# test that the following do not use the heap: # - basic scheduling of tasks # - uasyncio.sleep_ms # - StreamWriter.write, stream is blocked and data to write is a bytes object # - StreamWriter.write, when stream is not blocked import micropython # strict stackless builds can't call functions without allocating a frame on the heap try: f = lambda: 0 micropython.heap_lock() f() micropython.heap_unlock() except RuntimeError: print("SKIP") raise SystemExit try: import uasyncio as asyncio except ImportError: try: import asyncio except ImportError: print("SKIP") raise SystemExit class TestStream: def __init__(self, blocked): self.blocked = blocked def write(self, data): print("TestStream.write", data) if self.blocked: return None return len(data) async def task(id, n, t): for i in range(n): print(id, i) await asyncio.sleep_ms(t) async def main(): t1 = asyncio.create_task(task(1, 4, 100)) t2 = asyncio.create_task(task(2, 2, 250)) # test scheduling tasks, and calling sleep_ms micropython.heap_lock() print("start") await asyncio.sleep_ms(5) print("sleep") await asyncio.sleep_ms(350) print("finish") micropython.heap_unlock() # test writing to a stream, when the underlying stream is blocked s = asyncio.StreamWriter(TestStream(True), None) micropython.heap_lock() s.write(b"12") micropython.heap_unlock() # test writing to a stream, when the underlying stream is not blocked buf = bytearray(b"56") s = asyncio.StreamWriter(TestStream(False), None) micropython.heap_lock() s.write(b"34") s.write(buf) micropython.heap_unlock() asyncio.run(main())