To handle both remote cancellation this adds `ContextCanceled.canceller:
tuple` the uid of the cancel requesting actor and is expected to be set
by the runtime when servicing any remote cancel request. This makes it
possible for `ContextCancelled` receivers to know whether "their actor
runtime" is the source of the cancellation.
Also add an explicit `RemoteActor.src_actor_uid` which better formalizes
the notion of "which remote actor" the error originated from.
Both of these new attrs are expected to be packed in the `.msgdata` when
the errors are loaded locally.
These will verify new changes to the runtime/messaging core which allows
us to adopt an "ignore cancel if requested by us" style handling of
`ContextCancelled` more like how `trio` does with
`trio.Nursery.cancel_scope.cancel()`. We now expect
a `ContextCancelled.canceller: tuple` which is set to the actor uid of
the actor which requested the cancellation which eventually resulted in
the remote error-msg.
Also adds some experimental tweaks to the "backpressure" test which it
turns out is very problematic in coordination with context cancellation
since blocking on the feed mem chan to some task will block the ipc msg
loop and thus handling of cancellation.. More to come to both the test
and core to address this hopefully since right now this test is failing.
Previously we were leaking our (pdb++) override into the Python runtime
which would always result in a runtime error whenever `breakpoint()` is
called outside our runtime; after exit of the root actor . This
explicitly restores any previous hook override (detected during startup)
or deletes the hook and restores the environment if none existed prior.
Also adds a new WIP debugging example script to ensure breakpointing
works as normal after runtime close; this will be added to the test
suite.
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).
Since one-way streaming can be accomplished by just *not* sending on one
side (and/or thus wrapping such usage in a more restrictive API), we
just drop the recv-only parent type. The only method different was
`MsgStream.send()`, now merged in. Further in usage of `.subscribe()`
we monkey patch the underlying stream's `.send()` onto the delivered
broadcast receiver so that subscriber tasks can two-way stream as though
using the stream directly.
This allows us to more definitively drop `tractor.open_stream_from()` in
the longer run if we so choose as well; note currently this will
potentially create an issue if a caller tries to `.send()` on such a one
way stream.
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()`.
We weren't doing this originally I *think* just because of the path
dependent nature of the way the code was developed (originally being
mega pedantic about one-way vs. bidirectional streams) but, it doesn't
seem like there's any issue just calling the stream's `.aclose()`; also
have the benefit of just being less code and logic checks B)