mirror of https://github.com/evilhero/mylar
682 lines
25 KiB
Python
Executable File
682 lines
25 KiB
Python
Executable File
"""Site services for use with a Web Site Process Bus."""
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import os
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import re
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import signal as _signal
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import sys
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import time
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import threading
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from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, get_daemon, get_thread_ident, ntob, set
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# _module__file__base is used by Autoreload to make
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# absolute any filenames retrieved from sys.modules which are not
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# already absolute paths. This is to work around Python's quirk
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# of importing the startup script and using a relative filename
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# for it in sys.modules.
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#
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# Autoreload examines sys.modules afresh every time it runs. If an application
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# changes the current directory by executing os.chdir(), then the next time
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# Autoreload runs, it will not be able to find any filenames which are
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# not absolute paths, because the current directory is not the same as when the
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# module was first imported. Autoreload will then wrongly conclude the file has
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# "changed", and initiate the shutdown/re-exec sequence.
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# See ticket #917.
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# For this workaround to have a decent probability of success, this module
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# needs to be imported as early as possible, before the app has much chance
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# to change the working directory.
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_module__file__base = os.getcwd()
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class SimplePlugin(object):
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"""Plugin base class which auto-subscribes methods for known channels."""
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bus = None
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"""A :class:`Bus <cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus>`, usually cherrypy.engine."""
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def __init__(self, bus):
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self.bus = bus
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def subscribe(self):
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"""Register this object as a (multi-channel) listener on the bus."""
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for channel in self.bus.listeners:
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# Subscribe self.start, self.exit, etc. if present.
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method = getattr(self, channel, None)
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if method is not None:
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self.bus.subscribe(channel, method)
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def unsubscribe(self):
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"""Unregister this object as a listener on the bus."""
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for channel in self.bus.listeners:
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# Unsubscribe self.start, self.exit, etc. if present.
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method = getattr(self, channel, None)
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if method is not None:
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self.bus.unsubscribe(channel, method)
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class SignalHandler(object):
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"""Register bus channels (and listeners) for system signals.
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You can modify what signals your application listens for, and what it does
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when it receives signals, by modifying :attr:`SignalHandler.handlers`,
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a dict of {signal name: callback} pairs. The default set is::
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handlers = {'SIGTERM': self.bus.exit,
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'SIGHUP': self.handle_SIGHUP,
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'SIGUSR1': self.bus.graceful,
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}
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The :func:`SignalHandler.handle_SIGHUP`` method calls
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:func:`bus.restart()<cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus.restart>`
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if the process is daemonized, but
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:func:`bus.exit()<cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus.exit>`
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if the process is attached to a TTY. This is because Unix window
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managers tend to send SIGHUP to terminal windows when the user closes them.
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Feel free to add signals which are not available on every platform. The
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:class:`SignalHandler` will ignore errors raised from attempting to register
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handlers for unknown signals.
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"""
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handlers = {}
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"""A map from signal names (e.g. 'SIGTERM') to handlers (e.g. bus.exit)."""
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signals = {}
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"""A map from signal numbers to names."""
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for k, v in vars(_signal).items():
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if k.startswith('SIG') and not k.startswith('SIG_'):
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signals[v] = k
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del k, v
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def __init__(self, bus):
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self.bus = bus
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# Set default handlers
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self.handlers = {'SIGTERM': self.bus.exit,
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'SIGHUP': self.handle_SIGHUP,
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'SIGUSR1': self.bus.graceful,
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}
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if sys.platform[:4] == 'java':
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del self.handlers['SIGUSR1']
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self.handlers['SIGUSR2'] = self.bus.graceful
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self.bus.log("SIGUSR1 cannot be set on the JVM platform. "
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"Using SIGUSR2 instead.")
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self.handlers['SIGINT'] = self._jython_SIGINT_handler
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self._previous_handlers = {}
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def _jython_SIGINT_handler(self, signum=None, frame=None):
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# See http://bugs.jython.org/issue1313
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self.bus.log('Keyboard Interrupt: shutting down bus')
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self.bus.exit()
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def subscribe(self):
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"""Subscribe self.handlers to signals."""
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for sig, func in self.handlers.items():
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try:
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self.set_handler(sig, func)
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except ValueError:
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pass
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def unsubscribe(self):
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"""Unsubscribe self.handlers from signals."""
