1

I am trying to make my chunk of code non-thread-safe, in order to toy with some exceptions that I want to add on later.

This is my python code:

from time import sleep
from decimal import *
from threading import Lock
import random

def inc_gen(c):
    """
    Increment generator
    """
    while True:
        #getting sleep period
        timing_rand = random.randrange(0,1000)
        print "INC: Sleeping for " + str(Decimal(timing_rand)/Decimal(1000))
        sleep(Decimal(timing_rand)/Decimal(1000))
        c.inc()
        yield c

def dec_gen(c):
    """
    decrement generator
    """
    while True:
        #getting sleep period
        timing_rand = random.randrange(0,1000)
        print "DEC: Sleeping for " + str(Decimal(timing_rand)/Decimal(1000))
        sleep(Decimal(timing_rand)/Decimal(1000))
        c.dec()
        yield c

class something():
    """
    We use an obj instead of an atomic variable c, we can have "threads"
    simulating shared resources, instead of a single variable, to avoid
    atomic instructions. (which is thread-safe in python thanks to GIL)
    """
    def __init__(self):
        self.c = 0
    def inc(self):
        self.c += 1
    def dec(self):
        self.c -= 1
    def value(self):
        return self.c

def main():
    """
    main() function
    """
    obj = something()
    counters = [inc_gen(obj),dec_gen(obj)]

    #we only want inc_gen 10 times, and dec_gen 10 times.
    inc = 0 #number of times inc_gen is added
    dec = 0 #number of times dec_gen is added

    while True:
        #choosing the next counter
        if inc < 10 and dec < 10:
            counter_rand = random.randrange(0,2)
            if counter_rand == 0:
                inc += 1
            else: dec += 1
        elif inc < 10 and dec == 10:
            inc += 1 
            counter_rand = 0
        elif dec < 10 and inc == 10:
            dec += 1 
            counter_rand = 1
        else: break

        counters[counter_rand].next()

    #print for testing
    print "Final value of c: " + str(obj.value())

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()

What I want it to do is to have the code possibly result in a final value which is not 0.

Is it thread-safe? If not, how can I make it such that it is not thread-safe?

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  • 2
    Uhh, you just asked this (stackoverflow.com/questions/1717393), and were answered. Why are you asking the exact same question with example code that's logically identical but needlessly more complicated? Nov 12, 2009 at 9:13

1 Answer 1

0

You have a Read-Modify-Write operation basically. If you want to ensure things go haywire, the best is to intruduce delay between the read and the write.

def inc(self):
    v = self.c
    time.sleep(random.random()) # Should probably limit it to a few hundred ms
    self.c = v + 1

def dec(self):
    v = self.c
    time.sleep(random.random()) # Should probably limit it to a few hundred ms
    self.c = v - 1
3
  • Using sleep is not turning any piece of not-thread-safe-code into a thread safe one, it is only lowering the probability of accessing simultaneously the critical resource May 10, 2016 at 9:08
  • Could you read the question and answer before downvoting ... I never said it would make it thread safe ! And neither did the OP ask to make it thread safe. Quite the opposite, the point here is to make rise the probability that it will fail because of its non-threadsafeness ...
    – 246tNt
    May 27, 2016 at 13:15
  • ahem, you're right. Sorry, I reacted too quickly. I have suffered from sleeps in acceptance tests.... I tried cancelling the downvote, but I can't unless the answer is modifed. May 30, 2016 at 7:42

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