Use new implicit module-name detection throughout codebase to simplify
logger creation and leverage auto-naming from caller mod .
Main changes,
- drop `name=__name__` arg from all `get_logger()` calls
(across 29 modules).
- update `get_console_log()` calls to include `name='tractor'` for
enabling root logger in test harness and entry points; this ensures
logic in `get_logger()` triggers so that **all** `tractor`-internal
logging emits to console.
- add info log msg in test `conftest.py` showing test-harness
log level
Also,
- fix `.actor.uid` ref to `.actor.aid.uid` in `._trace`.
- adjust a `._context` log msg formatting for clarity.
- add TODO comments in `._addr`, `._uds` for when we mv to
using `multiaddr`.
- add todo for `RuntimeVars` type hint TODO in `.msg.types` (once we
eventually get that all going obvi!)
(this commit msg was generated in some part by [`claude-code`][claude-code-gh])
[claude-code-gh]: https://github.com/anthropics/claude-code
Since it turns out there's even case(s) in `trio` core that are guilty
(of implementing things like checkpoints in exc handlers), this adds
facility for ignoring explicit cases via `inspect.FrameInfo` field
matching from the unmasked `exc_ctx` within
`maybe_raise_from_masking_exc()`.
Impl deats,
- use `inspect.getinnerframes()/getmodule()` to extract the equivalent
"guilty place in code" which raised the masked error which we'd like
to ignore and **not unmask**.
- start a `_mask_cases: dict` which describes the entries to ignore
by matching against a specific `FrameInfo`'s fields from indexed
from `getinnerframes()`.
- describe in that table the case i hit with `trio.WouldBlock` being
always masked by a `Cancelled` due to way `trio.Lock.acquire()`
implements the blocking case in the would-block handler..
- always call into a new `is_expected_masking_case()` predicate (from
`maybe_raise_from_masking_exc()`) on matching `exc_ctx` types.
The correct ordering is to de-alloc the surrounding `service_n`
+ `trio.Event` **after** the `mng` teardown ensuring the
`mng.__aexit__()` never can hit a ref-error if it touches either (like
if a `tn` is passed to `maybe_open_context()`!
Such that key->value pairs can be defined which should *never be*
unmasked where values of
- the keys are exc-types which might be masked, and
- the values are exc-types which masked the equivalent key.
For example, the default includes:
- KBI->taskc: a kbi should never be unmasked from its masking
`trio.Cancelled`.
For the impl, a new `do_warn: bool` in the fn-body determines the
primary guard for whether a warning or re-raising is necessary.
Including all caller usage throughout. Moving to a non-`except*` impl
means it's never needed as a signal from the caller - we can just catch
the beg outright (like we should have always been doing)..
That is from `maybe_raise_from_masking_exc()` thus minimizing us to
a single `except BaseException` block with logic branching for the beg
vs. `unmask_from` exc cases.
Also,
- raise val-err when `unmask_from` is not a `tuple`.
- tweak the exc-note warning format.
- drop all pausing from dev work.
Turns out I didn't read my own internals docs/comments and despite it
not being used previously, this adds the real use case: a root,
per-actor, scope which ensures parent comms are the last conc-thing to
be cancelled.
Also, the impl changes here make the test from 6410e45 (or wtv
it's rebased to) pass, i.e. we can support crash handling in the root
actor despite the root-tn having been (self) cancelled.
Superficial adjustments,
- rename `Actor._service_n` -> `._service_tn` everywhere.
- add asserts to `._runtime.async_main()` which ensure that the any
`.trionics.maybe_open_nursery()` calls against optionally passed
`._[root/service]_tn` are allocated-if-not-provided (the
`._service_tn`-case being an i-guess-prep-for-the-future-anti-pattern
Bp).
- obvi adjust all internal usage to match new naming.
Serious/real-use-case changes,
- add (back) a `Actor._root_tn` which sits a scope "above" the
service-tn and is either,
+ assigned in `._runtime.async_main()` for sub-actors OR,
+ assigned in `._root.open_root_actor()` for the root actor.
