The IPython.kernel.core.notification module will provide a simple implementation of a notification center and support for the observer pattern within the IPython.kernel.core. The main intended use case is to provide notification of Interpreter events to an observing frontend during the execution of a single block of code.
The notification center must:
As written, the IPython.kernel.core.notificaiton module does not:
The following use cases describe the main intended uses of the notificaiton module and illustrate the main success scenario for each use case:
Dwight Schroot is writing a frontend for the IPython project. His frontend is stuck in the stone age and must communicate synchronously with an IPython.kernel.core.Interpreter instance. Because code is executed in blocks by the Interpreter, Dwight’s UI freezes every time he executes a long block of code. To keep track of the progress of his long running block, Dwight adds the following code to his frontend’s set-up code:
from IPython.kernel.core.notification import NotificationCenter center = NotificationCenter.sharedNotificationCenter center.registerObserver(self, type=IPython.kernel.core.Interpreter.STDOUT_NOTIFICATION_TYPE, notifying_object=self.interpreter, callback=self.stdout_notification)and elsewhere in his front end:
def stdout_notification(self, type, notifying_object, out_string=None): self.writeStdOut(out_string)
If everything works, the Interpreter will (according to its published API) fire a notification via the IPython.kernel.core.notification.sharedCenter of type STD_OUT_NOTIFICATION_TYPE before writing anything to stdout [it’s up to the Intereter implementation to figure out when to do this]. The notificaiton center will then call the registered callbacks for that event type (in this case, Dwight’s frontend’s stdout_notification method). Again, according to its API, the Interpreter provides an additional keyword argument when firing the notificaiton of out_string, a copy of the string it will write to stdout.
Like magic, Dwight’s frontend is able to provide output, even during long-running calculations. Now if Jim could just convince Dwight to use Twisted...
- Boss Hog is writing a frontend for the IPython project. Because Boss Hog is stuck in the stone age, his frontend will be written in a new Fortran-like dialect of python and will run only from the command line. Because he doesn’t need any fancy notification system and is used to worrying about every cycle on his rat-wheel powered mini, Boss Hog is adamant that the new notification system not produce any performance penalty. As they say in Hazard county, there’s no such thing as a free lunch. If he wanted zero overhead, he should have kept using IPython 0.8. Instead, those tricky Duke boys slide in a suped-up bridge-out jumpin’ awkwardly confederate-lovin’ notification module that imparts only a constant (and small) performance penalty when the Interpreter (or any other object) fires an event for which there are no registered observers. Of course, the same notificaiton-enabled Interpreter can then be used in frontends that require notifications, thus saving the IPython project from a nasty civil war.
- Barry is wrting a frontend for the IPython project. Because Barry’s front end is the new hotness, it uses an asynchronous event model to communicate with a Twisted engineservice that communicates with the IPython Interpreter. Using the IPython.kernel.notification module, an asynchronous wrapper on the IPython.kernel.core.notification module, Barry’s frontend can register for notifications from the interpreter that are delivered asynchronously. Even if Barry’s frontend is running on a separate process or even host from the Interpreter, the notifications are delivered, as if by dark and twisted magic. Just like Dwight’s frontend, Barry’s frontend can now recieve notifications of e.g. writing to stdout/stderr, opening/closing an external file, an exception in the executing code, etc.