The Queue module implements a multi-producer, multi-consumer FIFO queue. It is especially useful in threads programming when information must be exchanged safely between multiple threads. The Queue class in this module implements all the required locking semantics. It depends on the availability of thread support in Python.
The Queue module defines the following class and exception:
- Constructor for the class. maxsize is an integer that sets the upperbound limit on the number of items that can be placed in the queue. Insertion will block once this size has been reached, until queue items are consumed. If maxsize is less than or equal to zero, the queue size is infinite.
class Queue( | maxsize) |
-
exception Empty
- Exception raised when non-blocking get() (or get_nowait()) is called on a Queue object which is empty or locked.
-
exception Full
- Exception raised when non-blocking put() (or put_nowait()) is called on a Queue object which is full or locked.
Queue Objects
Class Queue implements queue objects and has the methods described below. This class can be derived from in order to implement other queue organizations (e.g. stack) but the inheritable interface is not described here. See the source code for details. The public methods are:
- Return the approximate size of the queue. Because of multithreading semantics, this number is not reliable.
qsize( | ) |
-
Return
True
if the queue is empty,False
otherwise. Becauseof multithreading semantics, this is not reliable.
empty( | ) |
-
Return
True
if the queue is full,False
otherwise. Because of multithreading semantics, this is not reliable.
full( | ) |
-
Put
item into the queue. If optional args
block is true and
timeout is None (the default), block if necessary until a free slot is available. If
timeout is a positive number, it blocks at most
timeout seconds and raises the
Full exception if no free slot was available within that time. Otherwise (
block is false), put an item on the queue if a free slot is immediately available, else raise the
Full exception (
timeout is ignored in that case).
New in version 2.3: the timeout parameter.
put( | item[, block[, timeout]] |
-
Equivalent to
put(item, False)
.
put_nowait( | item) |
-
Remove and return an item from the queue. If optional args
block is true and
timeout is None (the default), block if necessary until an item is available. If
timeout is a positive number, it blocks at most
timeout seconds and raises the
Empty exception if no item was available within that time. Otherwise (
block is false), return an item if one is immediately available, else raise the
Empty exception (
timeout is ignored in that case).
New in version 2.3: the timeout parameter.
get( | [block[, timeout]]) |
-
Equivalent to
get(False)
.
get_nowait( | ) |