"""SCons.Taskmaster Generic Taskmaster. """ # # Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 The SCons Foundation # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining # a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the # "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including # without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, # distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to # permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to # the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included # in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY # KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE # WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND # NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE # LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION # OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION # WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # __revision__ = "/home/scons/scons/branch.0/baseline/src/engine/SCons/Taskmaster.py 0.96.1.D001 2004/08/23 09:55:29 knight" import string import sys import traceback import SCons.Node import SCons.Errors class Task: """Default SCons build engine task. This controls the interaction of the actual building of node and the rest of the engine. This is expected to handle all of the normally-customizable aspects of controlling a build, so any given application *should* be able to do what it wants by sub-classing this class and overriding methods as appropriate. If an application needs to customze something by sub-classing Taskmaster (or some other build engine class), we should first try to migrate that functionality into this class. Note that it's generally a good idea for sub-classes to call these methods explicitly to update state, etc., rather than roll their own interaction with Taskmaster from scratch.""" def __init__(self, tm, targets, top, node): self.tm = tm self.targets = targets self.top = top self.node = node def display(self, message): """Allow the calling interface to display a message """ pass def prepare(self): """Called just before the task is executed. This unlinks all targets and makes all directories before building anything.""" # Now that it's the appropriate time, give the TaskMaster a # chance to raise any exceptions it encountered while preparing # this task. self.tm.exception_raise() if self.tm.message: self.display(self.tm.message) self.tm.message = None for t in self.targets: t.prepare() for s in t.side_effects: s.prepare() def execute(self): """Called to execute the task. This method is called from multiple threads in a parallel build, so only do thread safe stuff here. Do thread unsafe stuff in prepare(), executed() or failed().""" try: everything_was_cached = 1 for t in self.targets: if not t.retrieve_from_cache(): everything_was_cached = 0 break if not everything_was_cached: self.targets[0].build() except KeyboardInterrupt: raise except SystemExit: exc_value = sys.exc_info()[1] raise SCons.Errors.ExplicitExit(self.targets[0], exc_value.code) except SCons.Errors.UserError: raise except SCons.Errors.BuildError: raise except: exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback = sys.exc_info() raise SCons.Errors.BuildError(self.targets[0], "Exception", exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback) def get_target(self): """Fetch the target being built or updated by this task. """ return self.node def executed(self): """Called when the task has been successfully executed. This may have been a do-nothing operation (to preserve build order), so check the node's state before updating things. Most importantly, this calls back to the Taskmaster to put any node tasks waiting on this one back on the pending list.""" if self.targets[0].get_state() == SCons.Node.executing: for t in self.targets: for side_effect in t.side_effects: side_effect.set_state(None) t.set_state(SCons.Node.executed) t.built() else: for t in self.targets: t.visited() self.tm.executed(self.node) def failed(self): """Default action when a task fails: stop the build.""" self.fail_stop() def fail_stop(self): """Explicit stop-the-build failure.""" for t in self.targets: t.set_state(SCons.Node.failed) self.tm.failed(self.node) self.tm.stop() def fail_continue(self): """Explicit continue-the-build failure. This sets failure status on the target nodes and all of their dependent parent nodes. """ for t in self.targets: # Set failure state on all of the parents that were dependent # on this failed build. def set_state(node): node.set_state(SCons.Node.failed) t.call_for_all_waiting_parents(set_state) self.tm.executed(self.node) def mark_targets(self, state): for t in self.targets: t.set_state(state) def mark_targets_and_side_effects(self, state): for t in self.targets: for side_effect in t.side_effects: side_effect.set_state(state) t.set_state(state) def make_ready_all(self): """Mark all targets in a task ready for execution. This is used when the interface needs every target Node to be visited--the canonical example being the "scons -c" option. """ self.out_of_date = self.targets[:] self.mark_targets_and_side_effects(SCons.Node.executing) def make_ready_current(self): """Mark all targets in a task ready for execution if any target is not current. This is the default behavior for building only what's necessary. """ self.out_of_date = [] for t in self.targets: if not t.current(): self.out_of_date.append(t) if self.out_of_date: self.mark_targets_and_side_effects(SCons.Node.executing) else: self.mark_targets(SCons.Node.up_to_date) make_ready = make_ready_current def postprocess(self): """Post process a task after it's been executed.""" for t in self.targets: t.postprocess() def exc_info(self): return self.tm.exception def exc_clear(self): self.tm.exception_clear() def exception_set(self): self.tm.exception_set() def order(dependencies): """Re-order a list of dependencies (if we need to).""" return dependencies class Taskmaster: """A generic Taskmaster for handling a