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for signum, handler in self._previous_handlers.items():
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signame = self.signals[signum]
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if handler is None:
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self.bus.log("Restoring %s handler to SIG_DFL." % signame)
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handler = _signal.SIG_DFL
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else:
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self.bus.log("Restoring %s handler %r." % (signame, handler))
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try:
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our_handler = _signal.signal(signum, handler)
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if our_handler is None:
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self.bus.log("Restored old %s handler %r, but our "
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"handler was not registered." %
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(signame, handler), level=30)
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except ValueError:
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self.bus.log("Unable to restore %s handler %r." %
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(signame, handler), level=40, traceback=True)
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def set_handler(self, signal, listener=None):
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"""Subscribe a handler for the given signal (number or name).
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If the optional 'listener' argument is provided, it will be
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subscribed as a listener for the given signal's channel.
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If the given signal name or number is not available on the current
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platform, ValueError is raised.
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"""
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if isinstance(signal, basestring):
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signum = getattr(_signal, signal, None)
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if signum is None:
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raise ValueError("No such signal: %r" % signal)
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signame = signal
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else:
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try:
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signame = self.signals[signal]
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except KeyError:
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raise ValueError("No such signal: %r" % signal)
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signum = signal
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prev = _signal.signal(signum, self._handle_signal)
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self._previous_handlers[signum] = prev
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if listener is not None:
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self.bus.log("Listening for %s." % signame)
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self.bus.subscribe(signame, listener)
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def _handle_signal(self, signum=None, frame=None):
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"""Python signal handler (self.set_handler subscribes it for you)."""
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signame = self.signals[signum]
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self.bus.log("Caught signal %s." % signame)
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self.bus.publish(signame)
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def handle_SIGHUP(self):
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"""Restart if daemonized, else exit."""
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if os.isatty(sys.stdin.fileno()):
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# not daemonized (may be foreground or background)
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self.bus.log("SIGHUP caught but not daemonized. Exiting.")
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self.bus.exit()
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else:
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self.bus.log("SIGHUP caught while daemonized. Restarting.")
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self.bus.restart()
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try:
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import pwd, grp
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except ImportError:
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pwd, grp = None, None
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class DropPrivileges(SimplePlugin):
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"""Drop privileges. uid/gid arguments not available on Windows.
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Special thanks to Gavin Baker: http://antonym.org/node/100.
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"""
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def __init__(self, bus, umask=None, uid=None, gid=None):
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SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
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self.finalized = False
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self.uid = uid
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self.gid = gid
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self.umask = umask
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def _get_uid(self):
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return self._uid
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def _set_uid(self, val):
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if val is not None:
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if pwd is None:
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self.bus.log("pwd module not available; ignoring uid.",
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level=30)
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val = None
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elif isinstance(val, basestring):
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val = pwd.getpwnam(val)[2]
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self._uid = val
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uid = property(_get_uid, _set_uid,
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doc="The uid under which to run. Availability: Unix.")
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def _get_gid(self):
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return self._gid
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def _set_gid(self, val):
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if val is not None:
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if grp is None:
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self.bus.log("grp module not available; ignoring gid.",
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level=30)
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val = None
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elif isinstance(val, basestring):
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val = grp.getgrnam(val)[2]
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self._gid = val
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gid = property(_get_gid, _set_gid,
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doc="The gid under which to run. Availability: Unix.")
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def _get_umask(self):
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return self._umask
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def _set_umask(self, val):
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if val is not None:
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try:
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os.umask
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except AttributeError:
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self.bus.log("umask function not available; ignoring umask.",
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level=30)
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val = None
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self._umask = val
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umask = property(_get_umask, _set_umask,
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doc="""The default permission mode for newly created files and directories.
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Usually expressed in octal format, for example, ``0644``.
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Availability: Unix, Windows.
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""")
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def start(self):
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# uid/gid
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def current_ids():
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"""Return the current (uid, gid) if available."""
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name, group = None, None
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if pwd:
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name = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[0]
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if grp:
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group = grp.getgrgid(os.getgid())[0]
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return name, group
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if self.finalized:
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if not (self.uid is None and self.gid is None):
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self.bus.log('Already running as uid: %r gid: %r' %
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current_ids())
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else:
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if self.uid is None and self.gid is None:
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if pwd or grp:
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self.bus.log('uid/gid not set', level=30)
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else:
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self.bus.log('Started as uid: %r gid: %r' % current_ids())
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if self.gid is not None:
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os.setgid(self.gid)
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os.setgroups([])
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if self.uid is not None:
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os.setuid(self.uid)
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self.bus.log('Running as uid: %r gid: %r' % current_ids())
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# umask
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if self.finalized:
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if self.umask is not None:
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self.bus.log('umask already set to: %03o' % self.umask)
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else:
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if self.umask is None:
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self.bus.log('umask not set', level=30)
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else:
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old_umask = os.umask(self.umask)
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self.bus.log('umask old: %03o, new: %03o' %
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(old_umask, self.umask))
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self.finalized = True
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# This is slightly higher than the priority for server.start
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# in order to facilitate the most common use: starting on a low
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# port (which requires root) and then dropping to another user.
