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gh-102780: Fix uncancel() call in asyncio timeouts (#102815)
Also use `raise TimeOut from <CancelledError instance>` so that the CancelledError is set in the `__cause__` field rather than in the `__context__` field. Co-authored-by: Guido van Rossum <gvanrossum@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
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4 changed files with 50 additions and 6 deletions
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@ -300,13 +300,17 @@ in the task at the next opportunity.
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It is recommended that coroutines use ``try/finally`` blocks to robustly
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perform clean-up logic. In case :exc:`asyncio.CancelledError`
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is explicitly caught, it should generally be propagated when
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clean-up is complete. Most code can safely ignore :exc:`asyncio.CancelledError`.
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clean-up is complete. :exc:`asyncio.CancelledError` directly subclasses
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:exc:`BaseException` so most code will not need to be aware of it.
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The asyncio components that enable structured concurrency, like
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:class:`asyncio.TaskGroup` and :func:`asyncio.timeout`,
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are implemented using cancellation internally and might misbehave if
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a coroutine swallows :exc:`asyncio.CancelledError`. Similarly, user code
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should not call :meth:`uncancel <asyncio.Task.uncancel>`.
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should not generally call :meth:`uncancel <asyncio.Task.uncancel>`.
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However, in cases when suppressing :exc:`asyncio.CancelledError` is
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truly desired, it is necessary to also call ``uncancel()`` to completely
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remove the cancellation state.
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.. _taskgroups:
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@ -1148,7 +1152,9 @@ Task Object
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Therefore, unlike :meth:`Future.cancel`, :meth:`Task.cancel` does
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not guarantee that the Task will be cancelled, although
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suppressing cancellation completely is not common and is actively
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discouraged.
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discouraged. Should the coroutine nevertheless decide to suppress
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the cancellation, it needs to call :meth:`Task.uncancel` in addition
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to catching the exception.
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.. versionchanged:: 3.9
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Added the *msg* parameter.
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@ -1238,6 +1244,10 @@ Task Object
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with :meth:`uncancel`. :class:`TaskGroup` context managers use
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:func:`uncancel` in a similar fashion.
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If end-user code is, for some reason, suppresing cancellation by
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catching :exc:`CancelledError`, it needs to call this method to remove
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the cancellation state.
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.. method:: cancelling()
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Return the number of pending cancellation requests to this Task, i.e.,
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@ -84,6 +84,7 @@ class Timeout:
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async def __aenter__(self) -> "Timeout":
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self._state = _State.ENTERED
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self._task = tasks.current_task()
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self._cancelling = self._task.cancelling()
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if self._task is None:
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raise RuntimeError("Timeout should be used inside a task")
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self.reschedule(self._when)
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@ -104,10 +105,10 @@ class Timeout:
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if self._state is _State.EXPIRING:
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self._state = _State.EXPIRED
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if self._task.uncancel() == 0 and exc_type is exceptions.CancelledError:
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# Since there are no outstanding cancel requests, we're
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if self._task.uncancel() <= self._cancelling and exc_type is exceptions.CancelledError:
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# Since there are no new cancel requests, we're
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# handling this.
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raise TimeoutError
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raise TimeoutError from exc_val
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elif self._state is _State.ENTERED:
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self._state = _State.EXITED
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@ -247,6 +247,36 @@ class TimeoutTests(unittest.IsolatedAsyncioTestCase):
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async with asyncio.timeout(0.01):
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await asyncio.sleep(10)
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async def test_timeout_after_cancellation(self):
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try:
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asyncio.current_task().cancel()
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await asyncio.sleep(1) # work which will be cancelled
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except asyncio.CancelledError:
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pass
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finally:
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with self.assertRaises(TimeoutError):
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async with asyncio.timeout(0.0):
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await asyncio.sleep(1) # some cleanup
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async def test_cancel_in_timeout_after_cancellation(self):
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try:
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asyncio.current_task().cancel()
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await asyncio.sleep(1) # work which will be cancelled
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except asyncio.CancelledError:
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pass
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finally:
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with self.assertRaises(asyncio.CancelledError):
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async with asyncio.timeout(1.0):
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asyncio.current_task().cancel()
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await asyncio.sleep(2) # some cleanup
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async def test_timeout_exception_cause (self):
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with self.assertRaises(asyncio.TimeoutError) as exc:
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async with asyncio.timeout(0):
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await asyncio.sleep(1)
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cause = exc.exception.__cause__
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assert isinstance(cause, asyncio.CancelledError)
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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unittest.main()
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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
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The :class:`asyncio.Timeout` context manager now works reliably even when performing cleanup due
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to task cancellation. Previously it could raise a
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:exc:`~asyncio.CancelledError` instead of an :exc:`~asyncio.TimeoutError` in such cases.
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