bunch of targets. Classes that override methods of this class should call the base class method, so this class can do its thing. """ def __init__(self, targets=[], tasker=Task, order=order): self.targets = targets # top level targets self.candidates = targets[:] # nodes that might be ready to be executed self.candidates.reverse() self.executing = [] # nodes that are currently executing self.pending = [] # nodes that depend on a currently executing node self.tasker = tasker self.ready = None # the next task that is ready to be executed self.order = order self.exception_clear() self.message = None def _find_next_ready_node(self): """Find the next node that is ready to be built""" if self.ready: return while self.candidates: node = self.candidates[-1] state = node.get_state() # Skip this node if it has already been executed: if state != None and state != SCons.Node.stack: self.candidates.pop() continue # Mark this node as being on the execution stack: node.set_state(SCons.Node.stack) try: children = node.children() except SystemExit: exc_value = sys.exc_info()[1] e = SCons.Errors.ExplicitExit(node, exc_value.code) self.exception_set((SCons.Errors.ExplicitExit, e)) self.candidates.pop() self.ready = node break except KeyboardInterrupt: raise except: # We had a problem just trying to figure out the # children (like a child couldn't be linked in to a # BuildDir, or a Scanner threw something). Arrange to # raise the exception when the Task is "executed." self.exception_set() self.candidates.pop() self.ready = node break # Detect dependency cycles: def in_stack(node): return node.get_state() == SCons.Node.stack cycle = filter(in_stack, children) if cycle: nodes = filter(in_stack, self.candidates) + cycle nodes.reverse() desc = "Dependency cycle: " + string.join(map(str, nodes), " -> ") raise SCons.Errors.UserError, desc # Find all of the derived dependencies (that is, # children who have builders or are side effects): try: def derived_nodes(node): return node.is_derived() or node.is_pseudo_derived() derived = filter(derived_nodes, children) except KeyboardInterrupt: raise except: # We had a problem just trying to figure out if any of # the kids are derived (like a child couldn't be linked # from a repository). Arrange to raise the exception # when the Task is "executed." self.exception_set() self.candidates.pop() self.ready = node break # If there aren't any children with builders and this # was a top-level argument, then see if we can find any # corresponding targets in linked build directories: if not derived and node in self.targets: alt, message = node.alter_targets() if alt: self.message = message self.candidates.pop() self.candidates.extend(alt) continue # Add derived files that have not been built # to the candidates list: def unbuilt_nodes(node): return node.get_state() == None not_built = filter(unbuilt_nodes, derived) if not_built: # We're waiting on one more derived files that have not # yet been built. Add this node to the waiting_parents # list of each of those derived files. def add_to_waiting_parents(child, parent=node): child.add_to_waiting_parents(parent) map(add_to_waiting_parents, not_built) not_built.reverse() self.candidates.extend(self.order(not_built)) continue # Skip this node if it has side-effects that are # currently being built: cont = 0 for side_effect in node.side_effects: if side_effect.get_state() == SCons.Node.executing: self.pending.append(node) node.set_state(SCons.Node.pending) self.candidates.pop() cont = 1 break if cont: continue # Skip this node if it is pending on a currently # executing node: if node.depends_on(self.executing) or node.depends_on(self.pending): self.pending.append(node) node.set_state(SCons.Node.pending) self.candidates.pop() continue # The default when we've gotten through all of the checks above: # this node is ready to be built. self.candidates.pop() self.ready = node break def next_task(self): """Return the next task to be executed.""" self._find_next_ready_node() node = self.ready if node is None: return None try: tlist = node.builder.targets(node) except AttributeError: tlist = [node] self.executing.extend(tlist) self.executing.extend(node.side_effects) task = self.tasker(self, tlist, node in self.targets, node) try: task.make_ready() except KeyboardInterrupt: raise except: # We had a problem just trying to get this task ready (like # a child couldn't be linked in to a BuildDir when deciding # whether this node is current). Arrange to raise the # exception when the Task is "executed." self.exception_set() self.ready = None return task def is_blocked(self): self._find_next_ready_node() return not self.ready and (self.pending or self.executing) def stop(self): """Stop the current build completely.""" self.candidates = [] self.ready = None self.pending = [] def failed(self, node): try: tlist = node.builder.targets(node) except AttributeError: tlist = [node] for t in tlist: self.executing.remove(t) for side_effect in node.side_effects: self.executing.remove(side_effect) def executed(self, node): try: tlist = node.builder.targets(node) except AttributeError: tlist = [node] for t in tlist: self.executing.remove(t) for side_effect in node.side_effects: self.executing.remove(side_effect) # move the current pending nodes to the candidates list: # (they may not all be ready to build, but _find_next_ready_node() # will figure out which ones are really ready) for node in self.pending: node.set_state(None) self.pending.reverse() self.candidates.extend(self.pending) self.pending = [] def exception_set(self, exception=None): if exception is None: exception = sys.exc_info() self.exception = exception self.exception_raise = self._exception_raise def exception_clear(self): self.exception = (None, None, None) self.exception_raise = self._no_exception_to_raise def _no_exception_to_raise(self): pass def _exception_raise(self): """Raise a pending exception that was recorded while getting a Task ready for execution.""" exc_type, exc_value = self.exception[:2] raise exc_type, exc_value