Drop `.cancel_actor()` from `maybe_spawn_daemon()`
Since `tractor`'s new and improved inter-actor cancellation semantics are much more pedantic, AND bc we use the `ServiceMngr` for spawning service actors on-demand, the caller of `maybe_spawn_daemon()` should NEVER conduct a so called "out of band" `Actor`-runtime cancel request since this is precisely the job of our `ServiceMngr` XD Add a super in depth note explaining the underlying issue and adding a todo list of how we should prolly augment `tractor` to make such cases easier to grok and fix in the future!nix-qt6-fix
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cc5b21a7e6
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de6189da4d
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@ -134,7 +134,65 @@ async def maybe_spawn_daemon(
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async with tractor.wait_for_actor(service_name) as portal:
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lock.release()
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yield portal
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await portal.cancel_actor()
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# --- ---- ---
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# XXX NOTE XXX
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# --- ---- ---
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# DO NOT PUT A `portal.cancel_actor()` here (as was prior)!
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#
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# Doing so will cause an "out-of-band" ctxc
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# (`tractor.ContextCancelled`) to be raised inside the
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# `ServiceMngr.open_context_in_task()`'s call to
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# `ctx.wait_for_result()` AND the internal self-ctxc
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# "graceful capture" WILL NOT CATCH IT!
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#
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# This can cause certain types of operations to raise
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# that ctxc BEFORE THEY `return`, resulting in
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# a "false-negative" ctxc being raised when really
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# nothing actually failed, other then our semantic
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# "failure" to suppress an expected, graceful,
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# self-cancel scenario..
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#
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# bUt wHy duZ It WorK lIKe dis..
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# ------------------------------
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# from the perspective of the `tractor.Context` this
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# cancel request was conducted "out of band" since
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# `Context.cancel()` was never called and thus the
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# `._cancel_called: bool` was never set. Despite the
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# remote `.canceller` being set to `pikerd` (i.e. the
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# same `Actor.uid` of the raising service-mngr task) the
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# service-task's ctx itself was never marked as having
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# requested cancellation and thus still raises the ctxc
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# bc it was unaware of any such request.
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#
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# How to make grokin these cases easier tho?
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# ------------------------------------------
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# Because `Portal.cancel_actor()` was called it requests
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# "full-`Actor`-runtime-cancellation" of it's peer
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# process which IS NOT THE SAME as a single inter-actor
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# RPC task cancelling its local context with a remote
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# peer `Task` in that same peer process.
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#
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# ?TODO? It might be better if we do one (or all) of the
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# following:
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#
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# -[ ] at least set a special message for the
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# `ContextCancelled` when raised locally by the
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# unaware ctx task such that we check for the
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# `.canceller` being *our `Actor`* and in the case
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# where `Context._cancel_called == False` we specially
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# note that this is likely an "out-of-band"
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# runtime-cancel request triggered by some call to
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# `Portal.cancel_actor()`, possibly even reporting the
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# exact LOC of that caller by tracking it inside our
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# portal-type?
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# -[ ] possibly add another field `ContextCancelled` like
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# maybe a,
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# `.request_type: Literal['os', 'proc', 'actor',
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# 'ctx']` type thing which would allow immediately
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# being able to tell what kind of cancellation caused
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# the unexpected ctxc?
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# -[ ] REMOVE THIS COMMENT, once we've settled on how to
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# better augment `tractor` to be more explicit on this!
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async def spawn_emsd(
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