**THE primary reason** to keep this "upper" tn is that during
a full-`Actor`-cancellation condition (more details below) we want to
ensure that the IPC connection with a sub-actor's parent is **the last
thing to be cancelled**; this is most simply implemented by ensuring
that the `Actor._parent_chan: .ipc.Channel` is handled in an upper
scope in `_rpc.process_messages()`-subtask-terms.
- for the root actor this `root_tn` is allocated in `.open_root_actor()`
body and assigned as such.
- extend `Actor.cancel_soon()` to be cohesive with this entire teardown
"policy" by scheduling a task in the `._root_tn` which,
* waits for the `._service_tn` to complete and then,
* cancels the `._root_tn.cancel_scope`,
* includes "sclangy" console logging throughout.
Such that the caller can be responsible for their own (nursery) scoping
as needed and, for the latter fn's case with
a `trio.Nursery.CancelStatus.encloses()` check to ensure the `tn` is
a valid parent-ish.
Some deats,
- in `gather_contexts()`, mv the `try/finally` outside the nursery block
to ensure we always do the `parent_exit`.
- for `maybe_open_context()` we do a naive task-tree hierarchy audit to
ensure the provided scope is not *too* child-ish (with what APIs `trio`
gives us, see above), OW go with the old approach of using the actor's
private service nursery.
Also,
* better report `trio.Cancelled` around the cache-miss `yield`
cases and ensure we **never** unmask triggering key-errors.
* report on any stale-state with the mutex in the `finally` block.
Since the `await service_n.start()` on key-err can be cancel-masked
(checkpoint interrupted before `_Cache.run_ctx` completes), we need to
always `lock.release()` in to avoid lock-owner-state corruption and/or
inf-hangs in peer cache-hitting tasks.
Deats,
- add a `try/except/finally` around the key-err triggered cache-miss
`service_n.start(_Cache.run_ctx, ..)` call, reporting on any taskc
and always `finally` unlocking.
- fill out some log msg content and use `.debug()` level.
It was originally this way; I forgot to flip it back when discarding the
`except*` handler impl..
Specially handle the `exc.__cause__` case where we raise from any
detected underlying cause and OW `from None` to suppress the eg's tb.
Since it turns out the semantics are basically inverse of normal
`except` (particularly for re-raising) which is hard to get right, and
bc it's a lot easier to just delegate to what `trio` already has behind
the `strict_exception_groups=False` setting, Bp
I added a rant here which will get removed shortly likely, but i think
going forward recommending against use of `except*` is prudent for
anything low level enough in the runtime (like trying to filter begs).
Dirty deats,
- copy `trio._core._run.collapse_exception_group()` to here with only
a slight mod to remove the notes check and tb concatting for the
collapse case.
- rename `maybe_collapse_eg()` - > `get_collapsed_eg()` and delegate it
directly to the former `trio` fn; return `None` when it returns the
same beg without collapse.
- simplify our own `collapse_eg()` to either raise the collapsed `exc`
or original `beg`.
I dunno what exactly I was thinking but we definitely don't want to
**ever** raise from the original exc-group, instead always raise from
any original `.__cause__` to be consistent with the embedded src-error's
context.
Also, adjust `maybe_collapse_eg()` to return `False` in the non-single
`.exceptions` case, again don't know what I was trying to do but this
simplifies caller logic and the prior return-semantic had no real
value..
This fixes some final usage in the runtime (namely top level nursery
usage in `._root`/`._runtime`) which was previously causing test suite
failures prior to this fix.
Since it's for beg filtering, the current impl should be renamed anyway;
it's not just for filtering cancelled excs.
Deats,
- added a real doc string, links to official eg docs and fixed the
return typing.
- adjust all internal imports to match.
To handle captured non-egs (when the now optional `tn` isn't provided)
as well as yield up a `BoxedMaybeException` which contains any detected
and un-masked `exc_ctx` as its `.value`.
Also add some additional tooling,
- a `raise_unmasked: bool` toggle for when the caller just wants to
report the masked exc and not raise-it-in-place of the masker.
