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Dependancy free
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432
libs/cherrypy/process/wspbus.py
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432
libs/cherrypy/process/wspbus.py
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"""An implementation of the Web Site Process Bus.
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This module is completely standalone, depending only on the stdlib.
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Web Site Process Bus
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--------------------
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A Bus object is used to contain and manage site-wide behavior:
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daemonization, HTTP server start/stop, process reload, signal handling,
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drop privileges, PID file management, logging for all of these,
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and many more.
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In addition, a Bus object provides a place for each web framework
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to register code that runs in response to site-wide events (like
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process start and stop), or which controls or otherwise interacts with
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the site-wide components mentioned above. For example, a framework which
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uses file-based templates would add known template filenames to an
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autoreload component.
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Ideally, a Bus object will be flexible enough to be useful in a variety
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of invocation scenarios:
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1. The deployer starts a site from the command line via a
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framework-neutral deployment script; applications from multiple frameworks
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are mixed in a single site. Command-line arguments and configuration
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files are used to define site-wide components such as the HTTP server,
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WSGI component graph, autoreload behavior, signal handling, etc.
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2. The deployer starts a site via some other process, such as Apache;
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applications from multiple frameworks are mixed in a single site.
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Autoreload and signal handling (from Python at least) are disabled.
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3. The deployer starts a site via a framework-specific mechanism;
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for example, when running tests, exploring tutorials, or deploying
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single applications from a single framework. The framework controls
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which site-wide components are enabled as it sees fit.
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The Bus object in this package uses topic-based publish-subscribe
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messaging to accomplish all this. A few topic channels are built in
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('start', 'stop', 'exit', 'graceful', 'log', and 'main'). Frameworks and
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site containers are free to define their own. If a message is sent to a
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channel that has not been defined or has no listeners, there is no effect.
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In general, there should only ever be a single Bus object per process.
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Frameworks and site containers share a single Bus object by publishing
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messages and subscribing listeners.
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The Bus object works as a finite state machine which models the current
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state of the process. Bus methods move it from one state to another;
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those methods then publish to subscribed listeners on the channel for
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the new state.::
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O
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V
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STOPPING --> STOPPED --> EXITING -> X
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A A |
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| \___ |
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| \ |
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| V V
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STARTED <-- STARTING
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"""
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import atexit
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import os
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import sys
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import threading
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import time
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import traceback as _traceback
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import warnings
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from cherrypy._cpcompat import set
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# Here I save the value of os.getcwd(), which, if I am imported early enough,
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# will be the directory from which the startup script was run. This is needed
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# by _do_execv(), to change back to the original directory before execv()ing a
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# new process. This is a defense against the application having changed the
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# current working directory (which could make sys.executable "not found" if
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# sys.executable is a relative-path, and/or cause other problems).
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_startup_cwd = os.getcwd()
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class ChannelFailures(Exception):
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"""Exception raised when errors occur in a listener during Bus.publish()."""
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delimiter = '\n'
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def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
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# Don't use 'super' here; Exceptions are old-style in Py2.4
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# See http://www.cherrypy.org/ticket/959
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Exception.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
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self._exceptions = list()
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def handle_exception(self):
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"""Append the current exception to self."""
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self._exceptions.append(sys.exc_info()[1])
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def get_instances(self):
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"""Return a list of seen exception instances."""
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return self._exceptions[:]
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def __str__(self):
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exception_strings = map(repr, self.get_instances())
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return self.delimiter.join(exception_strings)
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__repr__ = __str__
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def __bool__(self):
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return bool(self._exceptions)
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__nonzero__ = __bool__
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# Use a flag to indicate the state of the bus.
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class _StateEnum(object):
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class State(object):
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name = None
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def __repr__(self):
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return "states.%s" % self.name
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def __setattr__(self, key, value):
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if isinstance(value, self.State):
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value.name = key
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object.__setattr__(self, key, value)
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states = _StateEnum()
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states.STOPPED = states.State()
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states.STARTING = states.State()
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states.STARTED = states.State()
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states.STOPPING = states.State()
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states.EXITING = states.State()
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try:
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import fcntl
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except ImportError:
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max_files = 0
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else:
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try:
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max_files = os.sysconf('SC_OPEN_MAX')
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except AttributeError:
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max_files = 1024
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class Bus(object):
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"""Process state-machine and messenger for HTTP site deployment.
