def _make_coroutine_wrapper(func, replace_callback):
"""The inner workings of ``@gen.coroutine`` and ``@gen.engine``.
The two decorators differ in their treatment of the ``callback``
argument, so we cannot simply implement ``@engine`` in terms of
``@coroutine``.
"""
@functools.wraps(func)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
future = TracebackFuture()
if replace_callback and 'callback' in kwargs:
callback = kwargs.pop('callback')
IOLoop.current().add_future(
future, lambda future: callback(future.result()))
try:
result = func(*args, **kwargs)
except (Return, StopIteration) as e:
result = getattr(e, 'value', None)
except Exception:
future.set_exc_info(sys.exc_info())
return future
else:
if isinstance(result, types.GeneratorType):
# Inline the first iteration of Runner.run. This lets us
# avoid the cost of creating a Runner when the coroutine
# never actually yields, which in turn allows us to
# use "optional" coroutines in critical path code without
# performance penalty for the synchronous case.
try:
orig_stack_contexts = stack_context._state.contexts
yielded = next(result)
if stack_context._state.contexts is not orig_stack_contexts:
yielded = TracebackFuture()
yielded.set_exception(
stack_context.StackContextInconsistentError(
'stack_context inconsistency (probably caused '
'by yield within a "with StackContext" block)'))
except (StopIteration, Return) as e:
future.set_result(getattr(e, 'value', None))
except Exception:
future.set_exc_info(sys.exc_info())
else:
Runner(result, future, yielded)
try:
return future
finally:
# Subtle memory optimization: if next() raised an exception,
# the future's exc_info contains a traceback which
# includes this stack frame. This creates a cycle,
# which will be collected at the next full GC but has
# been shown to greatly increase memory usage of
# benchmarks (relative to the refcount-based scheme
# used in the absence of cycles). We can avoid the
# cycle by clearing the local variable after we return it.
future = None
future.set_result(result)
return future
return wrapper
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