14.2 The thread Module
The
only part of the thread module that your code
should use directly is the lock objects that module
thread supplies. Locks are simple
thread-synchronization primitives. Technically,
thread's locks are non-reentrant
and unowned: they do not keep track of what thread last locked them,
so there is no specific owner thread for a lock. A lock is in one of
two states, locked or unlocked.
To get a new lock object (in the unlocked state), call the function
named allocate_lock without arguments. This
function is supplied by both modules thread and
threading. A lock object
L supplies three methods.
When
wait is True,
acquire locks L. If
L is already locked, the calling thread
suspends and waits until L is unlocked,
then locks L. Even if the calling thread
was the one that last locked L, it still
suspends and waits until another thread releases
L. When wait is
False and L is
unlocked, acquire locks
L and returns True.
When wait is False and
L is locked, acquire
does not affect L, and returns
False.
Returns True if L is
locked, otherwise False.
Unlocks L, which must be locked. When
L is locked, any thread may call
L.release, not just the
thread that last locked L. When more than
one thread is waiting on L (i.e., has
called L.acquire,
finding L locked, and is now waiting for
L to be unlocked),
release wakes up an arbitrary waiting thread. The
thread that calls release is not suspended: it
remains ready and continues to execute.
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