"""This test case provides support for checking forking and wait behavior. To test different wait behavior, override the wait_impl method. We want fork1() semantics -- only the forking thread survives in the child after a fork(). On some systems (e.g. Solaris without posix threads) we find that all active threads survive in the child after a fork(); this is an error. While BeOS doesn't officially support fork and native threading in the same application, the present example should work just fine. DC """ import os, sys, time, unittest import test.support as support threading = support.import_module('threading') LONGSLEEP = 2 SHORTSLEEP = 0.5 NUM_THREADS = 4 class ForkWait(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): self._threading_key = support.threading_setup() self.alive = {} self.stop = 0 self.threads = [] def tearDown(self): # Stop threads self.stop = 1 for thread in self.threads: thread.join() thread = None del self.threads[:] support.threading_cleanup(*self._threading_key) def f(self, id): while not self.stop: self.alive[id] = os.getpid() try: time.sleep(SHORTSLEEP) except IOError: pass def wait_impl(self, cpid): for i in range(10): # waitpid() shouldn't hang, but some of the buildbots seem to hang # in the forking tests. This is an attempt to fix the problem. spid, status = os.waitpid(cpid, os.WNOHANG) if spid == cpid: break time.sleep(2 * SHORTSLEEP) self.assertEqual(spid, cpid) self.assertEqual(status, 0, "cause = %d, exit = %d" % (status&0xff, status>>8)) def test_wait(self): for i in range(NUM_THREADS): thread = threading.Thread(target=self.f, args=(i,)) thread.start() self.threads.append(thread) time.sleep(LONGSLEEP) a = self.alive.keys() a.sort() self.assertEqual(a, range(NUM_THREADS)) prefork_lives = self.alive.copy() if sys.platform in ['unixware7']: cpid = os.fork1() else: cpid = os.fork() if cpid == 0: # Child time.sleep(LONGSLEEP) n = 0 for key in self.alive: if self.alive[key] != prefork_lives[key]: n += 1 os._exit(n) else: # Parent self.wait_impl(cpid)