The whole origin was not having an explicit open/close semantic for
streams. We have that now so this internal mechanic isn't needed and
further our streams become more correct by having `.aclose()` be
independent of cancellation.
Finally this makes a cancelled root actor nursery not clobber child
tasks which request and lock the root's tty for the debugger repl.
Using an edge triggered event which is set after all fifo-lock-queued
tasks are complete, we can be sure that no lingering child tasks are
going to get interrupted during pdb use and tty lock acquisition.
Further, even if new tasks do queue up to get the lock, the root will
incrementally send cancel msgs to each sub-actor only once the tty is
not locked by a (set of) child request task(s). Add shielding around all
the critical sections where the child attempts to allocate the lock from
the root such that it won't be disrupted from cancel messages from the
root after the acquire lock transaction has started.
If the root calls `trio.Process.kill()` on immediate child proc teardown
when the child is using pdb, we can get stdstreams clobbering that
results in a pdb++ repl where the user can't see what's been typed. Not
killing such children on cancellation / error seems to resolve this
issue whilst still giving reliable termination. For now, code that
special path until a time it becomes a problem for ensuring zombie
reaps.
A context is the natural fit (vs. a receive stream) for locking the root
proc's tty usage via it's `.started()` sync point. Simplify the
`_breakpoin()` routine to be a simple async func instead of all this
"returning a coroutine" stuff from before we decided that
`tractor.breakpoint()` must be async. Use `runtime` level for locking
logging making it easier to trace.
Another face palm that was causing serious issues for code that is using
the `.shielded` feature..
Add a bunch more detailed comments for all this subtlety and hopefully
get it right once and for all. Also aggregated the `trio` errors that
should trigger closure inside `.aclose()`, hopefully that's right too.
Revert this change since it really is poking at internals and doesn't
make a lot of sense. If the context is going to be cancelled then the
msg loop will tear down the feed memory channel when ready, we don't
need to be clobbering it and confusing the runtime machinery lol.
Add clear teardown semantics for `Context` such that the remote side
cancellation propagation happens only on error or if client code
explicitly requests it (either by exit flag to `Portal.open_context()`
or by manually calling `Context.cancel()`). Add `Context.result()`
to wait on and capture the final result from a remote context function;
any lingering msg sequence will be consumed/discarded.
Changes in order to make this possible:
- pass the runtime msg loop's feeder receive channel in to the context
on the calling (portal opening) side such that a final 'return' msg
can be waited upon using `Context.result()` which delivers the final
return value from the callee side `@tractor.context` async function.
- always await a final result from the target context function in
`Portal.open_context()`'s `__aexit__()` if the context has not
been (requested to be) cancelled by client code on block exit.
- add an internal `Context._cancel_called` for context "cancel
requested" tracking (much like `trio`'s cancel scope).
- allow flagging a stream as terminated using an internal
`._eoc` flag which will mark the stream as stopped for iteration.
- drop `StopAsyncIteration` catching in `.receive()`; it does
nothing.