Fixed #5664 -- Added a Jython workaround for some assumptions in the signal

dispatch code. Thanks, Leo Soto.


git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@6586 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Malcolm Tredinnick 2007-10-21 18:26:24 +00:00
parent fcbde3cbe5
commit 2adcb3f250
1 changed files with 74 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
"""Refactored "safe reference" from dispatcher.py"""
import weakref, traceback
from django.utils.functional import curry
def safeRef(target, onDelete = None):
"""Return a *safe* weak reference to a callable target
@ -17,7 +18,7 @@ def safeRef(target, onDelete = None):
# Turn a bound method into a BoundMethodWeakref instance.
# Keep track of these instances for lookup by disconnect().
assert hasattr(target, 'im_func'), """safeRef target %r has im_self, but no im_func, don't know how to create reference"""%( target,)
reference = BoundMethodWeakref(
reference = get_bound_method_weakref(
target=target,
onDelete=onDelete
)
@ -163,3 +164,75 @@ class BoundMethodWeakref(object):
if function is not None:
return function.__get__(target)
return None
class BoundNonDescriptorMethodWeakref(BoundMethodWeakref):
"""A specialized BoundMethodWeakref, for platforms where instance methods
are not descriptors.
It assumes that the function name and the target attribute name are the
same, instead of assuming that the function is a descriptor. This approach
is equally fast, but not 100% reliable because functions can be stored on an
attribute named differenty than the function's name such as in:
class A: pass
def foo(self): return "foo"
A.bar = foo
But this shouldn't be a common use case. So, on platforms where methods
aren't descriptors (such as Jython) this implementation has the advantage
of working in the most cases.
"""
def __init__(self, target, onDelete=None):
"""Return a weak-reference-like instance for a bound method
target -- the instance-method target for the weak
reference, must have im_self and im_func attributes
and be reconstructable via:
target.im_func.__get__( target.im_self )
which is true of built-in instance methods.
onDelete -- optional callback which will be called
when this weak reference ceases to be valid
(i.e. either the object or the function is garbage
collected). Should take a single argument,
which will be passed a pointer to this object.
"""
assert getattr(target.im_self, target.__name__) == target, \
("method %s isn't available as the attribute %s of %s" %
(target, target.__name__, target.im_self))
super(BoundNonDescriptorMethodWeakref, self).__init__(target, onDelete)
def __call__(self):
"""Return a strong reference to the bound method
If the target cannot be retrieved, then will
return None, otherwise returns a bound instance
method for our object and function.
Note:
You may call this method any number of times,
as it does not invalidate the reference.
"""
target = self.weakSelf()
if target is not None:
function = self.weakFunc()
if function is not None:
# Using curry() would be another option, but it erases the
# "signature" of the function. That is, after a function is
# curried, the inspect module can't be used to determine how
# many arguments the function expects, nor what keyword
# arguments it supports, and pydispatcher needs this
# information.
return getattr(target, function.__name__)
return None
def get_bound_method_weakref(target, onDelete):
"""Instantiates the appropiate BoundMethodWeakRef, depending on the details of
the underlying class method implementation"""
if hasattr(target, '__get__'):
# target method is a descriptor, so the default implementation works:
return BoundMethodWeakref(target=target, onDelete=onDelete)
else:
# no luck, use the alternative implementation:
return BoundNonDescriptorMethodWeakref(target=target, onDelete=onDelete)