[pypy-commit] extradoc extradoc: - unwrite the specific details about nested transactions, to be
arigo
noreply at buildbot.pypy.org
Sat Apr 14 19:15:39 CEST 2012
Author: Armin Rigo <arigo at tunes.org>
Branch: extradoc
Changeset: r4192:bb8a0daf30d6
Date: 2012-04-14 19:15 +0200
http://bitbucket.org/pypy/extradoc/changeset/bb8a0daf30d6/
Log: - unwrite the specific details about nested transactions, to be
considered later
- found out a more flexible way to ensure ordering when needed
diff --git a/planning/stm.txt b/planning/stm.txt
--- a/planning/stm.txt
+++ b/planning/stm.txt
@@ -11,28 +11,17 @@
Python Interface
----------------
-Planned interface refactoring: integrate the states of "running
-transactionally" and "not running transactionally".
+Planned interface refactorings:
-Running normally the program is done in one big top-level transaction.
-The "transaction" module should be provisionally renamed to "ame". At
-any point (including in sub-transactions) we can create an instance of
-'ame.RandomOrder()', and call methods on it:
+* inspired by "concurrent.futures" from Python 3.2: have
+ transaction.add() return a Future instance with a method result().
+ If called inside another transaction, it will suspend it until the
+ result is available, i.e. until the first transaction commits. Can
+ be used even if the result is not used, just to ensure some ordering.
- - 'add(callable, *args, **kwds)'
- - 'run()'
-
-When run() is called the current transaction is suspended and all
-added transactions are run (including the ones added by them). These
-transactions commit into the current transaction. When run() returns,
-the parent transaction continues running. If at any point any
-transaction becomes inevitable, its parent transaction does the same,
-and so on.
-
-This should give a model that composes more naturally than the current
-one. Also, it opens the door to other 'ame' objects; e.g. an
-'ame.Sequential()' would run the subtransactions in the same order as
-they have been added.
+* (later, maybe) allow nested transactions: either by calling
+ transaction.run() inside transactions too, or with actual objects
+ that store collections of transactions.
Overview of the GC
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