Scoped Lock
Michael Hudson
mwh at python.net
Mon Jan 5 12:12:53 EST 2004
Ype Kingma <ykingma at accessforall.nl> writes:
> Marco Bubke wrote:
>
> > Hi
> >
> > There is the Lock object in the threading module.
> > But there is no medode there I could aquire a scoped
> > lock like:
> >
> > mutex = threading.Lock()
> > my_lock = mutex.scoped_acquire() # maybe scoped_lock()
> > #now this stuff is locked
> >
> > del mylock
> >
> > #the lock is released.
> >
> > def do_domething:
> > my_lock = mutex.scoped_acquire()
> > #now this stuff is locked
> > #the lock is released after its out of scope
> >
> >
> > I have written this my own but I'm not sure there is a drawback
> > because its looks so convinent. So I wonder why its not in
> > the module?
>
> Some reasons:
> - What should happen when an exception happens during the locked stuff?
> - It is possible pass a reference to the lock during the locked stuff,
> so although the lock goes out of local scope, there still might be
> a reference to it.
> - The moment that __del__() is called is not guaranteed.
>
> You can also do it like this:
>
> mutex = threading.Lock()
> mutex.acquire()
> try:
> # now this stuff is locked
> finally:
> mutex.release() # explicit is better than implicit
This is the way to do it today. There's PEP 310 which, if accepted,
makes this at least shorter to write... (and PEP 310 references a
lengthy discussion about whether using __del__ like this is wise).
Cheers,
mwh
--
3. Syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon.
-- Alan Perlis, http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/perlis-alan/quotes.html
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