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All listeners for a given channel are guaranteed to be called even
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if others at the same channel fail. Each failure is logged, but
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execution proceeds on to the next listener. The only way to stop all
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processing from inside a listener is to raise SystemExit and stop the
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whole server.
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"""
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states = states
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state = states.STOPPED
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execv = False
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max_cloexec_files = max_files
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def __init__(self):
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self.execv = False
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self.state = states.STOPPED
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self.listeners = dict(
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[(channel, set()) for channel
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in ('start', 'stop', 'exit', 'graceful', 'log', 'main')])
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self._priorities = {}
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def subscribe(self, channel, callback, priority=None):
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"""Add the given callback at the given channel (if not present)."""
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if channel not in self.listeners:
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self.listeners[channel] = set()
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self.listeners[channel].add(callback)
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if priority is None:
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priority = getattr(callback, 'priority', 50)
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self._priorities[(channel, callback)] = priority
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def unsubscribe(self, channel, callback):
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"""Discard the given callback (if present)."""
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listeners = self.listeners.get(channel)
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if listeners and callback in listeners:
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listeners.discard(callback)
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del self._priorities[(channel, callback)]
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def publish(self, channel, *args, **kwargs):
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"""Return output of all subscribers for the given channel."""
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if channel not in self.listeners:
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return []
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exc = ChannelFailures()
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output = []
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items = [(self._priorities[(channel, listener)], listener)
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for listener in self.listeners[channel]]
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try:
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items.sort(key=lambda item: item[0])
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except TypeError:
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# Python 2.3 had no 'key' arg, but that doesn't matter
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# since it could sort dissimilar types just fine.
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items.sort()
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for priority, listener in items:
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try:
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output.append(listener(*args, **kwargs))
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except KeyboardInterrupt:
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raise
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except SystemExit:
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e = sys.exc_info()[1]
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# If we have previous errors ensure the exit code is non-zero
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if exc and e.code == 0:
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e.code = 1
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raise
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except:
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exc.handle_exception()
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if channel == 'log':
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# Assume any further messages to 'log' will fail.
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pass
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else:
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self.log("Error in %r listener %r" % (channel, listener),
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level=40, traceback=True)
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if exc:
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raise exc
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return output
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def _clean_exit(self):
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"""An atexit handler which asserts the Bus is not running."""
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if self.state != states.EXITING:
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warnings.warn(
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"The main thread is exiting, but the Bus is in the %r state; "
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"shutting it down automatically now. You must either call "
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"bus.block() after start(), or call bus.exit() before the "
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"main thread exits." % self.state, RuntimeWarning)
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self.exit()
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def start(self):
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"""Start all services."""
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atexit.register(self._clean_exit)
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self.state = states.STARTING
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self.log('Bus STARTING')
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try:
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self.publish('start')
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self.state = states.STARTED
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self.log('Bus STARTED')
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except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
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raise
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except:
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self.log("Shutting down due to error in start listener:",
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level=40, traceback=True)
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e_info = sys.exc_info()[1]
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try:
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self.exit()
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except:
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# Any stop/exit errors will be logged inside publish().
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pass
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# Re-raise the original error
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raise e_info
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def exit(self):
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"""Stop all services and prepare to exit the process."""
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exitstate = self.state
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try:
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self.stop()
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self.state = states.EXITING
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self.log('Bus EXITING')
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self.publish('exit')
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# This isn't strictly necessary, but it's better than seeing
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# "Waiting for child threads to terminate..." and then nothing.
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self.log('Bus EXITED')
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except:
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# This method is often called asynchronously (whether thread,
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# signal handler, console handler, or atexit handler), so we
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# can't just let exceptions propagate out unhandled.
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# Assume it's been logged and just die.
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os._exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE
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if exitstate == states.STARTING:
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# exit() was called before start() finished, possibly due to
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# Ctrl-C because a start listener got stuck. In this case,
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# we could get stuck in a loop where Ctrl-C never exits the
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# process, so we just call os.exit here.
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os._exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE
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def restart(self):
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"""Restart the process (may close connections).
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This method does not restart the process from the calling thread;
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instead, it stops the bus and asks the main thread to call execv.
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"""
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self.execv = True
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self.exit()
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def graceful(self):
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"""Advise all services to reload."""
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self.log('Bus graceful')
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self.publish('graceful')
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def block(self, interval=0.1):
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"""Wait for the EXITING state, KeyboardInterrupt or SystemExit.
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This function is intended to be called only by the main thread.
