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Home/ Questions/Q 8981485
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T20:20:54+00:00 2026-06-15T20:20:54+00:00

def synchronized(func): Decorator for storage-access methods, which synchronizes on a threading lock. The parent

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def synchronized(func):
    """Decorator for storage-access methods, which synchronizes on a threading
    lock. The parent object must have 'is_closed' and '_sync_lock' attributes.
    """

    @wraps(func)
    def synchronized_wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
        with self._sync_lock:
           return func(self, *args, **kwargs)

    return synchronized_wrapper

the code is in whoosh/src/util.py,I can’t understand the synchronized_wrapper’s effect and the parameters in synchronized_wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs) from where. Can anyone give me some pointers?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T20:20:55+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 8:20 pm

    The @wraps decorator is just syntactic sugar for a function closure with argument forwarding. *args refers to a tuple of positional args, and **kwargs refers to a dict of all keyword args that have been passed to func.

    Hence if you had:

    def f(foo, bar=None):
        ...
    

    and did:

    sync_f = someinst.synchronized(f)
    sync_f(a, bar=z)
    

    it would basically be like calling:

    f(a, bar=z)
    

    but inside the “with self._sync_lock:” context manager

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