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On Wed, Sep 9, 2009 at 23:56, Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com> wrote:
-- Thomas Wouters wrote:I thought "make sure I have the GIL, either by already having it or
> Your idea of making this an API called a 'fork lock' or something
> sounds good (though I think it needs a better name. PyBeforeFork &
> PyAfterFork?). The subprocess module, for example, disables garbage
> collection before forking and restores it afterwards to avoid
> http://bugs.python.org/issue1336. That type of thing could also be
> done in such a function.
>
>
> Unfortunately it's rather hard to make those functions work correctly
> with the current API -- we can't provide functions you can just use as
> arguments to pthread\_atfork because the global interpreter lock is not
> re-entrant and we have no way of testing whether the current thread
> holds the GIL.
waiting for it if I don't yet have it" was the entire point of the
PyGILState\_Ensure() API? \[1\]
Hm, yeah. For some reason I was certain it was inappropriate, back when I was trying to create a pthread\_atfork-friendly set of functions. At the time I was also hip-deep in the awfulness of Python/thread\*.c and its unsafe punning and unwarranted assumptions, so I may have overreacted. I added this as a feature-request issue ( http://bugs.python.org/issue6923 ) and will look at it some more.
In the mean time, I fixed the biggest source of issues by checking in the change to make at least calls to fork() made by Python be safe, also backported to 2.6.
Thomas Wouters <thomas@python.org>
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