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start.priority = 77
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class Daemonizer(SimplePlugin):
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"""Daemonize the running script.
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Use this with a Web Site Process Bus via::
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Daemonizer(bus).subscribe()
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When this component finishes, the process is completely decoupled from
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the parent environment. Please note that when this component is used,
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the return code from the parent process will still be 0 if a startup
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error occurs in the forked children. Errors in the initial daemonizing
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process still return proper exit codes. Therefore, if you use this
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plugin to daemonize, don't use the return code as an accurate indicator
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of whether the process fully started. In fact, that return code only
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indicates if the process succesfully finished the first fork.
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"""
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def __init__(self, bus, stdin='/dev/null', stdout='/dev/null',
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stderr='/dev/null'):
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SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
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self.stdin = stdin
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self.stdout = stdout
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self.stderr = stderr
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self.finalized = False
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def start(self):
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if self.finalized:
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self.bus.log('Already deamonized.')
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# forking has issues with threads:
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# http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/functions/fork.html
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# "The general problem with making fork() work in a multi-threaded
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# world is what to do with all of the threads..."
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# So we check for active threads:
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if threading.activeCount() != 1:
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self.bus.log('There are %r active threads. '
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'Daemonizing now may cause strange failures.' %
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threading.enumerate(), level=30)
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# See http://www.erlenstar.demon.co.uk/unix/faq_2.html#SEC16
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# (or http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/programmer/faq/ section 1.7)
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# and http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/66012
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# Finish up with the current stdout/stderr
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sys.stdout.flush()
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sys.stderr.flush()
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# Do first fork.
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try:
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pid = os.fork()
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if pid == 0:
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# This is the child process. Continue.
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pass
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else:
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# This is the first parent. Exit, now that we've forked.
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self.bus.log('Forking once.')
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os._exit(0)
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except OSError:
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# Python raises OSError rather than returning negative numbers.
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exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
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sys.exit("%s: fork #1 failed: (%d) %s\n"
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% (sys.argv[0], exc.errno, exc.strerror))
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os.setsid()
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# Do second fork
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try:
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pid = os.fork()
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if pid > 0:
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self.bus.log('Forking twice.')
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os._exit(0) # Exit second parent
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except OSError:
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exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
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sys.exit("%s: fork #2 failed: (%d) %s\n"
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% (sys.argv[0], exc.errno, exc.strerror))
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os.chdir("/")
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os.umask(0)
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si = open(self.stdin, "r")
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so = open(self.stdout, "a+")
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se = open(self.stderr, "a+")
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# os.dup2(fd, fd2) will close fd2 if necessary,
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# so we don't explicitly close stdin/out/err.
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# See http://docs.python.org/lib/os-fd-ops.html
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os.dup2(si.fileno(), sys.stdin.fileno())
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os.dup2(so.fileno(), sys.stdout.fileno())
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os.dup2(se.fileno(), sys.stderr.fileno())
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self.bus.log('Daemonized to PID: %s' % os.getpid())
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self.finalized = True
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start.priority = 65
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class PIDFile(SimplePlugin):
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"""Maintain a PID file via a WSPBus."""
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def __init__(self, bus, pidfile):
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SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
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self.pidfile = pidfile
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self.finalized = False
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def start(self):
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pid = os.getpid()
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if self.finalized:
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self.bus.log('PID %r already written to %r.' % (pid, self.pidfile))
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else:
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open(self.pidfile, "wb").write(ntob("%s" % pid, 'utf8'))
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self.bus.log('PID %r written to %r.' % (pid, self.pidfile))
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self.finalized = True
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start.priority = 70
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def exit(self):
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try:
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os.remove(self.pidfile)
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self.bus.log('PID file removed: %r.' % self.pidfile)
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except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
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raise
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except:
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pass
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class PerpetualTimer(threading._Timer):
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"""A responsive subclass of threading._Timer whose run() method repeats.
