94

I want to perform an action at a regular interval in my multi-threaded Python application. I have seen two different ways of doing it

exit = False
def thread_func(): 
    while not exit:
       action()
       time.sleep(DELAY)

or

exit_flag = threading.Event()
def thread_func(): 
    while not exit_flag.wait(timeout=DELAY):
       action()

Is there an advantage to one way over the other? Does one use less resources, or play nicer with other threads and the GIL? Which one makes the remaining threads in my app more responsive?

(Assume some external event sets exit or exit_flag, and I am willing to wait the full delay while shutting down)

4
  • 2
    Where is the code that sets the exit flag? Is it in the action() call or in another thread or maybe called by a signal handler?
    – tdelaney
    Mar 16, 2015 at 16:50
  • I use Event.wait in this situation even though python 2.x is polling in the background. Sleeping at, say, 1 second intervals is reasonably responsive and less intrusive.
    – tdelaney
    Mar 16, 2015 at 17:12
  • The first one is going to waste some CPU time, for one thing.
    – user253751
    Mar 16, 2015 at 21:45
  • interresting side-effect of Event.wait. I'm reverse-engeneering the python API of an application which has an embedded python 2.5 interpreter ( ableton live ), and the parent process doesn't like python threads in some way, maybe it's only running when processing an event, making the rconsole I injected irresponsive. If I loop over time.sleep, it's still unresponsive, but if I use event.wait with a timeout in the main thread, the parent app is still responding and rconsole is reasonably responsive.
    – vincent
    Sep 6, 2015 at 23:18

4 Answers 4

90

Using exit_flag.wait(timeout=DELAY) will be more responsive, because you'll break out of the while loop instantly when exit_flag is set. With time.sleep, even after the event is set, you're going to wait around in the time.sleep call until you've slept for DELAY seconds.

In terms of implementation, Python 2.x and Python 3.x have very different behavior. In Python 2.x Event.wait is implemented in pure Python using a bunch of small time.sleep calls:

from time import time as _time, sleep as _sleep

....
# This is inside the Condition class (Event.wait calls Condition.wait).
def wait(self, timeout=None):
    if not self._is_owned():
        raise RuntimeError("cannot wait on un-acquired lock")
    waiter = _allocate_lock()
    waiter.acquire()
    self.__waiters.append(waiter)
    saved_state = self._release_save()
    try:    # restore state no matter what (e.g., KeyboardInterrupt)
        if timeout is None:
            waiter.acquire()
            if __debug__:
                self._note("%s.wait(): got it", self)
        else:
            # Balancing act:  We can't afford a pure busy loop, so we
            # have to sleep; but if we sleep the whole timeout time,
            # we'll be unresponsive.  The scheme here sleeps very
            # little at first, longer as time goes on, but never longer
            # than 20 times per second (or the timeout time remaining).
            endtime = _time() + timeout
            delay = 0.0005 # 500 us -> initial delay of 1 ms
            while True:
                gotit = waiter.acquire(0)
                if gotit:
                    break
                remaining = endtime - _time()
                if remaining <= 0:
                    break
                delay = min(delay * 2, remaining, .05)
                _sleep(delay)
            if not gotit:
                if __debug__:
                    self._note("%s.wait(%s): timed out", self, timeout)
                try:
                    self.__waiters.remove(waiter)
                except ValueError:
                    pass
            else:
                if __debug__:
                    self._note("%s.wait(%s): got it", self, timeout)
    finally:
        self._acquire_restore(saved_state)

This actually means using wait is probably a bit more CPU-hungry than just sleeping the full DELAY unconditionally, but has the benefit being (potentially a lot, depending on how long DELAY is) more responsive. It also means that the GIL needs to be frequently re-acquired, so that the next sleep can be scheduled, while time.sleep can release the GIL for the full DELAY. Now, will acquiring the GIL more frequently have a noticeable effect on other threads in your application? Maybe or maybe not. It depends on how many other threads are running and what kind of work loads they have. My guess is it won't be particularly noticeable unless you have a high number of threads, or perhaps another thread doing lots of CPU-bound work, but its easy enough to try it both ways and see.

In Python 3.x, much of the implementation is moved to pure C code:

import _thread # C-module
_allocate_lock = _thread.allocate_lock

class Condition:
    ...
    def wait(self, timeout=None):
        if not self._is_owned():
            raise RuntimeError("cannot wait on un-acquired lock")
        waiter = _allocate_lock()
        waiter.acquire()
        self._waiters.append(waiter)
        saved_state = self._release_save()
        gotit = False
        try:    # restore state no matter what (e.g., KeyboardInterrupt)
            if timeout is None:
                waiter.acquire()
                gotit = True
            else:
                if timeout > 0:
                    gotit = waiter.acquire(True, timeout)  # This calls C code
                else:
                    gotit = waiter.acquire(False)
            return gotit
        finally:
            self._acquire_restore(saved_state)
            if not gotit:
                try:
                    self._waiters.remove(waiter)
                except ValueError:
                    pass

class Event:
    def __init__(self):
        self._cond = Condition(Lock())
        self._flag = False

    def wait(self, timeout=None):
        self._cond.acquire()
        try:
            signaled = self._flag
            if not signaled:
                signaled = self._cond.wait(timeout)
            return signaled
        finally:
            self._cond.release()

