheduled one more time for execution, and if they are not await'ed on by the next scheduling loop, then the exception handler is called (eg the exception is printed out). Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-06-10extmod/uasyncio: Add asyncio.wait_for_ms function.Damien George
Fixes issue #6107.
2020-03-26extmod/uasyncio: Add new implementation of uasyncio module.Damien George
This commit adds a completely new implementation of the uasyncio module. The aim of this version (compared to the original one in micropython-lib) is to be more compatible with CPython's asyncio module, so that one can more easily write code that runs under both MicroPython and CPython (and reuse CPython asyncio libraries, follow CPython asyncio tutorials, etc). Async code is not easy to write and any knowledge users already have from CPython asyncio should transfer to uasyncio without effort, and vice versa. The implementation here attempts to provide good compatibility with CPython's asyncio while still being "micro" enough to run where MicroPython runs. This follows the general philosophy of MicroPython itself, to make it feel like Python. The main change is to use a Task object for each coroutine. This allows more flexibility to queue tasks in various places, eg the main run loop, tasks waiting on events, locks or other tasks. It no longer requires pre-allocating a fixed queue size for the main run loop. A pairing heap is used to queue Tasks. It's currently implemented in pure Python, separated into components with lazy importing for optional components. In the future parts of this implementation can be moved to C to improve speed and reduce memory usage. But the aim is to maintain a pure-Python version as a reference version.