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Use this timer only when you really need a very interruptible timer;
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this checks its 'finished' condition up to 20 times a second, which can
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results in pretty high CPU usage
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"""
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def run(self):
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while True:
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self.finished.wait(self.interval)
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if self.finished.isSet():
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return
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try:
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self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
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except Exception:
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self.bus.log("Error in perpetual timer thread function %r." %
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self.function, level=40, traceback=True)
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# Quit on first error to avoid massive logs.
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raise
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class BackgroundTask(threading.Thread):
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"""A subclass of threading.Thread whose run() method repeats.
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Use this class for most repeating tasks. It uses time.sleep() to wait
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for each interval, which isn't very responsive; that is, even if you call
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self.cancel(), you'll have to wait until the sleep() call finishes before
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the thread stops. To compensate, it defaults to being daemonic, which means
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it won't delay stopping the whole process.
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"""
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def __init__(self, interval, function, args=[], kwargs={}):
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threading.Thread.__init__(self)
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self.interval = interval
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self.function = function
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self.args = args
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self.kwargs = kwargs
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self.running = False
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def cancel(self):
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self.running = False
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def run(self):
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self.running = True
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while self.running:
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time.sleep(self.interval)
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if not self.running:
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return
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try:
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self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
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except Exception:
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self.bus.log("Error in background task thread function %r." %
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self.function, level=40, traceback=True)
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# Quit on first error to avoid massive logs.
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raise
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def _set_daemon(self):
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return True
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class Monitor(SimplePlugin):
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"""WSPBus listener to periodically run a callback in its own thread."""
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callback = None
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"""The function to call at intervals."""
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frequency = 60
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"""The time in seconds between callback runs."""
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thread = None
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"""A :class:`BackgroundTask<cherrypy.process.plugins.BackgroundTask>` thread."""
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def __init__(self, bus, callback, frequency=60, name=None):
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SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
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self.callback = callback
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self.frequency = frequency
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self.thread = None
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self.name = name
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def start(self):
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"""Start our callback in its own background thread."""
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if self.frequency > 0:
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threadname = self.name or self.__class__.__name__
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if self.thread is None:
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self.thread = BackgroundTask(self.frequency, self.callback)
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self.thread.bus = self.bus
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self.thread.setName(threadname)
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self.thread.start()
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self.bus.log("Started monitor thread %r." % threadname)
|
|
else:
|
|
self.bus.log("Monitor thread %r already started." % threadname)
|
|
start.priority = 70
|
|
|
|
def stop(self):
|
|
"""Stop our callback's background task thread."""
|
|
if self.thread is None:
|
|
self.bus.log("No thread running for %s." % self.name or self.__class__.__name__)
|
|
else:
|
|
if self.thread is not threading.currentThread():
|
|
name = self.thread.getName()
|
|
self.thread.cancel()
|
|
if not get_daemon(self.thread):
|
|
self.bus.log("Joining %r" % name)
|
|
self.thread.join()
|
|
self.bus.log("Stopped thread %r." % name)
|
|
self.thread = None
|
|
|
|
def graceful(self):
|
|
"""Stop the callback's background task thread and restart it."""
|
|
self.stop()
|
|
self.start()
|
|
|
|
|
|
class Autoreloader(Monitor):
|
|
"""Monitor which re-executes the process when files change.
|
|
|
|
This :ref:`plugin<plugins>` restarts the process (via :func:`os.execv`)
|
|
if any of the files it monitors change (or is deleted). By default, the
|
|
autoreloader monitors all imported modules; you can add to the
|
|
set by adding to ``autoreload.files``::
|
|
|
|
cherrypy.engine.autoreload.files.add(myFile)
|
|
|
|
If there are imported files you do *not* wish to monitor, you can adjust the
|
|
``match`` attribute, a regular expression. For example, to stop monitoring
|
|
cherrypy itself::
|
|
|
|
cherrypy.engine.autoreload.match = r'^(?!cherrypy).+'
|
|
|
|
Like all :class:`Monitor<cherrypy.process.plugins.Monitor>` plugins,
|
|
the autoreload plugin takes a ``frequency`` argument. The default is
|
|
1 second; that is, the autoreloader will examine files once each second.
|
|
"""
|
|
|
|
files = None
|
|
"""The set of files to poll for modifications."""
|
|
|
|
frequency = 1
|
|
"""The interval in seconds at which to poll for modified files."""
|
|
|
|
match = '.*'
|
|
"""A regular expression by which to match filenames."""