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After waiting for the EXITING state, it also waits for all threads
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to terminate, and then calls os.execv if self.execv is True. This
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design allows another thread to call bus.restart, yet have the main
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thread perform the actual execv call (required on some platforms).
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"""
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try:
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self.wait(states.EXITING, interval=interval, channel='main')
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except (KeyboardInterrupt, IOError):
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# The time.sleep call might raise
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# "IOError: [Errno 4] Interrupted function call" on KBInt.
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self.log('Keyboard Interrupt: shutting down bus')
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self.exit()
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except SystemExit:
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self.log('SystemExit raised: shutting down bus')
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self.exit()
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raise
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# Waiting for ALL child threads to finish is necessary on OS X.
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# See http://www.cherrypy.org/ticket/581.
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# It's also good to let them all shut down before allowing
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# the main thread to call atexit handlers.
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# See http://www.cherrypy.org/ticket/751.
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self.log("Waiting for child threads to terminate...")
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for t in threading.enumerate():
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if t != threading.currentThread() and t.isAlive():
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# Note that any dummy (external) threads are always daemonic.
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if hasattr(threading.Thread, "daemon"):
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# Python 2.6+
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d = t.daemon
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else:
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d = t.isDaemon()
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if not d:
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self.log("Waiting for thread %s." % t.getName())
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t.join()
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if self.execv:
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self._do_execv()
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def wait(self, state, interval=0.1, channel=None):
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"""Poll for the given state(s) at intervals; publish to channel."""
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if isinstance(state, (tuple, list)):
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states = state
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else:
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states = [state]
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def _wait():
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while self.state not in states:
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time.sleep(interval)
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self.publish(channel)
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# From http://psyco.sourceforge.net/psycoguide/bugs.html:
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# "The compiled machine code does not include the regular polling
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# done by Python, meaning that a KeyboardInterrupt will not be
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# detected before execution comes back to the regular Python
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# interpreter. Your program cannot be interrupted if caught
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# into an infinite Psyco-compiled loop."
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try:
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sys.modules['psyco'].cannotcompile(_wait)
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except (KeyError, AttributeError):
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pass
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_wait()
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def _do_execv(self):
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"""Re-execute the current process.
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This must be called from the main thread, because certain platforms
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(OS X) don't allow execv to be called in a child thread very well.
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"""
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args = sys.argv[:]
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self.log('Re-spawning %s' % ' '.join(args))
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if sys.platform[:4] == 'java':
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from _systemrestart import SystemRestart
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raise SystemRestart
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else:
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args.insert(0, sys.executable)
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if sys.platform == 'win32':
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args = ['"%s"' % arg for arg in args]
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os.chdir(_startup_cwd)
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if self.max_cloexec_files:
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self._set_cloexec()
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os.execv(sys.executable, args)
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def _set_cloexec(self):
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"""Set the CLOEXEC flag on all open files (except stdin/out/err).
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If self.max_cloexec_files is an integer (the default), then on
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platforms which support it, it represents the max open files setting
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for the operating system. This function will be called just before
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the process is restarted via os.execv() to prevent open files
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from persisting into the new process.
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Set self.max_cloexec_files to 0 to disable this behavior.
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"""
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for fd in range(3, self.max_cloexec_files): # skip stdin/out/err
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try:
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flags = fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_GETFD)
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except IOError:
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continue
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fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_SETFD, flags | fcntl.FD_CLOEXEC)
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def stop(self):
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"""Stop all services."""
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self.state = states.STOPPING
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self.log('Bus STOPPING')
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self.publish('stop')
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self.state = states.STOPPED
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self.log('Bus STOPPED')
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def start_with_callback(self, func, args=None, kwargs=None):
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"""Start 'func' in a new thread T, then start self (and return T)."""
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if args is None:
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args = ()
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if kwargs is None:
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kwargs = {}
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args = (func,) + args
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def _callback(func, *a, **kw):
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self.wait(states.STARTED)
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func(*a, **kw)
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t = threading.Thread(target=_callback, args=args, kwargs=kwargs)
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t.setName('Bus Callback ' + t.getName())
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t.start()
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self.start()
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return t
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def log(self, msg="", level=20, traceback=False):
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"""Log the given message. Append the last traceback if requested."""
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if traceback:
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msg += "\n" + "".join(_traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info()))
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self.publish('log', msg, level)
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bus = Bus()
|
Reference in New Issue
Block a user