I am using gevent and I am monkey patching everything.
It seems like the monkey patching causes the threading to work serially.
My code:
import threading
from gevent import monkey; monkey.patch_all()
class ExampleThread(threading.Thread):
def run(self):
do_stuff() # takes a few minutes to finish
print 'finished working'
if __name__ == '__main__':
worker = ExampleThread()
worker.start()
print 'this should be printed before the worker finished'
So the thread is not working as expected.
But if I remove the monkey.patch_all()
it is working fine.
The problem is that I need the monkey.patch_all()
for using gevent (now shown in the code above)
My solution:
I changed the
monkey.patch_all()
to
monkey.patch_all(thread=False)
so I am not patching the thread.
When threads are monkey patched in gevent, they behave as coroutines. This means that you have to explicitly yield control to make it possible for other coroutines to execute.
The way to do this is call a blocking operation that has been patched (this will yield automatically) or gevent.sleep
:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from gevent import monkey, sleep
monkey.patch_all()
import threading
class ExampleThread(threading.Thread):
def run(self):
for i in xrange(10):
print 'working'
sleep()
if __name__ == '__main__':
worker = ExampleThread()
worker.start()
print 'this will be printed after the first call to sleep'