import threading import Queue sqlSubmitQueue = Queue.Queue() #SQLITE3 is so thread-unsafe that they won't even let you call it from different threads using your own locks. SQL objects can only be called from one thread. sqlReturnQueue = Queue.Queue() sqlLock = threading.Lock() def sqlQuery(sqlStatement, *args): sqlLock.acquire() sqlSubmitQueue.put(sqlStatement) if args == (): sqlSubmitQueue.put('') else: sqlSubmitQueue.put(args) queryreturn = sqlReturnQueue.get() sqlLock.release() return queryreturn def sqlExecute(sqlStatement, *args): sqlLock.acquire() sqlSubmitQueue.put(sqlStatement) if args == (): sqlSubmitQueue.put('') else: sqlSubmitQueue.put(args) sqlReturnQueue.get() sqlSubmitQueue.put('commit') sqlLock.release() def sqlStoredProcedure(procName): sqlLock.acquire() sqlSubmitQueue.put(procName) sqlLock.release() class SqlBulkExecute: def __enter__(self): sqlLock.acquire() return self def __exit__(self, type, value, traceback): sqlSubmitQueue.put('commit') sqlLock.release() def execute(self, sqlStatement, *args): sqlSubmitQueue.put(sqlStatement) if args == (): sqlSubmitQueue.put('') else: sqlSubmitQueue.put(args) sqlReturnQueue.get() def query(self, sqlStatement, *args): sqlSubmitQueue.put(sqlStatement) if args == (): sqlSubmitQueue.put('') else: sqlSubmitQueue.put(args) return sqlReturnQueue.get()