|
|
|
|
def __init__(self, bus, frequency=1, match='.*'):
|
|
self.mtimes = {}
|
|
self.files = set()
|
|
self.match = match
|
|
Monitor.__init__(self, bus, self.run, frequency)
|
|
|
|
def start(self):
|
|
"""Start our own background task thread for self.run."""
|
|
if self.thread is None:
|
|
self.mtimes = {}
|
|
Monitor.start(self)
|
|
start.priority = 70
|
|
|
|
def sysfiles(self):
|
|
"""Return a Set of sys.modules filenames to monitor."""
|
|
files = set()
|
|
for k, m in sys.modules.items():
|
|
if re.match(self.match, k):
|
|
if hasattr(m, '__loader__') and hasattr(m.__loader__, 'archive'):
|
|
f = m.__loader__.archive
|
|
else:
|
|
f = getattr(m, '__file__', None)
|
|
if f is not None and not os.path.isabs(f):
|
|
# ensure absolute paths so a os.chdir() in the app doesn't break me
|
|
f = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(_module__file__base, f))
|
|
files.add(f)
|
|
return files
|
|
|
|
def run(self):
|
|
"""Reload the process if registered files have been modified."""
|
|
for filename in self.sysfiles() | self.files:
|
|
if filename:
|
|
if filename.endswith('.pyc'):
|
|
filename = filename[:-1]
|
|
|
|
oldtime = self.mtimes.get(filename, 0)
|
|
if oldtime is None:
|
|
# Module with no .py file. Skip it.
|
|
continue
|
|
|
|
try:
|
|
mtime = os.stat(filename).st_mtime
|
|
except OSError:
|
|
# Either a module with no .py file, or it's been deleted.
|
|
mtime = None
|
|
|
|
if filename not in self.mtimes:
|
|
# If a module has no .py file, this will be None.
|
|
self.mtimes[filename] = mtime
|
|
else:
|
|
if mtime is None or mtime > oldtime:
|
|
# The file has been deleted or modified.
|
|
self.bus.log("Restarting because %s changed." % filename)
|
|
self.thread.cancel()
|
|
self.bus.log("Stopped thread %r." % self.thread.getName())
|
|
self.bus.restart()
|
|
return
|
|
|
|
|
|
class ThreadManager(SimplePlugin):
|
|
"""Manager for HTTP request threads.
|
|
|
|
If you have control over thread creation and destruction, publish to
|
|
the 'acquire_thread' and 'release_thread' channels (for each thread).
|
|
This will register/unregister the current thread and publish to
|
|
'start_thread' and 'stop_thread' listeners in the bus as needed.
|
|
|
|
If threads are created and destroyed by code you do not control
|
|
(e.g., Apache), then, at the beginning of every HTTP request,
|
|
publish to 'acquire_thread' only. You should not publish to
|
|
'release_thread' in this case, since you do not know whether
|
|
the thread will be re-used or not. The bus will call
|
|
'stop_thread' listeners for you when it stops.
|
|
"""
|
|
|
|
threads = None
|
|
"""A map of {thread ident: index number} pairs."""
|
|
|
|
def __init__(self, bus):
|
|
self.threads = {}
|
|
SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
|
|
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('acquire_thread', set())
|
|
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('start_thread', set())
|
|
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('release_thread', set())
|
|
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('stop_thread', set())
|
|
|
|
def acquire_thread(self):
|
|
"""Run 'start_thread' listeners for the current thread.
|
|
|
|
If the current thread has already been seen, any 'start_thread'
|
|
listeners will not be run again.
|
|
"""
|
|
thread_ident = get_thread_ident()
|
|
if thread_ident not in self.threads:
|
|
# We can't just use get_ident as the thread ID
|
|
# because some platforms reuse thread ID's.
|
|
i = len(self.threads) + 1
|
|
self.threads[thread_ident] = i
|
|
self.bus.publish('start_thread', i)
|
|
|
|
def release_thread(self):
|
|
"""Release the current thread and run 'stop_thread' listeners."""
|
|
thread_ident = get_thread_ident()
|
|
i = self.threads.pop(thread_ident, None)
|
|
if i is not None:
|
|
self.bus.publish('stop_thread', i)
|
|
|
|
def stop(self):
|
|
"""Release all threads and run all 'stop_thread' listeners."""
|
|
for thread_ident, i in self.threads.items():
|
|
self.bus.publish('stop_thread', i)
|
|
self.threads.clear()
|
|
graceful = stop
|
|
|