- `extra_note: str` which by default is tuned to the default
`unmask_from = (trio.Cancelled,)` but which can be used to deliver
custom exception msg content.
- `always_warn_on: tuple[BaseException]` which will always emit
a warning log of what would have been the raised-in-place-of
`ctx_exc`'s msg for special cases where you want to report
a masking case that might not be otherwise noticed by the runtime
(cough like a `Cancelled` masking another `Cancelled) but which
you'd still like to warn the caller about.
- factor out the masked-`ext_ctx` predicate logic into
a `find_masked_excs()` and also use it for non-eg cases.
Still maybe todo?
- rewrapping multiple masked sub-excs in an eg back into an eg? left in
#TODOs and a pause-point where applicable.
Inside a new `.trionics._beg` and exposed from the subpkg ns in
anticipation of the `strict_exception_groups=False` being removed by
`trio` in py 3.15.
Notes,
- mk an embedded single-exc "extractor" using a `BaseExceptionGroup.exceptions` length
check, when 1 return the lone child.
- use the above in a new `@acm`, async bc it's most likely to be composed in an
`async with` tuple-style sequence block, called `collapse_eg()` which
acts a one line "absorber" for when the above mentioned flag is no
logner supported by `trio.open_nursery()`.
All untested atm fwiw.. but soon to be used in our test suite(s) likely!
Namely inside,
- `ActorNursery.open_portal()` which uses
`.trionics.maybe_open_nursery()` and is now adjusted to
pass-through `**kwargs` for at least this flag.
- inside the `.trionics.gather_contexts()`.
- allow passing and report the lib name (`trio` or `tractor`) from
`maybe_open_nursery()`.
- use `.runtime()` level when reporting `_Cache`-hits in
`maybe_open_context()`.
- tidy up some doc strings.
- `trio_typing` is nearly obsolete since `trio >= 0.23`
- `exceptiongroup` is built-in to python 3.11
- `async_generator` primitives have lived in `contextlib` for quite
a while!
We were using a `all(<yielded values>)` condition which obviously won't
work if the batched managers yield any non-truthy value. So instead see
the `unwrapped: dict` with the `id(mngrs)` and only unblock once all
values have been filled in to be something that is not that value.
Makes the broadcast test suite not hang xD, and is our expected default
behaviour. Also removes a ton of commented legacy cruft from before the
refactor to remove the `.receive()` recursion and fixes some typing.
Oh right, and in the case where there's only one subscriber left we warn
log about it since in theory we could actually entirely unwind the
bcaster back to the original underlying, though not sure if that's sane
or works for some use cases (like wanting to have some other subscriber
get added dynamically later).
Driven by a bug found in `piker` where we'd get an inf recursion error
due to `BroadcastReceiver.receive()` being called when consumer tasks
are awoken but no value is ready to `.nowait_receive()`.
This new rework takes an approach closer to the interface and internals
of `trio.MemoryReceiveChannel` particularly in terms of,
- implementing a `BroadcastReceiver.receive_nowait()` and using it
within the async `.receive()`.
- failing over to an internal `._receive_from_underlying()` when the
`_nowait()` call raises `trio.WouldBlock`.
- adding `BroadcastState.statistics()` for debugging and testing
dropping recursion from `.receive()`.
Turns out the lifetime mgmt of separate nurseries per delegate manager
is tricky; a new nursery can't be naively allocated on cache-misses since
it may get closed by some early terminating task instead of by the "last
using" consumer task. In theory if we allocate using the same logic as
that used for the last-task-triggers-exit then this should work?
For now just go back to a single global nursery per `_Cache` which still
avoids use of the internal actor service nursery.
Instead of sticking all `trionics.maybe_open_context()` tasks inside the
actor's (root) service nursery, open a unique one per manager function
instance (id).
Further, accept a callable for the `key` such that a user can have
more flexible control on the caching logic and move the
`maybe_open_nursery()` helper out of the portal mod and into this
trionics "managers" module.