And the C code that acquires the lock:

/* Helper to acquire an interruptible lock with a timeout.  If the lock acquire
 * is interrupted, signal handlers are run, and if they raise an exception,
 * PY_LOCK_INTR is returned.  Otherwise, PY_LOCK_ACQUIRED or PY_LOCK_FAILURE
 * are returned, depending on whether the lock can be acquired withing the
 * timeout.
 */
static PyLockStatus
acquire_timed(PyThread_type_lock lock, PY_TIMEOUT_T microseconds)
{
    PyLockStatus r;
    _PyTime_timeval curtime;
    _PyTime_timeval endtime;


    if (microseconds > 0) {
        _PyTime_gettimeofday(&endtime);
        endtime.tv_sec += microseconds / (1000 * 1000);
        endtime.tv_usec += microseconds % (1000 * 1000);
    }


    do {
        /* first a simple non-blocking try without releasing the GIL */
        r = PyThread_acquire_lock_timed(lock, 0, 0);
        if (r == PY_LOCK_FAILURE && microseconds != 0) {
            Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS  // GIL is released here
            r = PyThread_acquire_lock_timed(lock, microseconds, 1);
            Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
        }

        if (r == PY_LOCK_INTR) {
            /* Run signal handlers if we were interrupted.  Propagate
             * exceptions from signal handlers, such as KeyboardInterrupt, by
             * passing up PY_LOCK_INTR.  */
            if (Py_MakePendingCalls() < 0) {
                return PY_LOCK_INTR;
            }

            /* If we're using a timeout, recompute the timeout after processing
             * signals, since those can take time.  */
            if (microseconds > 0) {
                _PyTime_gettimeofday(&curtime);
                microseconds = ((endtime.tv_sec - curtime.tv_sec) * 1000000 +
                                (endtime.tv_usec - curtime.tv_usec));

                /* Check for negative values, since those mean block forever.
                 */
                if (microseconds <= 0) {
                    r = PY_LOCK_FAILURE;
                }
            }
        }
    } while (r == PY_LOCK_INTR);  /* Retry if we were interrupted. */

    return r;
}

This implementation is responsive, and doesn't require frequent wakeups that re-acquire the GIL, so you get the best of both worlds.

5
  • 2
    so, does it mean that the sleep(DELAY) is less GIL heavy? albeit not as accurate? Mar 16, 2015 at 16:53
  • @user3012759 I would think so, since each wakeup inside of wait would require re-acquiring the GIL, where sleep can just release it for the entirety of DELAY.
    – dano
    Mar 16, 2015 at 16:55
  • 4
    This is python 2.x (its considerably better in 3.x) and its pretty bad especially as the number of threads increases.
    – tdelaney
    Mar 16, 2015 at 16:57
  • @tdelaney how does 3.x impl look like? Mar 16, 2015 at 16:58
  • 2
    @tdelaney Yes, good point. In Python 3.x the wait is implemented in C, and releases the GIL for the entirety of the wait. I'll update my answer to show the code
    – dano
    Mar 16, 2015 at 17:02
13

Python 2.*
Like @dano said, event.wait is more responsive,
but it can be dangerous when the system time is changed backward, while it's waiting!
bug# 1607041: Condition.wait timeout fails on clock change

See this sample:

def someHandler():
   while not exit_flag.wait(timeout=0.100):
       action()

Normally action() will be called in a 100ms intrvall.
But when you change the time ex. one hour then there is a pause of one hour between two actions.

Conclusion: When it's allowed that the time can be change, you should avoid event.wait, it can be disastrous!

Python 3 uses a monotonic clock to implement timeouts, so it's solved there

2
  • This is really interesting to know - but would be good to clarify if only Python 2.* is affected
    – lys
    Dec 23, 2021 at 5:56
  • 1
    @lys It's fixed in 3.*, I updated my answer
    – jeb
    Dec 23, 2021 at 6:49
4

It is interesting to note that the event.wait() method can be invoked on its own:

from threading import Event # Needed for the  wait() method
from time import sleep     

print("\n Live long and prosper!")
sleep(1)               # Conventional sleep() Method.
print("\n Just let that soak in..")   
Event().wait(3.0) # wait() Method, useable sans thread.
print("\n Make it So! = )\n")

So why -not- use wait() as an alternative to sleep() outside of multi-threading? In a word, Zen. (Of course.) Clarity of code is an important thing.

-1

Based on my experience, using time.sleep() would eat the CPU and makes the app laggy that's because the sleep function is a blocking method for other threads, while the Event.wait() is a non-blocking method for other threads.

You can see that by looking at the time required by a thread where it's waiting for the lock to be released!

Also, the Event.wait() is very very useful if you don't know the required time to block the thread! such that you can set and clear the Event

2
  • 1
    No, sleep doesn't block other threads, it only blocks the thread it is running in. Jul 29, 2021 at 14:00
  • @FahadAlduraibi I know it's blocking only the thread it's running in, but based on the GIL GLOBAL INTERPRETER LOCK, it will badly affect the other running threads! because the sleep method is consuming the resources while wait doesn't Aug 4, 2021 at 7:14

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